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  Sunday, Mar. 5 2:00pm ET
Four freshman free throws lift Kansas
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) -- On an afternoon set aside for seniors, nervous freshmen carried the day.

First-year players Drew Gooden and Kirk Hinrich shrugged off enormous the pressure and made two free throws each over the final 12 seconds as No. 23 Kansas squeezed past Missouri 83-82 Sunday in the Big 12's regular season finale.

Brian Grawer
Kansas' Nick Bradford, left, and Kirk Hinrich double-team Missouri's Brian Grawer.

Gooden, intentionally fouled by Jeff Hafer as he darted in for what would have been a layup, turned an 80-79 deficit into an 81-80 lead for the Jayhawks (22-8, 11-5).

Then after Hinrich's two foul shots gave Kansas an 83-80 lead with 7.6 seconds to go, Missouri's Clarence Gilbert tipped in Keyon Dooling's miss with one-tenth of a second left.

"I was under a lot of pressure. It was like a dream," said Gooden, who had 20 points and 13 rebounds. "I've never been in that position before in my whole life."

Because Hafer was charged with an intentional foul, the Jayhawks retained possession. Hafer's foul was not called intentional on Hinrich. But the freshman guard calmly canned both shots and brought a roar from the sellout throng who had come to honor four seniors playing their last game at Allen Fieldhouse.

Missouri (17-11, 10-6) had erased a 14-point second-half deficit to take a one-point lead on T.J. Soyoye's free throw at the 1:40 mark.

"I'm stinging a bit from this one. It hurts to play like we did and lose," Missouri coach Quin Snyder said.

Hafer did not dispute the intentional call foul.

"I didn't want him to get an easy two or have an opportunity for a three-point play," he said. "It's something I did and it turned out not to be a very good play."

Dooling and Hafer had hit consecutive 3-pointers to launch a 13-2 Missouri rally after Nick Bradford's free throw had given the Jayhawks a 77-67 lead with 4:20 left in the seesaw game between the archrivals.

After Soyoye's free throws, Kansas inbounded the ball with 39 seconds remaining.

"I thought it was probably a good call," Snyder said of the intentional foul.

Hafer, a 6-foot-5 senior averaging 7.2 points, hit two 3-pointers and a short jumper, scoring eight straight points during a 12-2 run that saw the Tigers shave a 63-49 deficit to 65-61 midway through the first half.

But then came Bradford, a 6-7 senior, scoring seven straight points to give the Jayhawks a 72-63 lead with 6:42 remaining.

Gooden was delighted, at first, to see Hafer called for the intentional foul.

"I looked up and saw he'd called it intentional. I thought good, then I thought, 'Oh, gosh, now I've got the pressure to make the free throws.' The crowd quieted down for me and I knocked them in," he said. "I kept thinking we've got to win this one for the seniors."

Hinrich figured he needed to make both his foul shots.

"I wanted to win the game so bad," he said. "I had made some mistakes early in the game and the last couple of possessions. "I thought if I made both of them we were sitting pretty good. If I didn't, then we were in trouble."

Missouri went six minutes without scoring during a 14-2 Kansas run opening the second half. The Tigers hit only three of their first 14 shots of the second half and Kansas appeared to be pulling away for an easy win until Hafer and Dooling halted the momentum.

The victory matches Kansas against 12th-seeded Kansas State on Thursday in the first round of the Big 12 tournament. Bradford had 15 points and Nick Collison added 14.

Kareem Rush had 20 points and Gilbert added 18 for Missouri, which will play Texas Tech on Thursday night.

Missouri had eight 3-pointers in the first half and twice led by as many as six before the Jayhawks pulled away for a 45-42 halfime lead.

 


ALSO SEE
Mens College Basketball Scoreboard

Missouri Clubhouse

Kansas Clubhouse