Getty ImagesST. LOUIS - Roger Powell Jr. darted in from the top of the key, grabbed the rebound from his own missed 3-pointer and screamed as he slammed the ball through the hoop.
The Illini’s big guys DO have some game.
With Dee Brown and Deron Williams sputtering, Powell came up with a huge second half to make sure Illinois’ special season will last another game.
“I really did pray at halftime. Seemed like it worked, I guess. It was just bouncing my way,” said Powell, a licensed Pentecostal minister.
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As the final seconds ticked down, Powell stood on the court with a big smile on his face and both hands raised in the air. Fellow big man Jack Ingram, who had nine points, waved his arms at the rowdy Illinois fans, urging them to cheer louder.
“We wrote April 4 on the board about six weeks ago, seven weeks ago, and we are playing April 4 for the national championship,” coach Bruce Weber said. “So we’re very excited.”
Actually, the Illini (37-1) have been thinking about playing for the national title for about a year. After losing in the regional semifinals last spring, they set their sights on the Final Four in nearby St. Louis. They break their huddle at the end of each practice with a chant of “national champions.”
They clearly were the best team in the regular season, ranked No. 1 since Dec. 6 and going undefeated until the regular-season finale. They also had the ideal route to the Final Four, playing all of their tournament games less than three hours from campus.
But early on, Illinois looked like it might come up short of its goal. Williams, Brown and Luther Head were dismal in the first half, shooting 6-for-19. Williams made Illinois’ opening bucket, a 3-pointer, then missed on his next four shots, finishing with three points — one less than little-used Nick Smith.
And Illinois’ big men, maligned all year as the team’s weakness, weren’t doing much, either. The Illini put up 3-pointer after 3-pointer, taking a dizzying 19 shots from long range in the first half. But they made only six of them, and their 31-28 lead at the half seemed very shaky, indeed.
“We talked about the 3-pointers. We wanted to get it inside,” James Augustine said. “Coach saw some things that were open, that the bigs weren’t doing, kind of drew it up on the board and it obviously worked.”
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