UNC’s May thrilled to follow father
St. Louis ? Sean May no longer needs to carry around that old videotape of his father’s national-championship game. Now, he has one of his own.
The burly North Carolina center made all but one of his 11 shots and scored 26 points in a dominating performance, controlling the paint and leading the Tar Heels past Illinois, 75-70, Monday night.
In the process, May forced one of his defenders to foul out and left another with four fouls. And May left with the Most Outstanding Player award.
No surprise there. The son of Scott May carried North Carolina to the Final Four by averaging 21.5 points and 11.8 rebounds in the tournament, slightly better than his regular-season numbers.
“My dad is not a very emotional person, but he might get a little emotional about this,” May said.
When May and his teammates arrived in St. Louis, he showed them the footage from the 1976 final, where his father and Indiana completed an undefeated season with a victory over Michigan.
Then they went out and claimed the NCAA title, sprinting away to a big lead before holding off a late comeback by the Illini. May added 10 rebounds, grabbing the carom after a last miss by Illinois’ Luther Head in the final seconds.
The Illini rarely had faced someone so rugged as May, listed at 6-foot-9 and 250 pounds. And they were ill-equipped to handle him, particularly when 6-foot-10 center James Augustine left with five fouls. Reserve Jack Ingram finished with four.
“It’s tough to stop May,” Illini coach Bruce Weber said. “They had probably more inside threat with May than we had, and it made the difference in the game.”
In the final 20 games of the season, May had 15 double-doubles, and he added the final one when it mattered most. May didn’t take a shot after making two free throws with 4:21 left to give the Tar Heels a 70-67 lead, but he found other ways to help.
Head later missed a three-pointer that would have given Illinois a tie in the final minute, and May leaped high to tip the carom to North Carolina point guard Raymond Felton. When Felton got fouled, a couple of teammates began celebrating, and May was there to squash it.
He finally allowed himself to smile when it was over, soaking in the atmosphere in what might be his final college game. All season long, May firmly insisted he would be back for his senior season, but the NBA surely will be an option.
“It’s been unbelievable,” May said. “My teammates, friends, family, they supported us. I’ll never forget this till the day I die. This is the best moment I’ve ever had in my whole life.”


