PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas (AP) – The crowd at the Imperial Arena was ready for the big upset. No. 2 Louisville was trying to hang on against Northern Iowa.
The last time the Panthers were going after a highly ranked team they got it, beating top-ranked Kansas 69-67 when Ali Farokhmanesh was the name on everybody’s lips for quite a few days in March 2010.
There was no wild celebrating this time, the Panthers just didn’t have enough and they lost 51-46 to the Cardinals on Thursday night in the first round of the Battle 4 Atlantis.
Louisville led by 18 points with just under 12 minutes to play. Somehow the Panthers kept chipping away and they were within one point with 2:06 to play.
“I kept telling the guys to stay with it – one possession at a time,” said Marc Sonnen, who finished with 11 points. “Stay with how we play and keep getting stops – that was our focus. It didn’t go our way, but we fought back hard and kept sticking with it.”
Russ Smith scored 16 points, including the deciding three-point play with 5.1 seconds left.
The Cardinals had a bad first half, looked as if they straightened things out but then stumbled to the finish.
“I think they scouted us perfectly. I think they did a really good job taking away all our pick and rolls, packing it in,” Louisville coach Rick Pitino said. “But we also played excellent defense and made big plays. We knew this was going to be a war and was going to go down to the buzzer.
“We played hard, but they made us look bad,” he said.
Louisville (4-0) will face No. 13 Missouri in Friday night’s semifinals. The Tigers beat Stanford 78-70.
The Cardinals somehow held a 26-20 halftime lead despite shooting 27.0 percent from the field (10 of 37) and committing 10 turnovers.
They held Northern Iowa (3-1) to one field goal over the opening 10:47 of the second half and that cut Louisville’s lead to 40-24. The Panthers were 1 of 13 from the field and committed eight turnovers in that span.
“At 40-22, all the momentum was on Louisville’s side,” Northern Iowa coach Ben Jacobson said. “You keep thinking about making the right plays and doing a couple things. At the same time, you think you have let a couple of opportunities go on layups and ball-handling plays we didn’t make. But that is where the guys get a lot of credit for continuing to get back and transition and continue to defend and block out, sharing the offense.”
It was far from an easy ride to the finish as the Cardinals went 5:12 without scoring and suddenly the Panthers were chipping away.
Jake Koch made two free throws with 2:06 to cut Louisville’s lead to 45-44.
Gorgui Dieng scored for the Cardinals and after a missed 3 by Northern Iowa, Luke Hancock made one of two free throws for Louisville with 54 seconds left.
Koch made two free throws with 42 seconds left to make it 48-46.
Peyton Siva drove the lane and missed a short shot for Louisville but the ball was tied up and the arrow favored the Cardinals with 6.3 seconds left. On the inbounds pass Wayne Blackshear found Smith who laid it in and was fouled with 5.1 seconds left for the final margin.
Sonnen had 11 points for Northern Iowa and Koch finished with 10.
“We knew coming in how good they are,” Sonnen said. “They are No. 2.”
Nate Buss was the man who made the difference for the Panthers scoring eight points in the final 13 minutes – his only playing time of the game. The 6-foot-9 sophomore didn’t score as a freshman and had a total of 24 points coming in.
“We did a great job of them not intimidating us,” Buss said. “We’re just as tough and can be just as aggressive. Our mentality coming in was a huge part of why it was the way it was.”
Louisville finished shooting 30.6 percent (19 of 62) while the Panthers hit 34.8 percent (16 of 46).
The Cardinals had a 46-28 rebound advantage including 21-5 on the offensive end.
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