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Seeded 10 and 11, Miami and Iowa State living the dream

Mar 20, 2022; Milwaukee, WI, USA; Wisconsin Badgers guard Brad Davison (34) drives between Iowa State Cyclones guard Izaiah Brockington (left) and forward Aljaz Kunc (right) in the second half  during the second round of the 2022 NCAA Tournament at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel via USA TODAY NETWORK
Credit: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel-USA TODAY NETWORK

Welcome, unlikely combatants, to Friday’s Midwest regional semifinal at Chicago’s United Center.

The 10th-seeded Miami Hurricanes and 11th-seeded Iowa State Cyclones – defense-minded programs with surprising 2022 success — stand two victories away from the Final Four.

A season ago, Iowa State earned two wins, period.

“I mean, it’s unbelievable,” the Cyclones’ Izaiah Brockington said. “I mean, just to think of where we started in June, like a group that was new to each other and just was going out there with the object of turning things around, getting as many wins as we could.

“To end up here, it’s a blessing, man. I’m excited.”

Iowa State followed up its tournament-opening win over No. 6 seed LSU with essentially a road assignment Sunday, facing Wisconsin in Milwaukee. Yet, the Cyclones emerged with another impressive triumph, beating the third-seeded Badgers 54-49.

Under first-year coach T.J. Otzelberger, the Cyclones (25-10) have won each of their NCAA Tournament games by five points, with different players leading the offense. Minnesota transfer Gabe Kalscheur did the trick with 22 points against Wisconsin, while Tyrese Hunter had 23 points in the LSU game.

Despite shooting just 34.5 percent against the Badgers, Iowa State harassed Wisconsin into a 2-for-22 effort from 3-point range.

“That’s what our identity is, our defense,” Kalscheur said. “Our defense influences our offense and gets us going. We knew coming into the game that we just had to be who we are, who we’ve been this whole season and just ramp up our defense and ball pressure and they gave it to us, so that really just led our offense.”

Miami, making its first NCAA appearance in four years, has never advanced beyond the Sweet 16, and like the Cyclones, the Hurricanes thrive behind their guards. Kameron McGusty (17.5 points a game), Isaiah Wong (15.5), Charlie Moore (12.8) and Jordan Miller (10.1) average double-figure scoring for Miami, playing at least 30 minutes per game.

Miami coughed up a late lead Friday in its first-round game against seventh-seeded USC before winning by a basket. Two days later, the Hurricanes trounced No. 2 seed Auburn 79-61, using their quickness and experience to overcome a minus-8 rebounding margin.

Wong scored 21 points and McGusty, a sixth-year senior, added 20 while helping Miami force 13 turnovers and hound the Tigers into 30.4 percent shooting, including 19.2 percent from long range.

“I mean, we practice the same stuff all the time,” Hurricanes coach Jim Larranaga said. “The guys that have developed such great understanding of what their role is and what we’re looking for.

“Our thought going into games is force turnovers and limit our turnovers, but we don’t do anything special. We just run our stuff, and the guys make good decisions. We’ve got really great guards, and the guards handle the ball the whole time.”

Miami committed just seven turnovers in the first two rounds of the Tournament to advance to the Sweet 16 for the third time in 11 seasons under Larranaga, but first since 2016.

“It just feels good to be here,” McGusty said. “I’m so blessed to have these guys with me. “We bust our butts every day, all summer, all fall, and it just feels good. I’m so thankful for these guys, and I love them so much.”

–By Kevin Druley, Field Level Media

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