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Ducks fall on road to Buffaloes

By Pat Graham / The Associated Press
Published: March 08. 2013 4:00AM PST
Colorado’s Beau Gamble, center, moves to the basket as Oregon’s Carlos Emory, right, and Coleton Baker, left, defend during the second half of Thursday night’s game in Boulder, Colo. The Buffaloes beat the Ducks 76-53.
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Colorado’s Beau Gamble, center, moves to the basket as Oregon’s Carlos Emory, right, and Coleton Baker, left, defend during the second half of Thursday night’s game in Boulder, Colo. The Buffaloes beat the Ducks 76-53.
Brennan Linsley / The Associated Press

BOULDER, Colo. — Spencer Dinwiddie has been defying his coach’s orders and looking at bracketology projections — in the middle of class, even.

The swift Colorado guard just can’t help studying the reports, wondering what seed his team might draw. He thinks the Buffaloes have proven they belong in the NCAA tournament, especially after a 76-53 win over No. 19 Oregon on Thursday night.

The Buffaloes (20-9, 10-7 Pac-12) improved to 4-2 against Top 25 teams this season. They even dismantled the Ducks while playing without the nation’s leading rebounder, Andre Roberson, who sat out with a viral illness.

Surely, that’s good enough to get the Buffs in, right?

Don’t bank on anything just yet. Colorado coach Tad Boyle certainly won’t.

He remembers all too clearly two years ago when he thought the Buffs were a lock to make the tournament, only to be left out. The sting of that disappointment has him looking only at the task at hand — a game against Oregon State on Saturday to close out the regular season and then the conference tournament.

“It’s important we finish strong," Boyle said.

No one realizes that more than the Ducks (23-7, 12-5), who were thwarted in their bid for an outright conference title.

Now, they’ve fallen into a first-place tie with UCLA, but the Ducks hold the tiebreaker after beating the Bruins in their only meeting in January.

Oregon has a chance to wrap up at least a share of its first league crown since 2002 — along with the No. 1 seed for the Pac-12 tournament — with a win at Utah on Saturday.

“We have to bounce back quickly," Oregon coach Dana Altman said. “We still have half a championship to play for."

Freshman Xavier Johnson stepped up in Roberson’s absence, scoring a career-high 22 points on a nearly perfect night. Johnson hit all seven of his shots, including three 3-pointers. His only miss was a free throw, finishing five of six from the line.

“Trying step my game up with Andre out," Johnson said.

He was far from alone. After all, the Buffs were without Roberson’s 11.5 rebounds and 10.8 points a game.

Little-used backups Xavier Talton and Jeremy Adams played big minutes as they helped pick up the slack in Roberson’s absence. Adams’ thunderous dunk early in the second half gave the Buffs a 52-29 lead and brought the capacity crowd to its feet. So loud were the fans that Oregon players went on playing right through an official’s whistle for a timeout.

Moments after play resumed, Shane Harris-Tunks crumbled to the floor after being bumped by Waverly Austin, who drew a flagrant foul. Dinwiddie made both free throws.

From there, the Buffs cruised to the victory as they reached the 20-win mark for the seventh time in school history, including three straight seasons under Boyle.

Colorado beat Oregon 48-47 last month, snapping the Ducks’ 20-game home-court winning streak. This was the Buffs’ second sweep of a league foe this season, taking two from Stanford as well.

The Ducks had a week off after beating Oregon State to close out a 17-2 campaign at home this season. The break was especially beneficial for freshman guard Damyean Dotson, who fell hard to the court against the Beavers and had to be carried off the court with a hip injury.

Dotson was held to five points against CU.

The Ducks couldn’t find any sort of offensive rhythm, shooting just 37.5 percent from the floor and going nine of 22 from the free-throw line.

“Obviously there’s pressure, we want to win the Pac-12 and that was in reach for us," E.J. Singler said. “We just played terrible tonight, bottom line."

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