go to MSN.com
ESPN Network: ESPN | NBA.com | NHL.com | RPM | ABCSports | EXPN | Insider | Shop | Fantasy

  NCAA Tournament
   Bracket
   East Region
   Midwest Region
   South Region
   West Region
Keyword
M COLLEGE BB
Scores
Schedules
Rankings
Standings
Statistics
Transactions
Teams
Players
Recruiting
Message Board
CONFERENCES


BROADCAST
TV Schedule
Video Highlights
Audio Highlights
SHOP@ESPN.COM
TeamStore
ESPN Auctions
SPORT SECTIONS
NBA
   Scores
NHL
   Scores
M Col. BB
   Scores
W Col. BB
   Scores
MLB
   Scores
Golf
   Scores
NFL | NFL Draft
RPM.ESPN.com
Col. Football
Tennis
Soccer | Soccernet
Outdoors
Horse Racing
Boxing
Recruiting
PBA Bowling
NCAA
Action Sports
Sports Business
WNBA
ESPNdeportes
More Sports
GAME DAY RECAP Friday, March 15
Cal gets smart in schooling Penn

BOX SCORE | RECAP

PITTSBURGH (AP) -- The NCAA Tournament committee didn't do California any favors, forcing the Pac-10 school to travel across the country for its first-round game.

The Ivy League has improved and Penn is certainly a solid representative. But in the end, Joe Shipp, Brian Wethers and company were too much for Penn to handle. Shipp was solid on the foul line hitting 11 of 14 free throws to help ice the victory.

Ben Braun is a solid coach who did wonders at Eastern Michigan -- now he's trying to get Cal to the Sweet 16. The Pac-10 is off to a terrific start with Arizona, Cal, Stanford and Oregon advancing already.

And now that they're here, the Golden Bears figure they might as well spend the weekend.

"Why not?" guard Brian Wethers said.

Joe Shipp scored 20 points as Cal played a solid all-around game and advanced to the second round with an 82-75 victory over Pennsylvania in the South Regional on Friday.

The sixth-seeded Golden Bears (23-8) will play Pittsburgh in the second round Sunday. The third-seeded Panthers, playing a short walk from their campus, beat Central Connecticut State 71-54.

Wethers hit several key jumpers and added 19 points for Cal, which avoided being beaten in the first round for the second straight year by holding off the 11th-seeded Quakers (25-7).

Last March, Cal was eliminated in the opening round by Fresno State, resulting in a plane ride back from Memphis that still hurts 12 months later.

The Bears were determined not to let it happen again.

"We're a lot more focused, a lot more prepared and a lot more hungry," Wethers said. "Last year, we were excited to be in. But this year, we really wanted to get a win in this tournament and make a run."

They're off.

Ugonna Onyekwe, the Ivy League's player of the year, and Koko Archibong led Penn with 16 points apiece. Jeff Schiffner added 12 before fouling out.

Much of the talk leading up to tipoff had focused on the Ivy's Quakers, who had won 10 straight games and 15 of 17 to get into the tournament.

Unlike Princeton, which staged NCAA tourney upsets in 1996 and '98, Penn is a much more athletic team. And based on their regular-season wins over Georgia Tech and Temple, the Quakers became a trendy office-pool pick to knock off Cal.

"That bothered us a little bit," Wethers admitted. "We tried to look at it as if we were the underdogs."

But it was Cal that looked like the Ivy League squad, making backdoor cuts and playing hard-nosed defense.

Cal, which held Pac-10 teams to 66.4 points per game this season, came up with nine steals and held the Quakers to 42 percent shooting.

"We wanted to make them work for everything," Shipp said. "In the second half, we really stepped it up after we gave them too many easy looks in the first half."

Cal's man-to-man pressure made it tough on Penn for the entire 40 minutes, and even when they led by double digits late, the Bears didn't back down.

"I thought we had some good looks, but we just didn't shoot well enough," Penn coach Fran Dunphy said. "Give Cal credit. They made big shots at big times."

This wasn't the same Cal team that got drubbed by 46 points by Arizona on March 2, but more like the one which started the season 9-1 and won seven of eight in conference play before the meltdown against the Wildcats.

"Yeah, we've taken our bumps and bruises in the past," Wethers said. "But we've learned from our losses. I think this was more like the team we really are."

Leading by four points with 15:41 left, Cal's Ryan Forehan-Kelly hit a 3-pointer, and Shipp had a thunderous dunk over Archibong to cap a 9-0 run that put the Bears ahead by 13 with 12:26 remaining.

"That was huge," Cal coach Ben Braun said of Shipp's dunk, which he punctuated by walking over the legs of Archibong, who was sprawled on the floor. Shipp "doesn't need to see that again. I'm probably going to turn off the TV when that play comes on."

But with Wethers the only Cal player looking to shoot, Penn crawled back with three 3-pointers and pulled within 65-59 on Archibong's two free throws with 4:16 left.

That's when Shipp brought Cal out of its offensive funk by draining an NBA-range 3-pointer on a designed play to make it 68-59 with 3 minutes to go.

"That was the play," said Shipp, who scored 11 points on free throws. "I got a great look, took my time and just stroked it. It was a good shot and we needed a score."



ALSO SEE
Mens College Basketball Scoreboard

Pennsylvania Clubhouse

California Clubhouse


RECAPS
Final
(2) Oklahoma 71
(15) Illinois (Chi.) 63


Final
(1) Maryland 85
(16) Siena 70


Final
(1) Cincinnati 90
(16) Boston U. 52


Final
(3) Pittsburgh 71
(14) Central Conn. 54


Final
(2) Connecticut 78
(15) Hampton 67


Final - 2nd OT
(12) Creighton 83
(5) Florida 82


Final
(4) Illinois 93
(13) San Diego State 64


Final
(3) Mississippi St. 70
(14) McNeese State 58


Final
(7) Xavier 70
(10) Hawaii 58


Final
(7) N.C. State 69
(10) Michigan State 58


Final
(6) California 82
(11) Pennsylvania 75


Final
(8) Wisconsin 80
(9) St. John's 70


Final
(11) Southern Illinois 76
(6) Texas Tech 68


Final
(8) UCLA 80
(9) Mississippi 58


Final
(3) Georgia 85
(14) Murray State 68


Final
(6) Texas 70
(11) Boston College 57






ESPN.com: HELP | ADVERTISER INFO | CONTACT US | TOOLS | SITE MAP
Copyright ©2002 ESPN Internet Ventures. Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and Safety Information are applicable to this site. Employment opportunities at ESPN.com.

go to MSN.com Make it Your Home
©2002 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.