INDIANAPOLIS -- As the empty
possessions and shot-clock violations kept piling up, as this entire
dream of a Kentucky season came crashing down in a way no amount of star
recruits could salvage, John Calipari called for someone to throw him a
white towel.
He was standing on the sideline
of Lucas Oil Stadium, facing futility in the final minute, his blue side
of the joint that had rolled up I-69 seeking a coronation now startled
into silence.
The Kentucky coach kept rubbing
the towel over his face, effectively wiping off the sweat, less so the
frustrated reality of seeing something so grand fall so fast. He
eventually threw it down and walked, with the final seconds still
ticking, to give Bo Ryan a congratulatory hug.
Wisconsin 71, Kentucky 64.
The chase for perfection: 38-and-Done.
Done was the clutch execution –
one made basket in the final 6:32. Done was the season-long dominance on
the glass – outrebounded by 12, limited to six offensively. Done was
the steely defense down the stretch – instead it was Wisconsin that
forced those three consecutive shot-clock violations.
And done was the clutch play of the Harrison twins, Andrew and Aaron,
who after all those nights coming up huge couldn't duplicate the magic.
They may have dragged the 'Cats here again, they may have combined for
25 points, but in the end there was a series of misses leaving Andrew, angry on a podium, caught whispering an expletive and racial slur under his breath.It was that kind of collapse.
Done, just like that, was a late four-point lead, melting into a complete mess, with half the Kentucky bench leaving the floor without shaking hands, the Wildcats coaches trying to corral them back. In the stands there were tears streaming down in blue, and jump around, jump around on the other end, before all those Badgers fans -- the Grateful Red --went out and tried to drink all the beer in Indiana between now and Monday's national title game against Duke.
"I look up, 'we're up four,' "
Calipari said of the second half. "I'm like, 'we're going to win this
thing.' Then, you know, a play here, a play there, all of a sudden we
don't post it. They crowd us, we don't post it again, we take a late
shot. We're not a team that takes shot-clock violations. We got three."
He was trying to process it, not just the how but what it all meant.
This was a gut punch for Big Blue, not just because it got beat, but
because it got beat when it was so close to everything, because it got
beat when so many thought it couldn't, that it got beat when it actually
played pretty well.
Nigel Hayes (10) drives against Kentucky's Karl-Anthony Towns (12) during the second half. (AP)
"You think about this," Calipari said. "We had six turnovers for the game. We shot 90 percent from the free-throw line, 60 percent from the three, 48 percent from the field and we lost? What does that mean they did?"
It meant, Calipari noted, that the Badgers beat them on the boards, forced them into bad shots in the most critical of moments and played with complete confidence in the face of history with as many as seven Kentucky players ready to declare early for the NBA draft.
The Badgers did it with their
own perfect, if seemingly unlikely, unit – a bunch of guys from brewery
towns such as Sheboygan and LaCrosse, oddballs with funny nicknames such
Frank the Tank, a loose group will built from 12 months of waiting for a
rematch, from working toward avenging last year's 74-73 Final Four
loss.
Wisconsin walked on the court and looked at Kentucky – not with any
sense of awe, not wondering if it was beatable, not up at all its size,
but like it was five guys from Madison Y."Obviously they were undefeated but we didn't look at their record or anything like that," Bronson Koenig said.
This is Wisconsin Basketball, the ideal antidote for the Wildcats machine.
"You know," Calipari said, "I told my wife before the game, 'we could lose. They're good enough to beat us.' "
"They are not in awe of that situation," Greg Gard, Wisconsin's associate head coach said. "Everybody makes a big deal about how they joke around and are loose, that's how they are … [Saturday night] we talked about don't try to be someone you aren't. If we play to that we'll be fine."
They were who they were. Frank Kaminsky with 20 points and 11 rebounds. Sheybogan Sam Dekker with 16 points. Nigel Hayes and Koenig adding 12.
"I'm going to tell you a little bit of a story here," Kaminsky said. "I was playing FIFA in the room, you know, we had so much time [Saturday]. One of my buddies from back home came and we were talking. He said if I had 20, Sam 16 or 18, Nigel would have 12 and either Bronson or Josh [Gasser] would add 10 or 12 we would win by seven points.
"It's just too weird not to bring up."
Wisconsin bench celebrates as Kentucky's Willie Cauley-Stein walks off after the loss. (AP)
"They took us on an absolute ride," Cal said of his players.
This was a coach trying to spin this into some kind of bright light.
"But 38, what these guys did in a row, incredible stuff," he continued.
Except the season ended in game 39.
"They're hurting right now," Calipari said.
That feeling will linger into history too, deep, deep into Kentucky history.
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/kentucky-s-pursuit-of-perfection-ends-in-stunned-silence-with-loss-to-wisconsin-064546875.html
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