By
JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer

CINCINNATI (AP) � As a struggling Steve Logan shuttled in and out of the
lineup, No. 5 Cincinnati answered its overriding question for tournament
time.
Yes, the Bearcats can win without a big game from their best player.
Logan managed only seven points, but Cincinnati used its brawny defense
to beat Charlotte 71-55 Friday night in the Conference USA semifinals.
Cincinnati (29-3) matched the school record for wins and made it to the
tournament title game for the second straight year despite a subpar game
from Logan.
The two-time conference player of the year moved cautiously and spent
most of the game standing and passing. Coach Bob Huggins made a point to
talk to him whenever he came off the court, and teammates patted him for
encouragement.
``He's a little bit beat up,'' Huggins said. ``He takes a lot of physical
abuse.''
Logan complained about a bad back in recent weeks, but wouldn't get
specific about the cause of his problems Friday. He had played only 22
minutes the previous night and should have been fresh.
``My legs were a little tired, but that's not a factor,'' Logan said.
``All I need to do is get some rest.''
The Bearcats will play No. 13 Marquette (26-5) for the title on Saturday.
The Golden Eagles beat Houston in the other semifinal, setting up a
rematch of teams that split their season series.
Charlotte (18-11) lost by double digits in all three meetings with the
Bearcats, who got the 49ers' long-range shooters flustered with their
bumping man-to-man defense.
Jobey Thomas, the conference's career 3-point leader, was closely guarded
by Immanuel McElroy and went only 1-of-7 from the field. In one telling
moment, he tried to drive to the basket late in the first half, got knocked
to the floor
and came up wide-eyed when no foul was called.
``They're so physical,'' coach Bobby Lutz said. ``They bump you, so it's
hard to use a screen and it's hard to set a screen.''
Donald Little led Cincinnati with 16 points, and Leonard Stokes added 15
as the Bearcats used their balance to pick up the slack for Logan.
``For me to only score seven points and we win by 16 � that's
impressive,'' Logan said.
Curtis Nash had 17 points for Charlotte, which depends upon the
3-pointer, but was only 5-of-19 from behind the arc.
Most of the intrigue centered around Logan, who played sparingly in a
quarterfinal win over South Florida because Huggins wanted to rest his
regulars.
Cincinnati's best shooter had an airball on one of his 3-point attempts
Friday and rarely tried to get open for a shot, spending most of the game
passing on the perimeter.
Logan was only 1-of-7 from the field and made four free throws in the
closing minutes, when Huggins shuffled him in and out. He had scored in
double figures in his last 51 games, reaching the 20-point mark in 10 of his
past 14.
Logan's struggles were nothing compared to the 49ers' problems. The
capacity crowd of 15,776 mockingly chanted ``Airball! Airball!'' as one
Charlotte shot after another missed everything.
The Bearcats started both of their regular-season wins over Charlotte
with scoring spurts that set the tone. The same thing happened the third
time around.
Little's three-point play made it 7-0 and gave Charlotte a familiar sense
of what was to come. The 49ers' first shot was an airball by Curtis Nash,
giving the crowd its first chance to chant.
Charlotte missed its first six shots and 11 of its first 13 as its
shooters got shoved around trying to maneuver through the Bearcats' defense.
Thomas' airball on a 3-point shot revved up the crowd again, and Demon
Brown missed everything on a long 3-pointer as Cincinnati pushed the lead to
double digits and was never seriously threatened.
Field Williams made three consecutive 3s, and McElroy's jumper made it
32-18 in the closing minutes of the half.
Charlotte has been able to contain Logan this season � Stokes was the
leading scorer in both regular-season meetings.
The Bearcats scored seven consecutive points in the second half to open a
45-30 lead. Charlotte never got closer than nine the rest of the way.