Greensboro, N.C. On a day when Mike Krzyzewski and Quin Snyder found it difficult to control their emotions, the best tandem in college basketball remained cool.
Krzyzewski's Duke team had too much Shane Battier and Jason Williams for his former co-captain and assistant coach as the No. 1 Blue Devils (31-4) beat Missouri 94-81 on Saturday in the second round of the NCAA East Regional.
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski, left, meets Missouri coach Quin Snyder at center court. Duke defeated MU on Saturday in Greensboro, N.C.
Williams, nursing a sore left ankle, was brilliant, scoring 31 points and handing out nine assists.
Battier had 27 points and 11 rebounds as the top-seeded Blue Devils advanced to Philadelphia and the round of 16 for the 12th time since 1986. Duke will face fourth-seeded UCLA, a 75-50 winner over Utah State.
"We know when we step on the court we're two of the tougher matchups in college basketball," Battier said.
"On any given night we're both capable of carrying this team. Today, we both carried the team on the offensive end."
Snyder, making his second postseason appearance after coaching for Krzyzewski from 1996-99, got a hug and long verbal exchange from his mentor a minute before tipoff, and the two hugged again at center court after player introductions.
Snyder, who was part of five Final Fours at Duke, wrestled with what was proper to do prior to game time.
"I didn't know what to do with myself," he said. "Part of me wanted to call Shane and wish him good luck, but I just stayed in the back. At first I was going to go out and see the guys and wish them well and be on with it, but then I wondered what my guys would think. I was just playing games with myself."
Krzyzewski wasn't comfortable either.
"I'm glad this is over and glad we both played terrific games," said Krzyzewski, who was facing a former player or assistant coach in an NCAA tournament game for the first time. "That was the best scenario."
After the hugs, it was down to business.
Duke built a 15-point first-half lead before the No. 9 seeded Tigers (20-13) closed to six at the half and 63-62 with 10:41 left on a three-pointer by Kareem Rush, who led Missouri with 29 points.
After the game, Rush, a sophomore who led the Big 12 in scoring at 20.8 per game, said he would return to Missouri next season and not enter the NBA draft.
The Blue Devils scored on six straight possessions to build the lead back to double digits with 7:49 left, taking control of a tense and tight game.
Battier had a driving layup, a bank shot, a three-pointer and a key block in Duke's spurt, while Mike Dunleavy added a fast-break layup and follow shot that gave the Blue Devils a 76-66 lead.
"That is what great teams will do and what great players on great teams will do," Snyder said of Duke's decisive run. "Coach K just lets those guys go and gives them confidence as opposed to making them question their abilities to make plays. Those kids stepped it up. They played like champions."
Missouri would not get closer than eight down the stretch despite hitting 11 of 21 three-pointers as Duke improved to 21-0 this season when scoring 90 or more points.
Battier was near-perfect at the foul line. The first-team All-American was 12-for-13 there as the Blue Devils sank 21 of 25 to improve Krzyzewski's NCAA mark to 52-14.



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