OMAHA -- The other players were already milling about, but O.J. Mayo grabbed the ball in the final seconds and gave it a long heave toward the basket.
It was odd, a desperation shot without any desperation.
OMAHA -- The other players were already milling about, but O.J. Mayo grabbed the ball in the final seconds and gave it a long heave toward the basket.
It was odd, a desperation shot without any desperation.
USC was down by 13.
The buzzer sounded on the Trojans' 80-67 first-round NCAA tournament loss to Kansas State, and Mayo got the rebound and tried again.
"Yeah, see if I could get a basket to fall," he said.
USC went one-and-done. Mayo looks as if he will too.
The much-ballyhooed battle of the freshman stars, Mayo and Kansas State's Michael Beasley, became a battle of teams, and Kansas State won it with contributions from some of its less-heralded freshmen.
Afterward, Mayo slapped hands with the Kansas State players, then found Beasley and his high school teammate Bill Walker and hugged them. They rubbed his head, and Mayo walked off the court, giving a ball boy a high five.
Somebody asked him in the locker room if he had played his last game in a USC uniform.
"I don't know. I'm not thinking about that right now," Mayo said.
He handled himself perfectly well, the way he has all season, with yes-sirs and yes-ma'ams and spot-on analysis of the game.
He handled himself, you have to say, like a pro.
"I think they were more aggressive on the boards," he said. "We knew going into the game we really had to control the defensive glass."
USC alternated defenses the way most people expected Coach Tim Floyd would, with Daniel Hackett doubling Beasley physically at times with Taj Gibson.
Foul trouble and the Trojans kept Beasley under wraps for a while, but he still muscled his way to 23 points and 11 rebounds, and Walker carried the Wildcats to a 10-point halftime lead by scoring 17 of his 22 before halftime.
"When you've got a one-two punch like that and pay a lot of attention to one player -- when you have two good players like that, inside and out, it's kind of tough," said Mayo, who finished with 20 points on six-for-16 shooting and had five assists.
He sat there in the locker room, his arms crossed, matter of fact.
Someone asked him to sum up his feelings.
"I'm mad that we lost," Mayo said, and smiled in a not-unfriendly way. "Is that good enough?"
He seemed not that different from the way he did when USC lost to Mercer in the opening game of the season. Disappointed, but not devastated. It was as if this were a summer tournament, and there were more games to play.