The Washington Times

Another crushing NCAA exit for Kansas, Self

SAN ANTONIO (AP) - In Bill Self’s eight seasons at Kansas, the Jayhawks have had all sorts of disappointing finishes _ back-to-back first-round departures and last year’s second-round failure when they were the No. 1 overall seed.

This one might be the worst yet.

Staring down what would’ve been the easiest path to a national championship in NCAA tournament history, their status as favorites boosted further by being the lone No. 1 seed left in the field, Kansas blew it again.

The Jayhawks got behind early and hardly threatened the rest of the way in a 71-61 loss to 11th-seeded Virginia Commonwealth in the finals of the Southwest regional on Sunday.

“We’re crushed,” Self said. “We tried real hard and just came up empty against a team that was better than us today.”

A victory would’ve sent Kansas into a Final Four matchup against eighth-seeded Butler, then no better than a No. 3 seed in the finals. Had the Jayhawks won it all, they would’ve shattered the record for the highest sum of seeds faced by the champion.

But instead of strolling into Houston next weekend as the heavy favorites, Kansas became the third No. 1 seed to lose to a No. 11, joining Connecticut in 2006 and Kentucky in 1986.

“Seeds are so overrated,” Self said. “It’s about matchups. Their players could play for us any day.”

It’s easy to figure out what went wrong. The Jayhawks made only 35.5 percent of their shots and 9.5 percent of 3-point tries, both season lows. They hit 15 of 28 free throws (53.6 percent), narrowly better than their season-low.

Their last lead was 10-9. They trailed by a season-high 14 at halftime. The deficit grew to 16 a few seconds later, then Kansas made its lone rally, getting within two points then fading again.

Unlike the 2008 team that walked out of the Alamodome as national champions, the 2011 Jayhawks walked to the locker room blank-faced, hands on hips, occasionally peeking at the wild celebration around them. Marcus Morris tried holding off the tears, but had to pull his jersey over his face by the time he reached the edge of the court.

“We let them beat us,” Markieff Morris said. “We missed a lot of shots we normally make. We missed a lot of free throws that we normally make.”

Kansas reached the regional finals on an 11-game winning streak. In the tournament, the Jayhawks hadn’t trailed by more than two points, and won by at least 14, in victories over teams seeded 16th, ninth and 12th.

As much as they claimed they would respect VCU as much as a Duke or North Carolina, the Big 12 champions still knew they were facing the fourth-place finisher from the Colonial Athletic Association. The lack of respect may have oozed out during a pregame meeting of team captains, when _ according to VCU’s Joey Rodriguez and two of his teammates _ one of the Morris twins said, “The run ends here.”

The lack of respect was evident again after the game. Said Markieff Morris: “Probably the best game they played ever, probably the best game ever as a school.”

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