Final Nov 21
JMU 99 -3.0 o146.0
UIC 81 3.0 u146.0
Final Nov 21
MIA 69 -9.0 o143.0
DRKE 80 9.0 u143.0
Final OT Nov 21
OHIO 81 -2.0 o146.5
MTU 83 2.0 u146.5
Final Nov 21
LAS 67 -1.5 o144.0
UCSD 72 1.5 u144.0
Final Nov 21
OKST 78 2.0 o163.0
FAU 86 -2.0 u163.0
Final Nov 21
USF 74 -6.5 o145.5
PORT 68 6.5 u145.5
Final Nov 21
ECU 78 -4.0 o135.0
JVST 86 4.0 u135.0
Final Nov 21
MONM 62 4.5 o146.5
YSU 72 -4.5 u146.5
Final OT Nov 21
HALL 69 7.0 o126.0
VCU 66 -7.0 u126.0
Final Nov 21
BRAD 82 -7.0 o135.5
TXST 68 7.0 u135.5
Final Nov 21
TOL 103 -13.0 o154.5
STET 78 13.0 u154.5
Final Nov 21
RMU 86 9.5 o151.5
COR 76 -9.5 u151.5
Final Nov 21
UNCG 58 17.5 o146.5
IND 69 -17.5 u146.5
Final Nov 21
RAD 51 22.0 o144.5
CLEM 79 -22.0 u144.5
Final Nov 21
SYR 66 11.0 o155.0
TEX 70 -11.0 u155.0
Final Nov 21
NIAG 73 14.0 o136.5
KENT 76 -14.0 u136.5
Final 0OT Nov 21
BAY 99 -2.5 o150.5
SJU 98 2.5 u150.5
Final Nov 21
EMU 68 7.0 o134.5
OAK 64 -7.0 u134.5
Final Nov 21
BRY 66 -12.5 o153.0
STONE 67 12.5 u153.0
Final Nov 21
MER 72 18.5 o150.0
SCAR 84 -18.5 u150.0
Final Nov 21
JOHNSU 52 -0.0 o0.0
CHAT 72 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
EDW 59 -0.0 o0.0
UNF 108 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
NJIT 64 12.5 o135.0
BUCK 81 -12.5 u135.0
Final OT Nov 21
SEMO 77 1.5 o149.5
CARK 73 -1.5 u149.5
Final OT Nov 21
PRE 58 8.5 o135.0
SFA 55 -8.5 u135.0
Final Nov 21
TRN 78 -0.0 o0.0
SHSU 105 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
VAN 73 2.5 o150.5
NEV 71 -2.5 u150.5
Final Nov 21
CCSU 54 -2.0 o142.0
SH 67 2.0 u142.0
Final Nov 21
UTM 77 11.5 o155.5
AMCC 81 -11.5 u155.5
Final Nov 21
ORU 68 21.5 o149.5
MISS 100 -21.5 u149.5
Final Nov 21
TXWES 66 -0.0 o0.0
UNT 73 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
LNDNWD 64 9.5 o145.0
VALP 77 -9.5 u145.0
Final Nov 21
MINCR 60 -0.0 o0.0
NDSU 67 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
PRIN 62 -7.5 o152.5
WRST 80 7.5 u152.5
Final Nov 21
46 -0.0 o0.0
WIU 73 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
TAMCOM 56 24.5 o144.5
OKLA 84 -24.5 u144.5
Final Nov 21
TST 49 31.0 o147.0
MICH 72 -31.0 u147.0
Final Nov 21
TTU 77 -10.5 o149.5
STJOE 78 10.5 u149.5
Final Nov 21
GRAM 58 23.5 o152.5
UNM 80 -23.5 u152.5
Final Nov 21
TENN 64 -12.5 o126.5
UVA 42 12.5 u126.5
Final Nov 21
EWU 81 14.0 o158.5
WSU 96 -14.0 u158.5
Final Nov 21
ORE 78 -6.5 o139.5
ORST 75 6.5 u139.5
Final Nov 21
AFA 69 16.0 o136.0
CAL 78 -16.0 u136.0
Final Nov 21
MEM 68 2.0 o154.5
SF 64 -2.0 u154.5
North Carolina 2nd Atlantic Coast23-8
UCLA 2nd Pacific-1223-6

North Carolina @ UCLA preview

Wells Fargo Center

Last Meeting ( Dec 21, 2019 ) UCLA 64, North Carolina 74

North Carolina and UCLA were supposed to meet last December in Las Vegas, but the game was canceled when UCLA had a COVID-19 outbreak.

Instead, the college basketball blue bloods will meet in the Sweet 16 when the eighth-seeded Tar Heels and fourth-seeded Bruins play Friday night in Philadelphia after the East Region's other game, between Purdue and Saint Peter's.

UCLA (27-7), aiming for its second Final Four trip in as many years, is on high alert after North Carolina (26-9) ran up a big lead on defending champion Baylor before finishing the 93-86 upset in overtime Saturday.

"When we went through our walk-through today, they were up 25," UCLA coach Mick Cronin said Saturday. "So I was curious as to who the heck the one seed was, from what I was watching.

"You can't be playing better than Carolina is playing. They're shooting the lights out."

The Tar Heels broke out and won their final five regular-season games, including their long-discussed upset of Duke in Mike Krzyzewski's last home game before retirement. Still, perhaps because ACC basketball had a down year by its standards, North Carolina flew under the radar and entered the NCAA Tournament as an No. 8 seed.

First-year Carolina coach Hubert Davis has a theory.

"I felt like people have assumed or said or thought that our guys were soft and weren't tough," Davis said Monday on the "Hubert Davis Show" podcast. "My hope is that narrative has definitively changed, because for them to come into overtime (against Baylor) and to come away with a win, you just can't do that without being tough, without being resilient, without having a sense of perseverance."

That toughness shone through in a game featuring 53 personal fouls and the ejection of North Carolina star Brady Manek with 10 minutes left in regulation. He was called for a flagrant-2 foul for elbowing an opponent he was boxing out, a call Davis disagreed with vehemently.

Manek still finished with 26 points in 28 minutes and could terrorize UCLA down low. UNC guard R.J. Davis led all scorers with 30 points.

After getting past No. 13 seed Akron in the first round, UCLA trounced popular mid-major Saint Mary's 72-56 Saturday night. Cronin, who received a contract extension through 2028 last week, guided the Bruins to the second weekend of the tourney one year after they made a run from the First Four to the Final Four.

Tyger Campbell scored 16 points to lead four Bruins in double figures. Jaime Jaquez Jr. had 15 on 6-of-11 shooting, but he suffered an apparent ankle injury in the second half.

Jaquez, the Bruins' leading rebounder (5.7 per game) and second-leading scorer (14.0), was a key figure in last year's run and this year's team, which spent most of the season ranked in the Top 10. Cronin claimed that "if he can walk, he'll play" Friday.

"He's had so many sprained ankles, I don't know how much he can sprain it anymore," Cronin said.

Hubert Davis sees similarities between his Tar Heels and the Bruins.

"They're experienced and they have very talented wing players that can score," Davis said. "They don't have tremendous size, but they have great athleticism and they're very similar to us ... from an offense standpoint, they've got four, five guys that can score at any time."

North Carolina owns a 10-3 all-time record against UCLA, including the past five meetings.

--By Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media

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