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ATLANTA - Some 3-pointers are worth more than others.
Florida specializes in those 3s, the ones that not only put three points on the scoreboard but steal momentum from an opponent.
The Gators hit 10 3-pointers Monday night in the 84-75 victory over Ohio State that sealed their place in college basketball history as the first repeat champion in 15 years.
Not all were the backbreakers from beyond the arc, but enough were.
The Buckeyes had two problems: They couldn’t stop Florida from making 3s and they couldn’t make any themselves. They kept missing and missing and missing.
Lee Humphrey, Corey Brewer and Taurean Green — Florida’s trio of 3-makers — started hitting early against Ohio State and didn’t stop, finishing 10-for-18. They combined for 43 points with Green getting 16, Humphrey 14 and Brewer 13.
“I think it was just taking what the defense was giving us,” Green said. “Coach always tells us, once you have a crack, let it go, shoot the ball with confidence. When they made runs, I think we did a good job of just coming back and knocking down 3s.”
They’d done this before in this NCAA tournament, starting with the regional final win over Oregon after many had questioned Florida’s ability to put away opponents early in the first three rounds.
On Monday night, Brewer, just a 33 percent 3-point shooter, hit the first of the big ones.
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Then it was all three of the Gators’ shooters hitting big shots.
Ivan Harris hit Ohio State’s second and last 3 of the first half with 5:37 to go to bring the Buckeyes within 24-22 and again bring the fans to life.
Humphrey, the most prolific 3-point shooter in NCAA tournament history, hit one 16 seconds later. Brewer nailed another with 4:28 left after Al Horford had grabbed an offensive rebound. Green capped the 9-0 run with 3:48 left and Florida had a 33-22 lead.
“I thought the 3-point line was key,” Humphrey understated. “That’s one of our main goals on defense, stop the 3-point line. Any time you can hit a string of 3s in a row, get a good rebound like Al did, kick it out for a 3, it’s good for kind of stopping momentum for a little bit.”
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It was more of the same in the second half.
Oden had a big rebound dunk to make it 46-38, then blocked a shot. But Humphrey hit a 3 when Florida corralled the rebound.
Mike Conley Jr. got the Buckeyes within 53-46 with a reverse layup. Humphrey hit a 3 on the next possession.
Ohio State got within 66-60 with 5:03 left on a free throw by Oden. Green nailed a 3 12 seconds later and the Buckeyes got no closer.
“It was real deflating. You try to make a run and they come back every time,” said Ohio State’s Ron Lewis, who was 0-for-4 on 3s. “When you’re trying to get back in the game, you’re out there shooting, thinking and knowing it’s about to fall for you, but it’s not going in for you. It’s real frustrating.”
Butler was 1-for-6 on 3s and Harris finished 2-for-8. Ohio State came into the game shooting 37 percent on 3s and the Buckeyes had upped that to 39 percent in the tournament.
Florida came into the game shooting 41 percent from 3-point range for the season. The Gators’ opponents hit just 28 percent from beyond the arc.
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Tim Hardaway Jr. scored 15 points and Evan Smotrycz added 13, helping No. 22 Michigan remain unbeaten at home with a 70-61 win over Illinois on Sunday.
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