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Saturday, Nov. 23
The Indiana Daily Student

sports

UNC survives Illinois charge

May gives coach Roy Williams 1st title on 10-11 shooting

ST. LOUIS - Of course, there was no way it was going to be easy. North Carolina did it, though, and now it's time to stop asking Roy Williams that doggone question.\nSean May had 26 points, and the Tar Heels didn't allow a basket over the final, excruciating 2 1/2 minutes Monday night to defeat Illinois 75-70, a win that finally gave Williams, the 17-year coaching veteran, the national championship that was missing from his otherwise stellar résumé.\nFreshman Marvin Williams had a tip-in with 1:26 left, Raymond Felton made three free throws down the stretch, and the Tar Heels (33-4) won their first title since 1993, back when Dean Smith was coaching and Williams was at Kansas in the middle of his Final Four futility.\nLed by May's 10-for-11 shooting, Carolina took a 65-55 lead with 8:51 left, and it looked like Williams would cruise to the championship. But Illinois (37-2) never quits.\nForward Jack Ingram hit a pair of outside jumpers, and Dee Brown scored six points as part of a 10-0 run that tied the game at 65 with 5 1/2 minutes left to set up a fantastic finish.\nWhen it was over -- after Felton had made his last two free throws, after May had cradled his 10th and final rebound -- Williams took off his glasses and started looking for people to hug.\nA few moments later, he was crying, much like he has at the end of every season -- but no ending has been as sweet as this one.\nLuther Head led Illinois with 21 points. He had a wide-open look at a 3-pointer that would have tied the game with 17 seconds left, but it bounded off, and coach Bruce Weber's magical ride with the Illini wound up one win short of the real fairy-tale ending he hoped for.\nHis opponent, Williams, left Kansas to take over the Tar Heels two years ago, after the program Dean Smith built had faltered and fallen to 8-20. Williams took a ton of heat for leaving Kansas after losing in the title game in 2003 -- his fourth close call at the Final Four.\nHe defended the move, saying returning to his alma mater always had been his dream. Then, this week, he dealt with a more familiar question: Did he need to win a title to call his career a success?\nHe told the story of Smith insisting he was no better a coach after he finally won one in 1982, but Williams conceded that answering that "same doggone question" did get a little annoying at times.\nHe finally broke through in a terrific game, the first meeting of the top two teams in the final Associated Press poll since 1975, when UCLA defeated Kentucky.\nAfter May made a short shot with 11:22 left in the first half for an 18-17 lead, Carolina never trailed again -- but this game never really got comfortable.\nMay was unstoppable for the first 12 minutes of the second half, scoring 16 points during that stretch and dishing out two assists to help North Carolina push its lead to as many as 15 and fight off a number of Illinois rallies.\nJames Augustine, charged with stopping the 6-foot-9 center, was in foul trouble through most of it. Weber put him back in to try to slow May down, but oddly it was when Augustine drew his fifth foul with 7 minutes left that the Illini finally caught up.\nThat Illinois could hang in there was no surprise. This was the team that rallied from 15 down with 4 minutes left against Arizona in the regional to make it to its first Final Four since 1989.\nBut the Illini never could take a lead. And after Head hit a 3-pointer with 2:40 left, Deron Williams missed on an open look, Felton stepped in front of a bad pass by Head, then Head missed the potential game-tying shot at the end. In all, the Illini missed five 3-pointers down the stretch, part of a night in which they shot 12-for-40 from long range and just 38 percent overall.

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