5 stats that popped for Kansas in a 2nd-round tournament win over Seton Hall

By Staff     Mar 18, 2018

Kansas guard Devonte' Graham (4) comes away with a ball that was nearly stolen late in the second half, Saturday, March 17, 2018 in Wichita, Kan.

Wichita — The hot shooting hand of guard Malik Newman and a resurgent Udoka Azubuike helped No. 1 seed Kansas get past feisty No. 8 Seton Hall, 8[3-79, in the second round of the NCAA Tournament][1] on Saturday night.

But plenty more went into the Jayhawks’ survive-and-advance victory at Intrust Bank Arena.

Here are five statistics that helped send KU on to Omaha, Neb., and a spot in the 2018 Sweet 16.

No offensive missteps in final minute
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The Jayhawks’ season could have ended ahead of schedule had they not handled their business at the foul line in crunch time, when their lead shrank to as little as three points.

Kansas guard Lagerald Vick (2) drives against Seton Hall forward Michael Nzei (1) during the second half, Saturday, March 17, 2018 in Wichita, Kan.

As Seton Hall senior guard Khadeen Carrington did everything within his power to will the Pirates to an improbable comeback, scoring 13 points in the final 1:06 — no, that’s not a typo — **KU guards Devonte’ Graham and Malik Newman combined to make all 10 of their free-throw attempts in the game’s final 53 seconds.**

Add a press-break out of a timeout that concluded with Graham finding Mitch Lightfoot for a two-handed slam and KU had just enough to move on.

Seton Hall outscored Kansas 16-12 in the final 1:06 thanks to Carrington’s heroics and a last-second Myles Powell 3-pointer. Had the Jayhawks turned the ball over or missed free throws, the game could have flipped.

Vick in rhythm in March
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Lagerald Vick continued trending upward in the postseason in KU’s second-round victory.

Seton Hall forward Desi Rodriguez (20) shows his frustration late in the second half, Saturday, March 17, 2018 in Wichita, Kan.

For the fifth consecutive game — a stretch that began with the Jayhawks’ Big 12 quarterfinal victory over Oklahoma State — the junior guard provided double-digit scoring to the Kansas attack.

**Against Seton Hall, Vick scored 13 points and, as he has in every Big 12 and NCAA tournament game this March, made at least 50% of his shot attempts, going 5 of 9.**

Vick also made more than two 3-pointers for the first time since KU’s home romp over Oklahoma, knocking in 3 of 4 from beyond the arc.

Shutting down Rodriguez
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Two nights after Seton Hall’s leading scorer, senior Desi Rodriguez, went for 20 points in a first-round win over North Carolina State, the 6-foot-6 senior never got rolling against the Big 12 champions.

Seton Hall's Angel Delgado pulls a rebound from Kansas center Udoka Azubuike (35) during the first half, Saturday, March 17, 2018 in Wichita, Kan.

**KU stymied Rodriguez, who entered averaging 17.9 points per game, limiting him to 2-for-10 shooting and 6 points in 35 minutes.**

Vick spent portions of the game defending Seton Hall’s typical double-digit scorer, but other Jayhawks checked him at times, too, as switches occurred within the half court.

Rodriguez went 2 of 7 in the first half and barely even found opportunities to take shots in the second, despite playing 18 minutes.

Surviving Seton Hall’s offensive rebounding
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The Jayhawks have run into their [fair share of strong offensive rebounding teams][2] this season and they continued to escape the wrath of devastating second-chance points in their matchup with Seton Hall.

By the Numbers: Kansas 83, Seton Hall 79.

Although the Pirates grabbed 15 of their missed shots against Kansas, they only cashed in on 14 second-chance points in a tight, loser-goes-home game.

Senior center Angel Delgado often operated as he pleased within the paint, [en route to 24 points and a career-best 23 rebounds][3] (9 on the offensive glass). But the key for Kansas was handling the Pirates when someone other than the skilled 6-foot-10 big controlled the offensive boards.

When Delgado snatched Pirates misses, the ball found its way through the net on those possessions — either by immediate putback, eventual basket or free throws — on six of eight occasions.

However, when a different Pirate came down with an offensive rebound, Kansas repeatedly found its way to a stop. **On six possessions, one of Delgado’s teammates got credited with an offensive rebound. The Pirates scored just one basket as a result.**

More second-chance points could have swung the game in Seton Hall’s favor, but KU found a way to move on, despite finishing with only 23 defensive rebounds on 38 opportunities.

Graham in set-up role
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KU star guard Graham wasn’t himself versus the Pirates, going 1 of 7 from the floor, missing all four of his 3-pointers and finishing with 8 points.

As the senior has shown in the past, though, an off shooting night didn’t get him down. Kansas needed Graham running the show and making plays that led to his teammates scoring. Throughout the second half Graham did just that.

**KU’s leader assisted on 7 of his team’s 15 field goals in the second half to finish with 9 assists in the victory.**

The Jayhawks built a double-digit lead in the second half, not only because of Udoka Azubuike’s presence, but also through Graham’s distributions.

His passes led to a Svi Mykhailiuk layup, an Azubuike slam, a Newman lay-in, a Vick 3-pointer, a Mykhailiuk 3-pointer, a 3 from Newman and the aforementioned Lightfoot jam.

And, after a 4-turnover first half by Graham, he only coughed the ball up once while playing the entirety of the second half.








More news and notes from Kansas vs. Seton Hall

[1]: http://www2.kusports.com/news/2018/mar/17/dominant-dok-azubuike-plays-big-role-lift-jayhawks/
[2]: http://www2.kusports.com/weblogs/smithology/2018/mar/17/jayhawks-look-at-seton-halls-offensive-r/
[3]: http://www2.kusports.com/news/2018/mar/17/angel-delgados-historic-performance-not-enough-sha/

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