Prescott wins NCAkik By LORI SHONTZ He had made it look easy. But it wasn't. the fall sei ° Collegian Sports Writer "No one thinks about losing 15 pounds. All the death. Whe) extra running, the sprints, pull-ups, lifting weights, Prescott :40011t lOWA CITY, lowa The first time assistant jumping rope —no one looks at all that," Prescott more that wrestling coach John Fritz saw Jeff Prescott wres- said. • "He's a tle, he loved Prescott's aggressiveness. Instead of sleeping the night before the final, it affect hi "I thought if only everyone wrestled that way, Prescott thought about all his hard work. And he Prescott it would be great," Fritz said. thought about his father, his No. 1 fan, who died and coachi ~! ..—• '''f" - Prescott's aggressiveness has been his trade- last November. Prescott dedicated this season to ' & '4110.0 0 mark, and Saturday night it won him a national his father and wanted to win a national "You lu . % title at 118 pounds and the Outsatnding Wrestler championship for him. there," he • . 0 Award of the NCAA Tournament. Before the fmal match, Prescott placed a picture the time, ' "It's just the highest high you can ever get," of his father in trainer Dan Monthley's hands. they were _. • Prescott said. "He won it for . . . well, he won it for himself, ImmediL Collegian PhotolDdan Gleiter After major decisioning Chad Zaputil of lowa, and that's important, but we're all thinking of his championshit 14-0, in the championship match, Prescott jumped father right now," Fritz said, wiping his eyes. She told hi" Jeff Prescott • into Fritz's arms and cried. Prescott withdrew from school partway through standing ' S p orts 13 The Daily Collegian JMU upsets No. 1 PSU, 73-71 By MICHAEL MATVEY Collegian Sports Writer It wasn't supposed to end this way On Saturday, in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, the No. 1 wom en's basketball team lost to James Madison, 73-71, in front of 6,0g7 fans— ending what could have been a dream season. The Lady Lions finished the season at 29-2 and had their 28-game home winning streak and 18-straight win streak broken. James Madison improves to 26-4 and will play this Thursday against fourth-seeded Clem son in the East Regionals at the Pales tra in Philadelphia. But the only word the can really describe the loss is shocking. The defeat is even more unbelieva ble knowing that the Lady Lions scored the first 11 points of the game and led by 12 at halftime. But in the tournament anything can happen and the Dukes proved that on Saturday in front of a mystified crowd. "I feel bad for the kids. I feel bad for our two assistant coaches and I feel very, very bad for the seniors," Coach Rene Portland said. "I am stunned and very, very disappointed." "I have never been involved in a better comeback than the one we put on today. I am so proud of the effort of our kids and the courage it took," James Madison coach Sheila Moor man said. Slowly in the second half, the Dukes began to cut the lead mainly on thbir 55.6 shooting percentage. This was also helped by the Lady Lions shooting only 32.4 percent. Another stat that led to the victory was that Penn State was outrebounded, 37-36, by a team that had no one taller than 6'o". "If you point out the things that cost us the game rebounding was a big key," Portland said. The James Madison attack was keyed by Vicki Harris, who scored 18 points (12 in the second half ). But the win was very much a team effort. Brandy Cruthird scored 11 points and defensively limited Susan Robinson to 10 points. Paula Schuler had 13 points while Jeanine Michealsen added 11. The James Madison comeback seemed harmless when Harris canned a 12-footer at the beginning of the sec ond half. After Cruthird hit a 6-foot jumper, however, the lead was cut to four points, 4137, at the 16:47 mark. One of the big reasons that Penn State dipped offensively in the second half was because Robinson picked up her third foul at 19:31 and didn't return until the 12:14 mark. Penn State called a timeout and there was no real sense of urgency as the Lady Lions realized that they had to crank their play up a notch. Penn State appeared to be doing that when it increased the lead to 45- 38 after guard Dana Eikenberg sank a 8-foot runner. But James Madison scored the next five points and the Penn State lead was cut to 45-43. Then Lady Lion guard Tanya Gar ner stepped to the forefront. Whenever Penn State needed a basket in the sec ond half, Garner answered. This time she scored a layup and Penn State was back up by four points. Garner fin ished with 24 points on 10-of-17 shoot ing. But Penn State could not stop the Dukes' tide and at 12:14 mark the unthinkable happened. Cruthird hit two free throws and James Madison Please see LADY CAGERS, Page 24. Confidence, qui By KENT PETERSEN Collegian Sports Writer "The first five minutes are very important to us." Since Wednesday night's NCAA first-round win over Kentucky, that's what James Madison wom en's basketball coach Shelia Moorman has told her players. Stay in the game early to have a shot at upsetting No. 1 