Auburn's NBA talent vs Miami's experience for Sweet 16 spot
GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) — It's Auburn's young roster of future NBA players against Miami's older, small-ball attack for a spot in the Sweet 16.
The second-seeded Tigers (28-5) and its duo down low in 6-foot-10 Jabari Smith and 7-1 Walker Kessler will try to put on another dominant show Sunday night when they face the 10th-seeded Hurricanes (24-10)
Smith, the Southeastern Conference freshman of the year, is a consensus NBA lottery pick — maybe No. 1 overall — should he turn pro. Kessler is considered a lower first-rounder after leading the country with nearly five blocked shots a game this season.
Miami coach Jim Larranaga compared Smith to NBA superstar Kevin Durant. Paired with Kessler, they are “a one-two punch that most teams just don’t have,” the coach said.
There are not many teams with Miami's experience. The Hurricanes have six players with four or more years playing college hoops, including three sixth-year “super seniors” in the starting lineup.
Auburn coach Bruce Pearl is grateful for his skilled young players, yet vexed about Miami's old-school knowledge heading into the most important game of the year.
“My best player's 18” years old, Pearl said. “Their best player is 25.”
Close, Coach. Miami's Charlie Moore is 24 and at his fourth stop of his college basketball journey. He began at California, spent two years at Kansas until moving on to DePaul and, this past offseason, the Hurricanes.
Moore had perhaps his biggest moment in the opening round, hitting two free throws with
The Trojans were big, fast and skilled, much like Auburn. No matter. Miami will rely on what brought it to the NCAAs in the first place.
“Charlie is for us what Chris Paul was for Wake Forest,” Miami guard Kameron McGusty said. “He's our quarterback.”
Larranaga understood before the season he'd have to adjust his offense — “We do not have a back-to-the-basket player,” he said — to his personnel. When Moore came in, Larranaga knew he'd found the guy to direct the transition offense necessary to compete with opponents loaded with taller players.
“We handed him the ball and said, ‘Lead us,’” the coach recalled.
Moore and McGusty rescued Miami in the opening round after leading scorer Isaiah Wong had fouled out of a one-point game with just more than two minutes left. McGusty scored five straight points before Moore's winning foul shots.
“We haven’t seen a team like this in a while, but we're a team that plays defense,” Auburn guard Zep Jasper said. “We hang our heads high on defense.”
Auburn also hangs its head high on Smith, Kessler and its inside game.
Smith had 20 points and 14 rebounds in
“I told him you look like LeBron out there today,” Auburn guard Wendell Green Jr. said of Smith's jam.
Kessler, a North Carolina transfer, had 13 points, 10 rebounds and nine blocks.
Smith got several texts and calls about the jam, including one from his father, Jabari Smith Sr., a former LSU forward who played professionally in the NBA and overseas.
“He said it wasn’t better
Less impressed — or at least not wanting to heap too much praise on Smith — were Miami's players.
“Yeah, we saw it,” Miami guard Jordan Miller said. “It was a good basketball play.”
Hurricanes forward Sam Waardenburg, at 6-10, is the tallest in the team's regular rotation. He said they've regularly faced talented, athletic players like Smith in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
“We're going to have a game plan for him,” he said. “We're going to have a game plan for all them and we're going to be ready.”
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