Wednesday,  March 20, 2013 • Vol. 14--No. 244 • 26 of 36 •  Other Editions

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nesses.

SD State guard Wolters back in national spotlight
DIRK LAMMERS,Associated Press

• BROOKINGS, S.D. (AP) -- By his own admission, Nate Wolters wasn't much of a threat last season from the 3-point line.
• The South Dakota State guard has sure turned things around. Wolters, whose evening routine includes taking hundreds of shots in an empty Frost Arena, said he worked hard this year to improve his outside shooting.
• "I've shot a pretty good percentage this year, and I think that's made the defense honest," he said. "I think I've become a better passer, as well."
• Wolters has always been a quiet Midwestern kid who leads by example, but the spotlight was on him earlier this season when he scored 53 points in a game, tops in Division I. And now he and the Jackrabbits are back on college basketball's biggest stage of all, facing No. 4 seed Michigan in the first round of the NCAA tournament on Thursday.
• Wolters' high school coach says there's no player he'd rather see with the ball in the final seconds if the Jackrabbits have a chance against the Wolverines.
• "When we needed a bucket, he definitely just seemed to always have the ball in his hands and make the right decision," said Randy Jordan, who led Wolters at St. Cloud (Minn.) Tech High School. "He's always been a competitor and always been a go-to guy down the stretch. He probably hit five, six game winners for us in the three years that he played."
• Wolters, a 6-foot-4 senior whose only Division I scholarship offer came from South Dakota State, captured attention last year when the Jackrabbits made their first trip to the NCAA tournament, losing to Baylor 68-60. A CBS Sports blogger even gave him his own slogan -- "Naters Gonna Nate" -- which has spread to T-shirts, arena signs and a Twitter hashtag.
• He became a sensation again in February when he scored that school-record 53 against IPFW and broke another mark with nine 3-pointers.
• Jackrabbits coach Scott Nagy said he's heard people question Wolters' defense, but the guard plays 40 minutes and a lapse sometimes can be because he's tired. He said Wolters has great anticipation and is much more athletic than people think.
• "Nate is a tremendous defender when he decides he's going to be a good defender," Nagy said.
• Jordan said Wolters was a good student but always thinking about basketball --

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