Shootouts at NCAA Corrals: UK vs. UND Only Game With Two Scorers > 40

The coronavirus is culprit for a massive national slowdown panic, but can't be connected to quarantine for scoring outbreaks in NCAA Tournament thus far this Century. What's really alarming to playoff pundits is there hasn't been an NCAA playoff game since 1998 where an individual scored at least 40 points and opponent had team-high scorer with at least 30 points.

The only playoff game in history when each squad had a player score more than 40 points was Kentucky beating Notre Dame in 1970 regional semifinals. It doesn't seem possible, but Irish All-American guard Austin Carr erupted for at least 45 points in three NCAA tourney defeats in 1970 and 1971.

A couple of relatively-obscure guards - Michigan's Garde Thompson (career scoring average of 7.2 ppg) and Fairleigh Dickinson's Elijah Allen (10 ppg) - are included among the 13 NCAA playoff shootouts - three in 1990 - when an individual scored at least 40 points while an opponent had team-high scorer with at least 30 points:

Year (Tourney Round) Result of Playoff Game When Player Scored At Least 40 and Foe Tallied Over 30
1953 (National Third) Washington 88 (Bob Houbregs game-high 42), Louisiana State 69 (Bob Pettit team-high 36)
1961 (National Third) St. Joseph's 127 (Jack Egan 42), Utah 120 (Billy McGill 34)****
1970 (Regional Semifinals) Kentucky 109 (Dan Issel 44), Notre Dame 99 (Austin Carr 52)
1970 (Regional Third) Iowa 121 (Chad Calabria/John Johnson 31), Notre Dame 106 (Austin Carr 45)
1971 (Regional Third) Houston 119 (James "Poo" Welch 38), Notre Dame 106 (Austin Carr 47)
1984 (Second Round) #10 seed Dayton 89 (Roosevelt Chapman 41), #2 Oklahoma 85 (Wayman Tisdale 36)
1987 (First Round) #9 Michigan 97 (Garde Thompson 33), #8 Navy 82 (David Robinson 50)
1988 (First Round) #8 Auburn 90 (Chris Morris 36), #9 Bradley 86 (Hersey Hawkins 44)
1989 (Second Round) #5 North Carolina State 102 (Rodney Monroe 40), #4 Iowa 96 (Ed Horton 32)**
1990 (First Round) #10 Texas 100 (Travis Mays 44), #7 Georgia 88 (Alec Kessler 33)
1990 (Regional Final) #4 Georgia Tech 93 (Dennis Scott 40), #6 Minnesota 91 (Willie Burton 35)
1990 (Regional Final) #1 UNLV 131 (Stacey Augmon 33), #11 Loyola Marymount 101 (Greg "Bo" Kimble 42)
1998 (First Round) #2 Connecticut 93 (Richard "Rip" Hamilton 30), #15 Fairleigh Dickinson 85 (Elijah Allen 43)

**Double Overtime.
****Four Overtimes.

In 1963, St. Joseph's became the only school to win back-to-back NCAA tourney contests despite an individual opponent erupting for at least 40 points. Two years ago, Purdue guard Carsen Edwards became the ninth different all-in-vain scoring machine to be on the losing end despite supplying at least 40 points in a single playoff game. In addition to the five players acknowledged in summary above, following is a list including Edwards and three other such all-for-naught individuals:

Year (Tourney Round) Result of NCAA Playoff Game When Player on Losing Team Scored At Least 40 Points
1963 (First Round) St. Joseph's 82 (Steve Courtin 21), Princeton 81 (Bill Bradley 40)*
1963 (Regional Semifinals) St. Joseph's 97 (Jim Boyle/Tom Wynne 23), West Virginia 88 (Rod Thorn 44)
1976 (Regional Final) Michigan 95 (Rickey Green 23), Missouri 88 (Willie Smith 43)
2019 (Regional Final) Virginia 80 (Kyle Guy 25), Purdue 75 (Carsen Edwards 42)*

*Overtime.