Penn State. "If we can weather the first five minutes, that's very important to us . ." So much for coaching strategy. In Saturday's first five minutes, the Lady Lions leaped out to an 11-0 lead and Moorman had to call a timeout before the Rec Hall crowd blew the roof off the building. But maybe Moorman meant the second half's first five minutes. With JMU down 12, 41-29, the visitors did some comebacking of their own, going on a 14- Senior co-captain Tanya Gamer (34), playing in her final game at Penn State, drives to the basket in Saturday's game Garner's 24 points were not enough as No. 1 Penn State was shocked by James Madison 73-71. Mental lapses mar team effort By KENT PETERSEN Collegian Sports Writer The celebration had begun. Players jumping on top of each other. Fans going crazy. The band striking up the school song. But it wasn't New Orleans. It wasn't even the regionals. It was Saturday afternoon in Rec Hall and it was the second round of the NCAA Tourna ment. And worst of all for the women's basketball team, it was James Mad ison that was doing all the hooping and hollering. For the No. 1 and East Region top seed Lady Lions, the 73-71 loss was a bitter end to what had been the most successful of any of its past seasons. The disappointment almost hung over ckness spark JMU comeback 4 run and reducing the deficit to only two, 45-43. That stretch provided the confidence for their 73-71 upset win. "I've never been involved in a better comeback than the one we were involved in," Moorman said. "The courage it took from our players, especially after the last few days, all we have talked about was the first five minutes. "It's hard not to be shell-shocked by the environ ment (6,087 in attendance). We were a little tenta tive at first, but we felt that if we could get out of the first half under double digits we'd be in great shape. We almost did that." After Penn State grabbed the early lead, James Madison used its speed and quickness on both ends of the floor especially in the second half. Offen sively, the players would use their speed to get a step advantage on the Lady Lions inside and often got short layups or close jump shots. everyone and everything in the build ing. "I'm stunned and very, very disap pointed," a dejected Rene Portland said in the interview room afterward. "You have to practice hard to play hard and maybe we didn't practice hard enough. If we would have won this, by one point or two points, we would have considered ourselves lucky. Right now, we consider our selves unlucky.- "We didn't play a very good mental game at all," forward Susan Robinson added. After guard Tanya Garner's last second 3-pointer was swatted away by JMU senior forward Jeanine Micheal sen, followed by the sound of the final buzzer, the Penn State players dropped to their knees in shock and total disbelief. It was over. And all that was left for Penn State was to wonder what went wrong. ■ A 32 percent field goal percent age in the second half. ■ Getting outrebounded 37-36 to a team that had no players over 6'o". ■ At times in the second half, looking disoriented with ill-advised passes and poor shot selection while trying to comeback, from, at one point, an eight-point deficit with 7:05 to play. PSU led by 12 at halftime. That 20-point turnaround in the ini tial 13 minutes of that half was the dif ference. Penn State did cut the lead to one, 62-61 on forward Lynn Dougher- Please see FRUSTRATION, Page 24. The quickness advantage also enabled JMU to sneak in and grab rebounds, despite having a tre mendous disadvantage height-wise no impact players on the team were over 6'o". It outrebounded Penn State, 37-36. And on defense, the Dukes again mostly in the second half would step in front of a PSU player and either steal, deflect or disrupt an incoming pass. "They outhustled us and we didn't get the job done," forward Susan Robinson said. It's not the first time the Dukes have went into a higher-rated opponents' lair and come away victo rious. In 1986, the Dukes went to Charlottesville, Va. and beat nationally-regarded Lady Cavaliers, 71- 62. That team, like this one, according to Moorman, had no center and played great team defense. She added those were the keys Saturday. "We just have a team," Moorman said. "We build our defense from the outside in." 118-pound title tmester to better deal with his father's ,en he returned for the spring semester, had to toughen his mind. Mental strength, tn anything, wins national titles. t very caring kid," Fritz said. "But he lets tim I credited his teammates, roommates ies with helping him stay focused. :now, you need someone and they're said. "I didn't know I needed them at but now I think about it and I did and there." tately after receiving his national ip plaque, Prescott called his mother. dm to call back after he won the Out- Wrestler Award, but Prescott didn't Collegian Photo/Jeff Farrar Cagers exit NCAAs in 2nd round, 71-68 By CHRIS MARTIN Collegian Sports Writer SYRACUSE, NY - There was only one glass slipper to go around at the Carrier Dome yesterday. And after the