Arizona, Cal, Oregon top quarterfinals

No Hassan Adams? No problem. Fourth-seeded Arizona may have been
without its leading scorer, suspended from the Pac-10 Tournament
because of a DUI, but the team ultimately didn’t need him in
beating fifth-seeded Stanford 73-68 Thursday to reach the
tournament’s semifinal at the Staples Center. Even in
victory, however, Arizona point guard Mustafa Shakur noticed a
glaring difference without Adams on the court. “It took a lot
out of us emotionally,” said Shakur, who finished with 18
points. “We really missed him a lot.” The Wildcats will
again be without Adams when they play UCLA today, with the winner
advancing to Saturday’s Pac-10 Tournament final. On Thursday,
the Wildcats, who have all but cemented their bid to the NCAA
Tournament, smothered Stanford (15-13, 11-7 Pac-10) on defense,
forcing a season-high 23 turnovers from the Cardinal.
Stanford’s loss will bring an end to the program’s
streak of 11 consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances.
“It’s really disappointing,” said Stanford senior
Matt Haryasz. “We didn’t win enough games. We just
didn’t get the job done. That’s that.”

Cal 82, USC 67 Analyzing the Golden
Bears’ 82-67 victory over USC Thursday in the quarterfinals
of the Pac-10 Tournament was relatively simple. Cal snatched 40
rebounds Thursday, with Golden Bears power forward Leon Powe
grabbing a Pac-10 Tournament-record 20 of them. USC, on the other
hand, pulled down only 15 rebounds. “Any time you’re
out-rebounded 40-15, you’re probably not going to win,”
USC coach Tim Floyd said. The Golden Bears’ victory all but
ensured that Cal (19-9, 12-6) will receive an invitation to the
NCAA Tournament. The Golden Bears will play Oregon in the
semifinals of the Pac-10 Tournament tonight. “I believe our
team has earned a spot in the NCAA Tournament. I’ll say
it,” Cal coach Ben Braun said. “But I don’t get a
vote.” Meanwhile, USC (17-13, 8-10) may be considered to play
in the NIT, an invitation Floyd indicated USC would accept.

Oregon 84, Washington 73 The ejection of
Oregon’s Aaron Brooks marred the seventh-seeded Ducks’
84-73 victory over No. 2-seed Washington in Pac-10 Tournament
quarterfinals Thursday. Brooks was ejected with 10 minutes
remaining in the first half after he delivered a straight forearm
to Washington guard Ryan Appleby’s face. Even without Brooks,
the Ducks erased an 11-point deficit with a 25-8 second-half run
sparked by Chamberlain Oguchi. The Oregon guard scored all of his
22 points in the second half Thursday.

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