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Memphis hopes to make its point — or maybe 100 of them

Memphis guard Chris Douglas-Roberts, left, and the rest of the Tigers are ready to set their high-octane offense against UCLA's stingy defense in the NCAA semifinals Saturday.

SAN ANTONIO — It should be easy to tell who wins the UCLA-Memphis game. Just look at the scoreboard.

If Memphis puts up 80 points, the Tigers are in good shape. At 90, they're pretty much set. At 100, it's a virtual lock.

As much as the Final Four matchup will become a showcase for freshmen Derrick Rose and Kevin Love, the first of Saturday's semifinals also will be a test of tactics.

Can coach John Calipari's suddenly chic "dribble drive motion" offense break down UCLA's coach Ben Howland's rugged defense?

"All we're going to do is have fun," Calipari said Thursday. "If it leads us to something good on Monday night, have at it, we're going to have a ball. I want these kids to feel nothing but, 'Let's go play, show what we're about. Let's make statements.'"

That, have the Tigers (37-1) take their first NCAA men's basketball championship.

Memphis looks to score in a hurry, either off the break or its normal set, leaving the middle open and encouraging Rose, All-America guard Chris Douglas-Roberts or anyone to take the ball to the basket and create a play.

"Calipari, I think, said they're kind of like Princeton on steroids. They're going to be very tough to defend," Love said.

It's worked well for them this season, with the Tigers scoring 90 points on eight occasions and topping 100 three times.

UCLA, meanwhile, has not reached 100 points in a game since December 2002. The Bruins never scored even 90 this season.

That's fine with Love, Darren Collison and their teammates. UCLA (35-3) is making its third straight appearance in the Final Four, and the Bruins have done it mostly by jamming up their opponents — two weeks ago, they held overmatched Mississippi Valley State to 29 points, the fewest in the NCAA tournament since 1946.

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