South Florida exits tourney after loss to Ohio

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- Stan Heath knows he should be happy South Florida reached the NCAA tournament for the first time in two decades, especially after posting a losing record a year ago and getting off to a rough start this season. Still, the coach wanted and expected more from the Bulls.
"This will sting me until I die," he said. "This team was coachable, they listened, they bought in, they hugged each other, they lifted each other up. Sometimes when your team can I guess what I call police themselves... you have a special team, and that's what we had this year."
As special as this South Florida team was, it didn't turn into an extra-special NCAA tournament run. Walter Offutt scored 21 points, D.J. Cooper had 19 and No. 13 seed Ohio beat the Bulls 62-56 on Sunday night to advance to the Midwest Regional semifinals.
The Bobcats (29-7), who opened the tournament with an upset against fourth-seeded Michigan, will play No. 1 seed North Carolina in St. Louis on Friday in their first trip to the round of 16 since they lost to the Wolverines in the regional finals in 1964.
Ohio trailed by two when Offutt swished a 3-pointer, launching a 10-0 run for the Bobcats. A pair of free throws by Cooper made it 54-46 with 3:28 left.
The Bobcats had a 59-53 lead when Toarlyn Fitzpatrick connected for South Florida's first 3-pointer of the half. But Cooper went 3 for 4 from the line while the Bulls missed three shots in the final 36 seconds.
"I do think our guys have a chip on their shoulder," said Ohio coach John Groce, who has led the Bobcats to two NCAA tournaments in his four seasons with the team. "I think our guys look forward to playing on the big stage against quality competition."
Victor Rudd Jr. and Anthony Collins scored 13 points apiece and Augustus Gilchrist had 12 for the Bulls (22-14), who were playing in their third game in five days with a travel day in between. South Florida beat California on Wednesday and Temple on Friday night in the second round.
If fatigue was a concern for South Florida, it didn't show it. The Bulls relied on their stingy defense to limit Ohio to just 30.4 percent shooting in the first half.
But while the Bulls managed to keep the Bobcats away from the rim, they couldn't stop them at the perimeter. Half of Ohio's second-half buckets were 3s, and the Bobcats finished 9 for 18 from long range.
"It really seemed like they hadn't missed any 3s in the second half," Collins said. "We just didn't execute our defensive assignments the right way. They got open and made the shots."
Two of their five treys in the second half came after either a flagrant or technical foul.
Rudd was called for the flagrant, and Offutt hit both of his free throws and a 3-pointer that tied it at 31 with 15:52 to play.
Jawanza Poland was given the technical after hanging on the rim following a dunk. Nick Kellogg sank both free throws and a 3-pointer that again tied the game, this time at 42 with 9:23 to play.
Just over 2 minutes later, the Bobcats put together the 10-0 run that gave them the lead and control, and the Bulls missed out on a shot at being the only team from the first four games to advance to the Sweet 16.
"It wasn't like we didn't play," Heath said. "We lost to a good basketball team."
The Big East's top scoring defensive team and the Mid-American Conference tournament champions turned out to be a good match for one another.
Strong defense from both sides turned the first half into a mostly slow-paced affair. South Florida managed just 40.7 percent shooting in the first 20 minutes.
The Bobcats had the hot hand first. Cooper sank a 3-pointer, Reggie Keely hit a pair of free throws, and a steal by T.J. Hall led to a layup by Cooper that gave Ohio a 12-6 lead 6 minutes into the game.
Rudd Jr. answered with a resounding alley-oop dunk on a pass from Collins that launched a 13-1 run by the Bulls. A 3-pointer by Rudd gave them a 19-13 lead with 5:31 in the first half, and South Florida held a 27-21 lead at halftime.
Ohio stayed in the game with its perimeter shooting, going 4 for 10 from long range in the first half, while South Florida relied on its size. The Bulls outscored the Bobcats 16-6 in the paint in the first half.
"We didn't do anything differently (in the second half)," Offutt said. "Coach told us to come out and swing aggressively from the start. We went out there and played aggressively and hit some shots. We were fortunate to beat a tough team at the end and got the win."