LAHAINA, Hawaii -- Tyler Hansbrough was back for a second game and No. 1 North Carolina will be playing for a third title on Maui.
The reigning player of the year, who missed three weeks of practice and three games with a leg injury, had 16 points to lead the Tar Heels to a 98-69 victory over Oregon on Tuesday night in the semifinals of the EA Sports Maui Invitational.
North Carolina (5-0) will play No. 8 Notre Dame on Wednesday night in the championship game. The Fighting Irish beat No. 6 Texas 81-80 in the semifinals in the season's first matchup of Top Ten teams.
Here comes the second.
Hansbrough scored 13 points in 25 minutes last Friday in an 84-67 win over UC Santa Barbara after missing games for the first time in his college career because of a stress reaction in his right led.
He tweaked his left ankle at the end of the game against the Gauchos and didn't play in the Tar Heels' 115-70 opening-round win over Chaminade. That wasn't a real surprise because coach Roy Williams had indicated he wouldn't play the senior in all three games on Maui. Williams said after the Chaminade game that Hansbrough would have played if it "had been for the national championship."
Against Oregon, Hansbrough looked like the player known as "Psycho T," drawing plenty of contact down low on both offense and defense and diving on the floor for loose balls. He finished 12-for-14 from the free throw line, proof he wasn't avoiding contact in his 19 minutes.
He had 12 points and four rebounds in 16 minutes as the Tar Heels took a 51-22 halftime lead over the Ducks (3-2), a young team that looked good in a 92-69 first-round win over Alabama but just couldn't stay with the nation's unanimous No. 1 team.
Danny Green had 21 points and freshman Ed Davis had 11 points and 13 rebounds for North Carolina, which led by as many 37 points in the second half.
Michael Dunigan had 18 points to lead Oregon.
North Carolina led 22-12 when it went on a 13-0 run that started with a 3-pointer by Danny Green and ended with a three by Larry Drew II with 7:03 left in the half. The Ducks missed nine shots during the run, including five underneath the basket where Hansbrough led the Tar Heels' impressive defense that held Oregon to 8-of-38 shooting in the half.
North Carolina won the Maui Invitational in 1999 and 2004 and finished second in 1989 and 1995. A third title would put them one behind Duke, which is 12-0 here.
NO. 8 NOTRE DAME 81, NO. 6 TEXAS 80: Notre Dame's Luke Harangody had done everything a bruising power forward is supposed to do. He scored 29 points, grabbed 13 rebounds and even threw in a banked 40-footer as the shot clock expired. But he had to wait to make sure his two missed free throws in the final seconds didn't cost No. 8 Notre Dame a win over No. 6 Texas. They didn't, barely.
After Harangody's second miss with 3.5 seconds to play, Texas' A.J. Abrams let fly with a shot from just beyond halfcourt that bounced off the front of the rim, securing the Fighting Irish an win.
"We're happy we're playing for the championship, that's why we came here and we don't care who it would be against," said Notre Dame's Kyle McAlarney, who had five threes and 19 points.
The teams combined for 49 3-point attempts and Notre Dame won that battle as well, hitting 11 from beyond the arc while the Longhorns made eight.
"McAlarney doesn't need a whole lot of space," Texas coach Rick Barnes said. "We can survive teams making 11 threes against us it just seemed that every time we had a chance down the stretch they would get a big rebound, make a big play."
MAUI INVITATIONAL Who: No. 8 Notre Dame vs. No. 1 North Carolina When: 10 p.m. today Where: Lahaina (Hawaii) Civic Center TV: ESPN. Radio: WTHZ-94.1, WBAG-1150, WLXN-1440
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