By RON MALY
It doesn't get much easier, or much better, than this.
For the Panthers and Hawkeyes, I mean.
The Big Dance
No doubt about it, the state of Iowa pretty much took over Seattle today and tonight.
At least the collegiate basketball aspect.
Both teams were at the top of their game in the NCAA tournament.
Northern Iowa improved its record to 31-3 by overpowering Wyoming, 71-54, early in the day, and Iowa [22-11] played its best game of the season while steamrolling Davidson, 83-52, tonight.
The 31-point difference marked the biggest victory in a No. 7 [Iowa] vs. No. 10 [Davidson] game in NCAA tournament history.
There was certainly no case of either UNI or
Meg Ryan
Iowa being sleepless in Seattle [Hollywood's Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks, who both are longtime readers of my columns, probably knew I'd get that line in].
UNI was playing in the Big Dance for the first time since upsetting Kansas and reaching the Sweet Sixteen in 2010, and made it a whopping team effort in a game that began at 10:40 a.m., Pacific Time.
I mean, the players who came off the Panthers' bench outscored Wyoming by a whopping 41-2.
That's how overpowering UNI was.
Speaking of overpowering, Iowa was just that in its spectacular assault against Davidson.
The Hawkeyes smothered Davidson with a defense that was significant throughout the Big Ten season, and they scored at will against an opponent that looked bewildered throughout the entire game.
Getting back to that sleepless in Seattle stuff, I think it would be a good idea for the players from both UNI and Iowa to not overdo it when it comes to celebrating tonight and tomorrow.
The competition Sunday for both teams figures to be considerably tougher.
UNI is matched against tradition-rich Louisville, and Iowa plays Gonzaga, which is well-known in collegiate basketball circles.
Gonzaga has been on the verge of becoming a national basketball power in recent years, but always seems to be one key player or two away from getting to the high level in the postseason for which it is striving.
Gonzaga is a small Catholic university in Spokane, Wash., and the team is usually ranked very high in the national polls throughout the regular season.
It is a No. 2 seed in this tournament. The campus is about 250 miles from Seattle, which means it will have plenty of fans in the arena for the game against Iowa.
Nonetheless, it's my feeling that both UNI and Iowa can win Sunday, but both had better bring their "A" game.
Consequently, my advice to the Panthers and Hawkeyes is this:
Do what your mothers have always told you, boys, and get plenty of rest.
Sunday will be here before you know it.
One good thing is that fans planning to watch the games on TV in Iowa won't have to hurry through anything Sunday to get their game faces on.
The UNI and Iowa games will be among the last to be played Sunday.
The Hawkeyes play Gonzaga at 6:10 p.m., and the UNI-Louisville matchup is at 8:40 p.m. The Panthers' game is the entire tournament's last one of the night.
Both games will be shown on the TBS network.
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