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 Tuesday, February 22
Sanchez, Temple pierce Cincy's air of invincibility
 
By Pat Forde
Special to ESPN.com

 CINCINNATI -- No disputing it. The Most Valuable Body Parts of the college basketball season are Pepe Sanchez's ankles.

When they're sprained, John Chaney's team is Shirley Temple. When they're healthy, Chaney's team is the Temple of Doom.

Juan
The efforts of Pepe Sanchez, left, were much appreciated by Lamont Barnes and the Owls.
The 15th-ranked Owls' point guard unexpectedly limped into the starting lineup Sunday and helped upset Cincinnati 77-69 at the Shoemaker Center. Down went the No. 1 team in America. Splat went the Bearcats' winning streaks: 16 straight this year and 42 straight at home. Poof went Cincy's invincible air.

Prevailing wisdom says that losing a game now isn't such a bad thing -- especially to a good team. Bearcats coach Bob Huggins should have his team's undivided attention again, and there will be no weighty winning streak on their backs heading into the NCAA Tournament.

Nevertheless, Huggins wasn't smiling.

"Everyone keeps trying to convince me that losses are good," he said. "I'm having a hard time with that."

No doubt this was a good win for Temple. Pepe and his posse solidified themselves as a group nobody will want to play from here on out. The Owls' oddball style -- the cloying zone defense, the patient spread offense -- is the last thing any team will want to see in its bracket on Selection Sunday.

As long as Sanchez can walk, coach Chaney, 68, has a real shot at his first Final Four.

The senior from Argentina's line was unspectacular Sunday -- seven points, five assists, three rebounds and a steal in 38 purple-heart minutes -- but the box score lies.

"No way we could win this game without Pepe," Chaney said.

Temple is now 15-1 with Sanchez in the lineup. It was 5-3 without him earlier this season, as Sanchez sat out with a sprained right ankle.

The word right up until tipoff Sunday was that the Good Ship Lollipop was leaving port again: the Owls would play the Bearcats without Sanchez, who hurt his left ankle last week at Dayton. A tasty matchup appeared to be turning into white bread.

"I met with him a couple times (Saturday night), had a couple drinks," Chaney said. "Tried to get drunk to see if I could make a wise decision. My answer was no."

At the time, Sanchez agreed.

"I didn't want to play," he said. But while Chaney sought wisdom in a bottle, Sanchez went supernatural. "Some ghosts during the night said I should play," he said with a straight face.

They must have been the ghosts of Quinn Buckner, Bobby Hurley and other point guards who were relentless winners as collegians. Sanchez convinced his coach to let him warm up, and he passed all tests.

Even the spin-around-three-times test. "My grandma used to make me spin around three times when I stubbed my toe," Chaney said. "And it always worked."

Cincinnati then stubbed its toe on Temple. Caught up in a rare tooth-and-nail struggle, Bob Huggins' team squandered a six-point lead in the final 7½ minutes. The previously bulletproof Bearcats (24- 2) suddenly showed some flaws:

  • The freshman backcourt of Kenny Satterfield and DerMarr Johnson committed key turnovers.

  • The offense sputtered with slashing forward Pete Mickeal on the bench in foul trouble, going from three up to six down during a four-minute scoreless stretch.

  • And the defense was unable to slow down the one-on-one moves of Mark Karcher (28 points) and Quincy Wadley (16), who keyed a 12-for-22 performance from 3-point range. Temple became the first Cincinnati opponent in 63 games to shoot 50 percent from the field.

    "They hit a lot of shots that kind of broke our hearts," Johnson said.

    "Hopefully our guys understand now how much better we need to get guarding the perimeter," Huggins said. "... We're not very tough. We've got to get a whole lot tougher."

    Karcher at times resembled Adrian Dantley, pounding in from the perimeter to hit off-balance jumpers time and again. He scored 22 points after halftime as Cincy searched vainly for someone to check him.

    "He can hit that mid-range jumper, and that's All-Pro," Chaney said. "He can get in the gut and shoot it."

    The true guts of the Owls is Sanchez. His primary offensive value is directing Temple's precise attack, which calls for him to control the ball, control tempo and control traffic until Karcher, Wadley and Lynn Greer can get open on the wings. Then Sanchez delivers the ball, and the scorers improvise.

    On defense Sanchez keys the confounding matchup zone, which surrenders 12 fewer points per game when he's in the lineup. Had Sanchez played in enough games to be eligible for the NCAA rankings, he'd be second in the nation in steals at 3.0 per game.

    "He's old fashioned," Chaney said. "He gets a big kick out of making a steal, gets a big kick out of making a stop."

    Stopping Cincinnati's 16-game winning streak and coronation as the Team To Beat in March was big. Now it's Temple who looms as one of the scariest opponents in the nation.

    As long as Pepe Sanchez is in the lineup.

    Pat Forde of the Louisville Courier-Journal is a regular contributor to ESPN.com.

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