KU, K-State to play for Final Four
Jayhawks oust Vanderbilt from Regional, 77-64
Posted Saturday, March 26, 1988
advertisement
PONTIAC, Mich. - One game away from goin’ to Kansas City...who would have thunk it?
“There were a lot of times I even wondered if we’d make the NCAA,” conceded Kansas senior Chris Piper. “Now we’re one game from the Final Four. It’s unbelievable.”
Unbelievable. That was the buzzword of the NCAA Midwest Regional here Friday night.
Not only was Kansas State’s 73-70 victory over No. 1 seed Purdue unbelievable, so was Danny Manning.
It was Manning’s 38-point performance - particularly a 25-point first half - that carried Kansas to a 77-64 victory over the Commodores in the first semifinal.
Certainly, not everyone in the Silverdome crowd of 31,309 had settled in when Manning popped a three-point goal just 35 ticks after tipoff.
Talk about a harbinger.
“Usually when he gets confidence early,” KU coach Larry Brown pointed out, “he has games like this.”
Manning has scored more points in a game - his career high is 42; his most this season 39 - but he’s never had a more prolific half than that 25-point first half.
With Manning scoring 11, Kansas bolted to a 19-4 bulge after a little more than nine minutes. Vandy never recovered. Only twice, in fact, would the ‘Dores close to within a single digit, and that was just barely (nine points) and the second half when Manning went 10 minutes without a field goal.
Manning missed eight of 12 shots in the second half after making 12 of 17 in the opening 20 minutes. Still, taken as a whole, 16 of 29 isn’t bad.
Typical Manning? someone asked Brown.
“I don’t know if that’s typical of anybody,” Brown smiled. “He made that three-pointer early and didn’t even get yelled at.
“I can’t remember a game I didn’t yell at him...and I hardly yelled at him tonight.”
Manning was human Friday night. For instance, he grabbed only five rebounds and he matched that number in turnovers.
Still, as impressive as Manning was on offense - and he helped demoralize Vandy early - his one-man show again obscured the other reason Kansas hovers on the brink of the Final Four.
“To me, the biggest factor,” Brown said, “is we got some easy hoops because of our defense. We won the game in the first five minutes defensively.”
Indeed, with the spotlight on Manning, just about everyone overlooked the fact Vanderbilt missed 10 of its first 12 shots and coughed the ball up five times while scoring just four points in 9 1/2 minutes.
Not a surprise, really. Kansas ranks in the top five nationally in field goal percentage defense. Vandy finished at 43.9 percent, a little better actually than the 41.3 percentage the Jayhawks had been surrendering.
Nevertheless, when one player scores 38 points, who wants to talk about defense?
Manning, playing in a record 144th NCAA game (Georgetown’s Patrick Ewing played in 143), boosted his career scoring total to 2,875 points and moved past Larry Bird into eighth place on the NCAA list.
Now the Jayhawks, 12-8 on Feb. 3 and 12-3 since, will meet Kansas State at 12:58 p.m., Lawrence time, on Sunday for the right to make another short trip to Kemper Arena.
“I think this team has improves so much since January,” Brown said.
Box Score
Vandy 29 35 - 64
Kansas 41 36 - 77
Vanderbilt: Frank Kornet 2-5 0-0 4, Eric Reid 1-5 0-0 2, Will Perdue 7-13 2-3 16, Barry Booker 8-16 0-0 22, Barry Goheen 1-7 1-2 3, Scott Draud 1-3 1-2 4, Charles Mayes 0-1 0-0 0, Derrick Wilcox 3-4 0-0 7, Steve Grant 1-2 2-2 4, Fred Benjamin 1-1 0-0 2, Team 25-57 6-9 64.
Three-point goals: 8-20 (Booker 6-13, Draud 1-3, Wilcox 1-1, Mayes 0-1, Goheen 0-2). Assists: 17 (Kornet 4, Goheen 4, Booker 3, Draud 2, Mayes 2, Perdue, Reid). Turnovers: 15 (Kornet 5, Wilcox 3, Booker 2, Goheen 2, Perdue, Draud, Grant). Blocked shots: 3 (Perdue 2, Booker). Steals: 6 (Kornet 2, Wilcox 2, Goheen, Draud).
Kansas: Milt Newton 2-7 0-0 4, Chris Piper 3-5 2-2 8, Danny Manning 16-29 4-7 38, Jeff Gueldner 1-2 0-0 2, Kevin Pritchard 5-6 0-2 11, Scooter Barry 2-4 4-6 8, Mike Maddox 0-0 4-4 4, Keith Harris 0-3 0-0 0, Clint Normore 0-0 0-0 0, Lincoln Minor 0-0 0-0 0, Marvin Mattox 1-1 0-0 2, Team 30-57 14-21 77.
Three-point goals: 3-5 (Manning 2-3, Pritchard 1-1, Barry 0-1). Assists: 21 (Gueldner 7, Pritchard 5, Barry 3, Piper 2, Manning, Newton, Maddox, Harris). Turnovers: 12 (Manning 5, Pritchard 2, Piper 2, Gueldner, Newton, Maddox). Blocked shots: 3 (Manning, Pritchard, Newton). Steals: 6 (Piper, Gueldner, Manning, Pritchard, Harris, Mattox).
- Anthony Collins : OL, Cincinnati Bengals
- Derek Fine : TE, Buffalo Bills
- Charles Gordon : CB, Minnesota Vikings
- Justin Hartwig : OL, Pittsburgh Steelers
- Marcus Henry : WR, New York Jets
- Adrian Jones : OL, Kansas City Chiefs
- David McMillan : LB, Cleveland Browns
- Moran Norris : FB, San Francisco 49ers
- Brandon Rideau : WR, Chicago Bears
- Mark Simmons : WR, Houston Texans
- Aqib Talib : CB, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- All-time list of 'Hawks in the NFL
- Darrell Arthur : F, Memphis Grizzlies
- Mario Chalmers : G, Miami Heat
- Nick Collison : C-F, Seattle Sonics
- Drew Gooden : F-C, Chicago Bulls
- Kirk Hinrich : G, Chicago Bulls
- Darnell Jackson : F, Cleveland Caveliers
- Raef LaFrentz : F, Portland Trailblazers
- Paul Pierce : G-F, Boston Celtics
- Scot Pollard : C-F, Boston Celtics
- Brandon Rush : G, Indiana Pacers
- Billy Thomas : G, Cleveland Cavaliers
- Jacque Vaughn : G, San Antonio Spurs Julian Wright : F, New Orleans Hornets
- All-time list of 'Hawks in the NBA
- Watch this space as we track recruits for the 2008-09 Jayhawks.
- » LB Tharp commits
- » C.J. Henry commits to Memphis, says brother still undecided
- » Henry to visit for Late Night
- » 2008 football signees
- » All football recruiting
- » All basketball recruiting





















2003, 2004, and 2007 EPpy Award Winner.
Add a comment
You'll need a free KUsports.com user account (your LJWorld.com or lawrence.com account will also work).