Vols have ‘Sweet’ visit to Lexington
By TERESA M. WALKER
AP Sports Writer
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — Chaz Lanier made 4 of 5 3-pointers and finished with 20 points, and No. 2 seed Tennessee advanced to a program-record third straight Sweet 16, beating seventh-seeded UCLA 67-58 in the NCAA Tournament on Saturday night.
The Volunteers (29-7) will play either sixth-seeded Illinois or No. 3 seed Kentucky, who play Sunday in Milwaukee. The Midwest Region semifinals will be Friday at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.
Senior guard Jahmai Mashack said this kind of streak is what he wanted when he signed to play for coach Rick Barnes at Tennessee.
“I’m not saying that to be cocky,” Mashack said. “I’m saying that because I put in the work … Just knowing that the Sweet 16 was a possibility that I wanted to get to, I wanted to do it and I knew this team was going to be able to do it.”
Lanier also set the Tennessee single-season record for 3s with 120, topping the 118 by Chris Lofton in 2007-08. Lofton was in the stands at Rupp Arena to witness Lanier’s performance. Lanier called it a blessing and said the glory went to God. He hoped to talk with Lofton postgame.
“It’s just a blessing,” Lanier said of the record. “I want to shout out my teammates as well. They’re always setting good screens for me and passing the ball on the money for me. So without them, I wouldn’t be making the shots.”
Zakai Zeigler added 15 points for Tennessee, and Jordan Gainey had 13 points to help the Vols take a 19-point lead with 5:15 left.
UCLA (23-11) made its earliest exit from the tournament in the six-year tenure of coach Mick Cronin.
This was just the second meeting between these programs and first since 1977, a game won in a rout by UCLA in Atlanta. Tennessee took this round with smothering defense, holding UCLA to the fewest points the Bruins had scored in a loss this season.
Cronin said Tennessee’s experienced starting lineup, including a graduate transfer in Lanier and seniors in Zeigler, Mashack and Igor Milicic, was a huge advantage for Barnes and the Vols.
“Offensively, we weren’t good enough,” Cronin said.
UCLA last led 25-24.
Tennessee scored the final eight points of the first half and led 32-25. The Vols, with Zeigler and Mashack two of the four finalists for the Naismith Defensive Player of the Year award, held UCLA scoreless over the final 3:21 of the half.
Skyy Clark, limited to barely three minutes of play in the first half by foul trouble, finished with 18 points for UCLA. Tyler Bilodeau added 15. Clark said he smacked himself on the head as he watched from the bench in the first half.
“Skyy not being able to play really threw us off for a long time,” Cronin said. “It messed the game up. We had a chance if that wouldn’t have happened, we might’ve had a lead at half.”
Takeaways
UCLA: The Bruins came in with the Big Ten’s best scoring defense, holding opponents to 65.2 points a game. They committed just 11 turnovers compared to the Vols’ 18, giving them fewer than their opponent in 28 of 34 games this season.
Tennessee: The Vols led the Southeastern Conference by allowing just 63 points a game and limiting opponents to 38.4 percent shooting — fourth stingiest in the nation. They also led the SEC and were third in the country in defending 3s with teams shooting just 28.2 percent outside the arc. The Vols shot 11-of-22 from 3.
Key moment
The Vols opened the second half by outscoring UCLA 14-6. Cronin took a timeout with 14:11 left after Lanier hit his fourth 3, capping a 9-0 spurt for a 46-31 lead.
Up next
Tennessee is two wins away from the program’s first Final Four berth in a season where the Vols spent five weeks ranked No. 1 in the country.
Cronin got UCLA back to the tournament after last year’s miss, with the Bruins turning in a good inaugural season in the Big Ten.
TENNESSEE 77, WOFFORD 62
By TERESA M. WALKER

Tennessee guard Chaz Lanier (2) shoots against UCLA center Aday Mara (15) during the second half of their NCAA Tournament second round game Saturday night at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Ky. Tennessee won 67-58 to reach the Sweet 16. AP
AP Sports Writer
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — Chaz Lanier scored 29 points on 11-of-22 shooting in his NCAA Tournament debut, and No. 2 seed Tennessee never trailed in a 77-62 victory over Wofford on Thursday night that sent the Volunteers to the second round for the fourth straight season.
Coach Rick Barnes’ Vols (28-7) will play No. 7 seed UCLA, a 72-47 winner over Utah State, on Saturday in the Midwest Region.
“These are the moments you dream of,” said Lanier, a Nashville native who transferred after four years at North Florida.
Barnes wasn’t too surprised at seeing how Lanier handled his first game on college basketball’s biggest stage.
“I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a guy, as good a player as him, ever being scared of the moment here,” Barnes said. “I think they embrace that kind of thing and they really love it. I think he was looking forward to it.”
Zakai Zeigler had 12 points and 12 assists. He became Tennessee’s career assist leader after setting the single-season record for assists at the Southeastern Conference Tournament.
No. 15 seed Wofford was making its sixth March Madness appearance as the Southern Conference Tournament champion but ended a run of reaching four straight second rounds. The Terriers’ last first-round loss was in 2010.
“Our goal is to be a Sweet 16 team,” Wofford coach Dwight Perry said. “And there’s people that probably will look at that and say, ‘You know, that’s a little bit delusional or that’s too unrealistic.’ But to be honest, like no one in that locker room — coaches, players — no one cares whether it’s unrealistic or not. We know it’s realistic.”
Jackson Sivills led the Terriers (19-16) with 15 points. Corey Tripp scored 14, Jeremy Lorenz 12 and Justin Bailey 10.
Lanier made a quick impression after Tennessee took the lead 13 seconds into the game on a 3-pointer by Jahmai Mashack. Lanier reeled off 13 points with a trio of 3s within his first 11 minutes of play.
That helped Tennessee jump out to a 22-8 lead, though the Terriers kept fighting even as the Vols beat them for the ninth time and first in this tournament. Tennessee led 36-27 at halftime. Wofford got within 48-40 with 13:33 left on a 3 by Lorenz.
Lanier scored seven of the next eight for Tennessee, which pushed its lead to 17 and closed it out with little stress.
Cold and hot
The Vols led 36-27 at halftime, a lead that would have been bigger if they hadn’t missed their final five shots. They didn’t make a field goal over the last 4:47 of the half. The Vols shot 50 percent (13-of-26) in the second half even as they missed seven of their final eight attempts.
Make them pay
Tennessee outscored Wofford 14-0 off 11 turnovers. The Vols turned it over only six times.