East Region's Cinderel la teams - 13th-seed Penn State and 12th-seed Eastern Michigan - tossed it around like a hot potato for 40 minutes, it fell at EMU's feet in overtime. More specifically, it landed in the hands of senior point guard Lorenzo Neely. The senior tallied six of his 18 points in the extra session as EMU advanced to the Sweet 16 for the first time in its history with a thrilling 71-68 victory over the Lions. "Lorenzo took over the game down the stretch," EMU coach Ben Braun said. "There's not a better player in those situations that I've seen. He wants the ball in his hands and he's willing to take the challenge on his shoulders." Eastern Michigan (26-6), the lowest seeded team remaining in the field, will face top seed North Carolina at the Meadowlands Friday. Penn State (21- 11), in its first NCAA tourney since 1965, closes its comeback season winners of four of its last five games. Neely started the overtime with a slick backdoor feed to center Marcus Freddie Bames(2l) dishes a pass during the Lions' first•round win over UCLA. The Lions lost to Eastern Michigan, 71.68, in overtime yesterday to fall from the NCAAs. EMU's clutch shooting seals overtime triumph By TERRY HESS Collegian Sports Writer SYRACUSE, N.Y. With just over a minute gone by in overtime of its East Regional second-round game with East ern Michigan yesterday at the Carrier Dome, Penn State had to feel good about its chances of reaching the Sweet 16. After falling behind 62-58 in overtime, backup center C.J.Johnson was fouled by EMU center Marcus Kennedy. Not only did the Lions pull within two with Johnson's two free throws, but Kennedy. who had overpowered the Lions' big men all afternoon and had a game-high 21 points left the game with five fouls. After a EMU miss, Penn State for ward Jamesßarnes made a layup and was fouled by opposing forward Kory Hallas with 3:04 left. Hallas, who kept EMU close in the first half with 12 points, was also gone with his fifth per sonal. Barnes nailed the free throw to put the Lions up 63-62. "I was encouraged," Coach Bruce Parkhill said. "I thought we had a great shot to win at that point in time. But sometimes late in the game it comes down to defense and free-throw shoot ing." "We felt if we could use some clock expect to talk to his mother again before leaving lowa. "There's just so many big guys in this tourna ment," he said, surrounded by fans wanting an autograph or a handshake. "It really hasn't sunk in yet —it'll probably hit me tomorrow at 6:30 a .m." Prescott won the OW because he dominated every one of his opponents. He pinned Navy's Jeff Stepanik in the first round, pinned North Caroli na's Ty Moore in the second and major decisioned eighth-seeded Eric Akin of lowa State in the quar terfinals. In the semifinals, Prescott faced Lew Rosselli of Edinboro, whom he major decisioned to win the Eastern Wrestling League title. This time Rosselli Please see PRESCOTT, Page 16 Monday, March 18, 1991 More NCAA Tournament coverage Kennedy who scored on an open layup. He followed with a drive of his own, fin ishing a give -and-go play with Kennedy. The lethal combintion came to an abrupt end as Kennedy picked up his fifth personal on a loose ball with 3:50 to go. The senior powered for a game high 21 points. Lion forward James Barnes took advantage of Kennedy's absence and hit a layup and foul shot to give Penn State a 63-62 lead. More importantly, EMU forward Kory Hallas found a spot next to Kennedy - picking up his last foul on the play. With the pair on the bench, Neely took over. He sank a pair of free throws with 1:30 to give EMU another three-point advantage, 66-63. "We knew it was up to me and the Thomas twins (Carl and Charles) to step up our level of play and that's what we did," Neely said. "We're seniors and we've been there before. As a team, I thought we did real well." • Please see CAGERS, Page 24. and shorten the game up in the second half we'd be OK," Eastern Michigan coach Ben Braun said. "But then Mar cus and Kory fouled out in overtime and it looked like we were in trouble." It would have been easy for Eastern Michigan to fold it up. But in the clutch EMU did exactly what Parkhill said could determine the game, played tough defense and hit its free throws. In came seldom used forwards Roger Lewis and Mike Boykin to replace Ken nedy and Hallas. "When I went out, I told Mike all he had to do is play defense and rebound," Hallas said. "I knew he and Roger would do a good job because they've played well for us all year." On the next possession, Eastern Mich igan's slick point guard Lorenzo Neely drove the lane and attempted a layup. The ball was swatted right back at him by Lions' guard Monroe Brown but EMU forward Charles Thomas caught the ball on the fly and laid it in to grab the lead back. Forward Deßon Hayes missed a jumper for the Lions and James Barnes fouled Neely who buried two free throws with 1:30 left to put EMU up 66-63. Brown kept the Lions close with a run ning 10-foot jumper but Hayes fouled Page 21 Collegian Photo/Chris Gaydosh Please see EMU, Page 24