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Tennessee fends off Creighton to reach Elite Eight

DETROIT — Dalton Knecht had 24 points, six rebounds, five assists and two steals, and Tennessee moved closer to a victory in its first trip to the Final Four, beating Creighton 82-75 in the semifinals of the Midwest region Friday evening.

Zakai Zeigler added 18 points and six assists for the second-seeded Volunteers.

When Tennessee lost last year in the regional semifinals for the second straight season, Knecht was at Northern Colorado and Zeigler was out with torn knee ligaments.

Dalton Knecht, who scored 24 points, celebrates after Tennessee’s 82-75 Sweet 16 victory over Creighton. Brianna Paciorka/News Sentinel/USA TODAY NETWORK

Coach Rick Barnes’ Vols (27-8) tied the longest NCAA tournament run in school history and hope to go further than the 2010 team that lost by one point to Michigan State in the Elite Eight.

Tennessee will face top-seeded Purdue, which beat Gonzaga earlier Friday night, on Sunday for the Midwest Region title and a Final Four appearance that has been elusive for both schools.

The third-seeded Bluejays (25-10) reached the Sweet 16 for the third time in four years and came within a win of matching their first appearance in a regional final from last year.

Baylor Scheierman, a third-team All-America wing, had 25 points and some of his teammates struggled against a long, athletic team that plays logo defense to the rim.

Steven Ashworth finished with 16 points and Ryan Kalkbrenner had 14 for the Bluejays, who had plenty of fight.

Tennessee went on a stunning 18-0 run early in the second half – taking a 55-39 lead – that forced Creighton coach Greg McDermott to call two timeouts because he wasn’t didn’t want to wait for a television shutdown to stem the tide.

Dalton Knecht shoots at Baylor Scheierman during Tennessee game
Victory of the sweet 16. USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

Scheierman made a 3-pointer to end the drought and then made a three-point play during a 9-0 run that brought the Bluejays within three points with 6:04 to play.

Knecht hit a pair of three-pointers that restored a six-point lead and Zeigler set up Tobe Awaka for a three-point play that put the Vols ahead 71-64 with 1:39 to play.

Tennessee survived the first weekend of the tournament, trailing Texas by four points after opening with a rout of Saint Peter’s, with Knecht combining for 41 points in those games.

The Bluejays advanced to the second weekend of the tournament with a rout of Akron and a double-overtime victory over Oregon.

Creighton coach Doug McDermott reacts with frustration during Tennessee’s victory. Junfu Han: USA TODAY NETWORK

In the Sweet 16, Scheierman had 15 points in the first half and his second assist was a lob that Kalkbrenner slammed in to give the Bluejays a 35-34 lead.

Knecht was at his best during the crucial push at the start of the second half.

The 6-foot-6 wing, who transferred from Northern Colorado after playing at Northeastern Junior College, became the first former junior college player to earn All-America recognition since Larry Johnson in 1991.

Knecht had 10 points in a tightly contested first half that featured eight lead changes, three ties and neither team took a lead by more than four points.

The Vols were pesky on defense, playing chest-to-chest 40 feet from the basket, and forced a team that averages more than 10 turnovers to lose possession four times in the first five minutes.

Tennessee took advantage, scoring eight points off those turnovers.

Perhaps fittingly, both teams weren’t given much breathing room on the field or on the scoreboard.

New York Post

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