Albany 60 69 13/15 OU

Stat Comparison Category Albany

OU Points 60 69 FGM-A 23-61 25-57 FG% 37.7 43.9 3 FGM-A 8-25 7-24 3 FG% 32.0 29.2 FTM-A 6-10 12-16 FT% 60.0 75.0 Rebounds 34 40 Assists 15 10 Turnovers 7 9 Blocks 1 6 Steals 6 5 Individual Leaders Category Albany

OU Points Hooley - 15 Thomas - 18 Rebounds Sanders - 7 Spangler - 11 Assists Two Players - 4 Woodard - 4 Steals S. Rowley - 3 Cousins - 2 Blocks S. Rowley - 1 Thomas - 4 Player of the Game TaShawn Thomas//Sr.//F

Thomas scored a game-high 18 points on 7 for 11 from the floor. He secured five rebounds and added four blocks, two assists and a steal in 32 minutes of action.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The closest TaShawn Thomas had ever come to experiencing the NCAA Tournament was watching it on TV.

He made the most of finally getting his moment on the big stage.

Thomas powered his way to 18 points inside and versatile Buddy Hield added 15 to lead third-seeded Oklahoma past Albany 69-60 on Friday night, carrying the Sooners into the Round of 32 after early exits the last two years.

"It just feels so good right now, to get the first win, play good with your teammates and just being able to extend your season a little bit longer," he said. "I feel ecstatic right now."

Thomas transferred to Oklahoma last June after averaging 14.5 points and 8.7 rebounds for three seasons at Houston. He decided to make the move when there was a coaching change. After a lengthy wait, the NCAA allowed him to play his senior season for the Sooners without having to sit out a year.

"TaShawn probably had a little different edge to his practice all week, given that he hadn't played in the tournament at all," said coach Lon Kruger . "He was telling the other guys, `This is pretty special.' And I think that was a good influence on them in preparation."

The Sooners (23-10) led wire to wire, advancing to play on Sunday against the winner of the late game between Dayton and Providence.

They were trying to not only end their troubling first-game failures the last two years but also to defend the honor of their conference. On Thursday, fellow No. 3 seeds and Big 12 Conference members Iowa State and Baylor both were eliminated in their first games.

"My third year here now, and I fell short twice," said Hield, an athletic swingman. "It feels good to come and get a win."

Albany (24-9), down by as many as 10 in the opening half, got as close as five points early in the second half. After an Oklahoma spurt stretched it out to a 12-point margin, the Great Danes drew to 60-54 on a 3 from the left corner by Singletary with 3:53 left.

"When you get within six or seven, just one more shot will help," said guard Peter Hooley, who led the Great Danes with 15 points. "If we got within three or four, maybe the game would have swung different. Maybe they would have got nervous or something. We always just hung around."

Oklahoma always had an answer.

The Sooners came down and found trouble when a pass was tipped and the shot clock sank into single digits. But Isaiah Cousins splashed in a 3 with 2 seconds left to avoid a violation with 3:18 remaining.

"That was really big," said Kruger, who became the first Division I coach to lead five different schools to a victory in NCAA play. "If we don't get a bucket there, they go down and score and all of a sudden it's a three- or four-point ballgame. That's a big difference."

The Sooners played keep-away with the lead from there, Thomas scoring on a tip-in and Jordan Woodard and Ryan Spangler adding four free throws in the final 38 seconds.

Evan Singletary had 13 points, Sam Rowley 12 and Ray Sanders 11 for No. 14-seeded Albany, regular season and tournament champs of the America East Conference.

"I felt coming in there was a chance we were going to be overmatched physically and athletically, especially in the front court," said coach Will Brown. "They're a team a lot of people expected to go deep in this tournament."