Soaking Up Spotlight: Which Relatively-Unknown Player Will Rise to Occasion?

One of the special features fans of NCAA Tournament competition appreciate most are games when relatively-unknown players rise to occasion and blossom before our eyes. Among power-conference members and current mid-majors who reached the Final Four at some point in their history, do you know who furnished the finest out-of-nowhere NCAA playoff fireworks? Consider:

Well, which individuals established tourney scoring marks higher than 25 points for these schools? WSU's Paul Lindemann has the longest-running single-game scoring standard - 80 years - after contributing 26 points against Creighton in 1941 regional semifinal (opening round). Seven years ago, Michigan State's Adreian Payne provided a stunning 32 points more than his career scoring average (8.9) when he erupted for 41 in a victory against Delaware in the first round of 2014 East Regional. Lindemann and Payne are among the following seven players from power-conference members or former F4 participants holding the NCAA playoff single-game scoring records for their respective schools despite averaging fewer than 10 points per game in their careers:

School Record Holder (Career Avg.) HG NCAA Playoff Opponent Date
Arkansas Mario Credit (9.1 ppg) 34 Loyola Marymount (First Round) 3-16-89
Clemson Gabe DeVoe (7.9) 31 Kansas (Regional Semifinal) 3-23-18
Drake Jonathan Cox (9.3) 29 Western Kentucky (First Round) 3-21-08
Memphis Roburt Sallie (8.1) 35 Cal State Northridge (First Round) 3-19-09
Michigan State Adreian Payne (8.9) 41 Delaware (First Round) 3-20-14
Virginia Commonwealth Rolando Lamb (9.2) 30 Marshall (First Round) 3-15-85
Washington State Paul Lindemann (7.1) 26 Creighton (Regional Semifinal) 3-21-41