There will be a quartet of traditional college basketball powers gathering next weekend in New Orleans for the men’s Final Four. 

North Carolina and Kansas punched their tickets on Sunday in dominating fashion. The No. 8 seeded Tar Heels ended a Cinderella run by Saint Peter’s with a 65-42 thumping. They’ll face archrival Duke in one national semifinal next Saturday.

Meanwhile, No. 1 Kansas fell behind early on Sunday but turned on the jets to defeat No. 10 Miami 76-50. The Jayhawks will take on Villanova in the other Final Four matchup. 

In the first half of the women’s Elite Eight, Dawn Staley’s No. 1 South Carolina Gamecocks dismissed No. 10 seed Creighton 80-50.

And in the final game of the night, top-seeded and defending national champion Stanford pulled away from No. 2 seed Texas 59-50. The remaining two spots in the women’s Final Four will be determined on Monday night.

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Top-seeded Stanford holds off Texas to return to Final Four

SPOKANE — Behind a stellar defensive performance from sophomore Cameron Brink (six blocks, one steal) and some late-game heroics from the hometown Hull sisters, defending champion Stanford beat Texas 59-50 to qualify for its second consecutive Final Four. 

Stanford advances to play the winner of UConn-NC State, which will be played Monday evening.

After a drive and finish from senior guard Lexie Hull that put the Cardinal up 52-48, Stanford hit seven of nine free throws over the final 2:29 to ice the win. 

Stanford guard Lexie Hull gets around Texas guard Joanne Allen-Taylor for two of her game-high 20 points in a 59-50 Cardinal victory.

Hull led all players with 20 points on 7-of-14 shooting, and Haley Jones chipped in 18 points and 12 rebounds. Brink finished with 10 points and six rebounds to go along with her shot-altering game. 

Joanne Allen-Taylor led Texas with 15 points, but fouled out. Superstar rookie Rori Harmon, the Big 12 Freshman of the Year, finished with 14 points, but it took her 18 shots to get there and she was bothered much of the night by Stanford’s length defensively. She also grabbed seven rebounds and handed out six assists. 

The key stretch for Stanford came midway through the third quarter, when Cardinal coach Tara VanDerveer switched to a zone. Stanford — and Brink specifically — flustered the Longhorns, as Brink blocked a shot, guard Hannah Jump blocked a shot, Brink blocked two more and then grabbed a steal. 

This will be the 14th Final Four appearance for VanDerveer, who has won three national titles.

— Lindsay Schnell

Kansascoach Bill Self celebrates with his team after advancing to the Final Four by defeating Miami in the Midwest regional final.

Kansas coach Bill Self reflects on late father’s motto during postgame celebration

Bill Self couldn’t help but smile after Kansas basketball’s dominating win over Miami in the Elite Eight on Sunday.

Down by six points at the break, the Jayhawks put on a defensive clinic in the second half, limiting the Hurricanes to just 15 points en route to a 76-50 win.

After the game, Self took a moment to speak with CBS sideline reporter Dana Jacobson to give his thoughts on the team’s victory and trip to the Final Four.

At one point, Jacobson brought up one of the mottos of Self’s father, Bill Self Sr., who died in January at age 82.

“It’s a special year for me and my family, obviously, with my dad passing, and that was his motto: ‘Don’t worry about the mules, just load the wagon,'” Self said. “The guys didn’t really worry about the distractions of what was going on in the first half, they just played in the second half.”

— Adam Hensley, Topeka Capital-Journal