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RECAP
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BOX SCORE
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) Mike Montgomery was the last to climb
the ladder. After cutting the final strand, he grabbed the net with
one hand and held up three fingers with the other.
|  | | Jason Collins and the Cardinal cut down the nets after clinching the Pac-10. |
The crowd roared both for Stanford's players and for the coach
who has fostered sustained excellence at a school that hadn't seen
it in decades.
Top-ranked Stanford clinched its third straight Pac-10
Conference title with a 99-75 victory over Arizona State on
Saturday. Though the Cardinal's three seniors were the centers of
attention in the regular-season finale, no one enjoyed it more than
Montgomery.
"It just feels so good to watch the kids and the students and
all the fans just enjoy the whole thing so much," Montgomery said.
"We're going to take a big deep breath now and enjoy this day, but
we'll get right back to practice tomorrow."
Casey Jacobsen scored 15 of his 21 points in the first half, and
Ryan Mendez had 19 as the Cardinal (28-2, 16-2) assured themselves
of the nation's best regular-season record. They also avoided
sharing their conference crown with Arizona or UCLA, the only
visiting teams to win at Maples Pavilion this season.
Stanford, which also earned the Pac-10's automatic berth in the
NCAA Tournament, hadn't won three straight conference crowns since
winning the Pacific Coast Conference from 1936-38.
After an easy, festive win, the Cardinal were in a reflective
mood.
"This is such a great program," said Mendez, who set
conference and school marks for consecutive free throws made.
"The old guys leave, the new guys come in year after year, and
we get good results. We seem to go to the tournament year after
year. We're just looking at this as a beginning."
The Cardinal, who lost 76-75 to Arizona (No.7 ESPN/USA Today, No. 8 AP) on Thursday night
on a last-second basket, left no doubt against the Sun Devils
(13-16, 5-13). Stanford led by 22 points in the first half and by
26 in the second while cruising to its eighth victory in nine
games, likely assuring the Cardinal of the top seed in the West
Regional.
"The guys on this team have the experience to go further in the
tournament," Jarron Collins said. "As freshmen and sophomores,
we've been through frustration. We know what it feels like, and we
know what it takes to overcome that."
All five Stanford starters scored in double figures. Jacobsen
hit four 3-pointers, while Jarron Collins had 15 points, Mike
McDonald 12 points and Jason Collins 10.
"That's the outcome I was looking for," Montgomery said. "Our
kids have been focused and have worked hard all the way through
this thing."
With Stanford undergrad Chelsea Clinton cheering from a seat two
rows behind the west basket, Arizona State lost its seventh
straight to Stanford and ended the season with five losses in seven
games.
Stanford seniors Mendez, Jarron Collins and McDonald were
honored before the game. All three starters played key roles as the
Cardinal quickly grabbed an insurmountable lead and spent the
second half in a free-throw shooting contest.
Alton Mason, the Sun Devils' only senior, had 23 points. Awvee
Storey had 16 points and 16 rebounds before becoming one of three
Arizona State players to foul out in yet another heavily officiated
Pac-10 game. Forty-seven free throws were shot in the second half
including 34 in a 7 1/2-minute stretch.
"I think Stanford is going to definitely get a No. 1 (seed),"
Arizona State coach Rob Evans said. "But they're going to find out
the game is called differently all around the country. Stanford
always seems to go to the line a lot. They may not find themselves
going to the line quite as much in the tournament."
Stanford ended the game in style, with Mendez throwing an
alley-oop pass to the 6-foot-1 McDonald, who made a layup with 2:08
left. Moments later, Montgomery threw his hands in the air to
incite the student body to an ovation when all three seniors left
the game together.
"You can't ask for anything more out of a final game than
that," McDonald said. "Now we're ready to go on, hopefully for
the next three weeks, and do something special."
Mendez, who had hit 41 straight free throws before the game,
made six in the first half to break the school record and two
Pac-10 marks for consecutive free throws.
The Stanford record, which he shared with Todd Lichti, was four
less than the conference record, set earlier this year by Southern
Cal's David Bluthenthal.
Mendez broke the Pac-10 record on two free throws after a
technical foul on Evans, whose team fell behind 50-28 late in the
first half. The Sun Devils didn't use a player taller than 6-foot-9
against the Collins twins, who blocked three shots apiece and
grabbed 18 rebounds.
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ALSO SEE
Men's College Basketball Scoreboard
Arizona State Clubhouse
Stanford Clubhouse
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