NCAA Tournament – Aaron & Andrew Harrison’s Kentucky Wildcats Will Win Program’s Ninth Crown Tonight

by Kent Sterling

The only unpleasantness for Big Blue Nation tonight will be Rex Chapman's absence on the CBS only championship game telecast.

The only unpleasantness for Big Blue Nation tonight will be Rex Chapman’s absence on the CBS only championship game telecast.

Kentucky is just too big and athletic for UConn to beat tonight, or so I believe.

The work Kentucky does on the offensive glass makes them a very tough team to put away.  In every game in this tourney, the Wildcats have outpaced opponents on the offensive glass for a total advantage of 22 boards.  That translates into 22 extra possessions.

Think of offensive rebounds as anti-turnovers.  Instead of forfeiting an offensive possession, you add one.

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Amazingly, Kentucky’s opponents have only 11 more defensive rebounds in the five games than offensive boards the Wildcats have controlled.

Kentucky is also tournament tough, winning games by seven, two, five, three, and one point, and have trailed in four of the games.  Against Kansas State in the opener, Kentucky led after the opening minutes.  Wichita State led Kentucky by five with 4:15 remaining, Louisvile led by seven with 4:10 left, Michigan was up four with 11:00 to go, and Wisconsin was up five with 5:10 left.

They know what it takes to win, and they do exactly those things when necessary, and in the last two games it took a three-pointer by Aaron Harrison as the clock wound down to give the Wildcats the lead.

For their part, UConn has won with greater ease after being taken to overtime before winning by eight against St. Joseph’s.  They have rolled to wins of eight, 12, five, six, and 10 points.

The Huskies have not trailed during the last 12 minutes of any of the games following the outlier against St. Joseph’s.

What does that mean?  That when Kentucky turns it on, as they have in every game since the beginning of the tournament, UConn needs to maintain its wits and continue to fight.

Defensive pressure from Shabazz Napier and Ryan Boatright will need to make running offense very uncomfortable for the Harrison twins, and do it for all 40 minutes.  This morning on ESPN, analyst Dan Dakich mentioned Napier and Boatright’s defensive pressure as a huge reason for the Huskies upset over the Florida Gators, and as usual, he was right.

He also said that UConn needs to play 40 minutes, and what that means is the must avoid the surges that have propelled UK to wins in their last four games.

Causing discomfort and disrupting rhythm is what good defense is all about, and if it’s absent Kentucky will have its way with UConn.  Without forcing turnovers, Kentucky gets to shoot, and given the near 50% of an offensive rebound followed by a second chance, there is just no chance for UConn to win.

Because the Harrison’s have really improved over the course of the season, they will beat the best defensive backcourt in college basketball and the best player in the tournament in Napier.  That means Julius Randle, James Young, and Marcus Lee will get touches, and that means points on the first, second, or third shot at the bucket.

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It might make John Calipari detractors physically ill tonight to listen to a post game press conference featuring more of his ludicrous blathering about the “toughest” road to a championship in history, and how his team was fueled by the negative chatter about how their 10 losses painted the Wildcats as a huge disappointment.

No one celebrates victory with a chip on his shoulder like Calipari.  Fortunately, the game tips at 9:10p, so the earliest Jim Nantz can hurl softballs to Calipari is roughly 11:30p as the over/under on going to the monitor in the last two minutes is three.

Kentucky wins tonight 74-68, unless UConn slows it down enough and defends well enough the keep the score down.  Then I’ll take UConn 60-54.

5 thoughts on “NCAA Tournament – Aaron & Andrew Harrison’s Kentucky Wildcats Will Win Program’s Ninth Crown Tonight

  1. Mike Davis

    Since Cal is blathering about their tough road, name 5 tougher paths in the history of the tournament. Should be easy given it was so ludicrous. I look forward to your response.

    Reply
    1. kentsterling Post author

      The point isn’t that there have been five tougher roads, it’s that UK earned its road by losing 10 and being seeded eighth as a result. The path Kentucky had to endure wasn’t done to them – it was self-inflicted. Off the top of my head though, the 1976 Indiana team, 1985 Villanova team, 2003 Syracuse team who beat two #1s and a #2. In 1997, Arizona had to beat three #1s. UK will win tonight beating only one questionable #1. UNC in 1993 had to beat two #2, and #4, and #8, and a #1. The road for the 1965 UCLA team was daunting, as was the 1971 UCLA team.

      I could go back further if you like.

      Reply
  2. Pete

    1. Arizona beat three number one seeds, including the defending national champ in Kentucky.
    2. NC State I believe was the lower seeded team in each of their games, defeated two number one seeds.
    3. Villanova as a number 8 beat at least two number one seeds and pulled off the greatest championship upset in history.
    4. The 1989 Michigan team won six games with an interim coach, including winning in the last minute in the semifinal and the final three seconds in overtime in the final
    5. An unranked Marquette team that had the most losses of any champ until the 1983 NC State team had a buzzer beater in the semifinal and beat a heavily favored UNC team in the final.

    Because I respect UK so much, I didn’t include Texas Western…. / sarc

    Reply
  3. Pauly Balst

    Also, you have to consider…..oh, it doesn’t matter anyway. This was much more fun than a first round NIT departure. So so close, but come up so so short. Cal to Knicks.

    Reply

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