ATLANTA - Nearly two months ago, Xavier appeared to be fighting for a spot in the NIT.<br>
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Now, the Musketeers are one win away from going to the Final Four for the first time in school history.<br>
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``I love being in the dark and people not knowing who we are,'' guard Dedrick Finn said. ``We've been through a lot this season and to be able to come together and get this far and to finally make a name for ourselves, it feels great.''<br>
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Romain Sato scored 27 points and backcourt mate Lionel Chalmers added 14, helping No. 7 seed Xavier beat Texas 79-71 in the semifinals of the Atlanta Regional on Friday night.<br>
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In the final, the Musketeers (26-10) will go against top-seeded Duke, which wore down Illinois and pulled away for a 72-62 victory in the nightcap.<br>
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Duke has a 9-1 record in regional finals during the tenure of coach Mike Krzyzewski.<br>
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At the end of January, a three-game losing streak dropped Xavier to 10-9, with crosstown rival Cincinnati next on the schedule. A victory against the Bearcats started an amazing run that's not quite over 16 wins in 17 games.<br>
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``Nobody thought we could get to this point,'' Sato said. ``We started 10-9 and everybody said we couldn't even make the NIT.''<br>
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In the A-10 tournament, the Musketeers won four games in four days including a 20-point rout of previously undefeated Saint Joseph's and then beat Louisville and Mississippi State to reach the round of 16 in the NCAA tournament.<br>
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Xavier will be joined in the round of eight by Saint Joe's, which beat Wake Forest on Thursday night. It's the first time two A-10 teams have advanced this far.<br>
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``It's great for the A-10 because we don't get as much credit as we deserve,'' Chalmers said. ``It shows how strong we are, and it shows when we were in last place earlier in the year, that was the reason why.''<br>
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Brandon Mouton had 21 before fouling out for the third-seeded Longhorns (25-8), who were trying to reach the Final Four for the second straight season. Brian Boddicker added 11, and P.J. Tucker finished with 10 points and 10 rebounds.<br>
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``We had a goal as freshmen to win a national championship,'' said Mouton, one of four seniors who played prominent roles for Texas. ``We pushed each other at practice every day to get better in order to reach that goal, but we came up short.<br>
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``I feel that Texas is going to be a great program for years to come.''<br>
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In the nightcap, Chris Duhon scored only four points and attempted only one shot, but finished with a career-high 10 rebounds and eight assists while playing with sore ribs. More importantly, he helped hold Deron Williams Illinois' top scorer to only seven points on 3-of-13 shooting.<br>
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Luol Deng led the Blue Devils (30-5) with 18 points, while J.J. Redick added 17 and Shelden Williams 14. But it was Duhon, the senior leader, who set the tone.<br>
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``I'm going to take my opportunities to score,'' Duhon said. ``Tonight it just wasn't there. Tonight it was there for me to run my team, get guys in the right position, just play defense.''<br>
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He was injured when he fell into a stanchion holding a TV camera during the ACC championship game. The Blue Devils had a stunning collapse that day, blowing a 12-point lead in the last five minutes and losing to Maryland in overtime.<br>
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At the time, Duke looked vulnerable. Not anymore.<br>
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The Blue Devils, who have the best winning percentage in NCAA tournament history, will be playing in a regional final for the 17th time. Another victory will send them to their 14th Final Four just one short of the record shared by North Carolina and UCLA.<br>
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James Augustine and Roger Powell led the Illini (29-6) with 15 points apiece, and Dee Brown playing with a stress fracture in his left leg added 14. But the other guards, Deron Williams and Luther Head, combined to go 7-of-24 for 16 points.<br>
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``We went down with a fight,'' Brown said. ``You always learn from a game. Hopefully we learned our lesson.''<br>
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The Illini got off to a slow start this season under first-year coach Bruce Weber, but rebounded to win 14 of 15 along with the Big Ten championship before running into the Blue Devils.<br>
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``I just told them how proud I was of them,'' Weber said. ``The most important thing was we hung together as a basketball family this season. No family in life is perfect, and we're not perfect.''<br>
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Duke was up 31-30 at the half and never relinquished its lead. Illinois missed five straight free throws at one point, hurting its chances to get back in the game.<br>
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Redick the cocky target of Duke haters everywhere essentially sealed the victory with a 3-pointer, putting the Blue Devils ahead 67-57 with about 6.5 minutes left. He strutted down the court bobbing his head, his mouth wide open.<br>
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Illinois never got closer than seven points the rest of the way.
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