NATIONAL INVITATION TOURNAMENT : When Majerus Gets Angry, Utah Loses to Notre Dame
Daimon Sweet sank two free throws with nine seconds left after a technical foul on Utah Coach Rick Majerus, helping Notre Dame beat the Utes, 58-55, Monday in the semifinals of the National Invitation Tournament at New York.
In the final Wednesday, the Irish (18-14) will play Virginia, a 62-56 winner over Florida in the other semifinal.
Utah (23-11), which trailed by 14 points in the first half, took its only lead of the game when Phil Dixon’s three-pointer with 34 seconds remaining put the Utes ahead, 55-54.
But on Notre Dame’s next possession, Majerus went wild after a foul was called on Utah’s Paul Afeaki for pushing LaPhonso Ellis. Majerus pounded his fist and threw a clipboard on the scorer’s table, earning him a technical from referee John Cahill.
Ellis then made one of two free throws and Sweet converted both technical foul shots to put the Irish ahead, 57-55.
Following two timeouts, Notre Dame’s Elmer Bennett was fouled on the inbounds play and hit one of two free throws to make it 58-55.
“I feel bad,†Majerus said of his costly outburst. “I was wrong and I cost my team the game. It (the technical) was deserved. I lost control.â€
However, Majerus insisted that the foul call that triggered the technical was a bad one. Ellis dribbled the ball off his foot as the foul was called, and a Utah player picked it up.
“I thought Ellis hit the ball off his foot and we covered it,†Majerus said. “It’s a shame that the game has to be decided by that kind of call.â€
Asked if he was angry at the officials, who had called a technical on the Utah bench earlier in the second half, Majerus said, “I’m not going to ask any of them on a camping trip this summer.â€
Notre Dame Coach John MacLeod, who used to coach the New York Knicks in Madison Square Garden, defended the crucial call.
“I thought he got bumped, and I was looking right at the play,†MacLeod said. “The official had no one in front of him to block his view and there was no hesitation in blowing the whistle.â€
Virginia 62, Florida 56--Bryant Stith scored 27 points and led a late run that sent Virginia (19-13) past Florida (19-13).
Stith, the school’s all-time scoring leader, had 10 points as Virginia overcame a 49-45 deficit in the final nine minutes.
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