What you need to know for the Kentucky vs. UConn national championship game
By SCOTT GLEESON 8 hours agoARLINGTON, Texas – Bracket experts, media analysts and office pool juggernauts certainly didn’t expect these two teams to be in the national championship game. The players and coaches at Kentucky and UConn aren’t surprised much, go figure.
“I don’t think we were a No. 8 seed and I don’t think Connecticut was a No. 7 seed,” Kentucky coach John Calipari said.
These teams have had their inconsistencies, but their routes to Monday’s title game highlight the unexpectedness of the NCAA tournament and the maturation of two fiery teams. This game will come down to Xs and Os, sure, but the key to understanding these teams is simple: Resiliency and togetherness have got them here.
“I know we are fighters,” UConn coach Kevin Ollie said. “Dark times is what promotes you.”
Game Time: 9:10 p.m. ET
Location: Arlington, Texas
TV: CBS
Analysis: Who has the edge? Here’s a video breakdown and key factors for UConn and Kentucky.
How the Wildcats (29-10, 12-6) got here: Beat Kansas State, Wichita State, Louisville, Michigan, Wisconsin.
How the Huskies (21-8, 12-6) got here: Beat Saint Joseph’s, Villanova, Iowa State, Michigan State, Florida.
BACKCOURT
Key Kentucky players: Andrew Harrison, Aaron Harrison, James Young
Key UConn players: Shabazz Napier, Ryan Boatright, Niels Giffey
Advantage goes to: UConn. Napier and Boatright are arguably the best backcourt tandem in the country, and they undoubtedly have been the best in this NCAA tournament. Napier has ability to take over games offensively, but it was the duo’s defense that made the difference in the Huskies’ victory against top-ranked Florida. They held SEC Player of the Year Scottie Wilbekin to four points — which caused the Gators to completely unravel offensively. If they can put a similar defensive lockdown on Andrew and Aaron Harrison — forcing turnovers and bad shots— that can be the ultimate edge. Young, who paced Kentucky with 17 points against Wisconsin, could be the X-Factor. His length and athleticism will be tough for even Napier and Boatright to guard. And Aaron Harrison obviously wins the clutch award for his back-to-back game-winners, but Napier has been the definition of clutch this season. Giffey is a big-time glue guy to keep an eye on for Connecticut.
FRONTCOURT
Key Kentucky players: Julius Randle, Dakari Johnson, Alex Poythress
Key UConn players: Phillip Nolan, DeAndre Daniels, Amida Brimah
Advantage goes to: Kentucky. For all of the love Aaron Harrison and James Young have been getting for their backcourt heroics, it’s important to remember Kentucky wouldn’t be positioned to win if it weren’t for Randle, the Wildcats’ most consistent offensive force all season. His pitbull-like aggressiveness could be tough for Connecticut to handle. Daniels was the Huskies’ best player against Florida, finishing with a double-double (20 points and 10 rebounds). He’ll need a similar performance to keep UConn in the mix. Nolan and Brimah both had four fouls against Florida, and they’ll need to stay out of foul trouble against an athletically gifted, deep Kentucky frontcourt that got huge contributions from Johnson and Poythress vs. Wisconsin.
BENCH
COACHING
“A lot of it has come from coach,” Boatright said of the team’s extra gear. “He played 13 years in the NBA, and he’s worked extremely hard for everything that he has. He’d be the first one to tell you that he wasn’t the most talented player. He just worked extremely hard and took a lot of pride in himself, and he instills that in us every day.”
(Graphics by Tim McGarry.)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for contacting Sports CR3W Inc. (App). All rights reserved on the logo and intellectual property of "CR3W." Any misuse or republication without written consent and full, legal, and proper attribution will be susceptible to the full extent of the law on license/copyright infringement.
We are available via twitter @SportsCR3W, G+ page name & community (page response is faster) and also on facebook.com/sportsCR3W... Please allow 48 hours to respond via email or get your message. If you would like a quicker one, twitter and G+ will probably yield a quicker result.
Aside from that, pop up a comment or two and get the discussion running where 7 or 8 out of 10 posters are just trolling. This is for passionate, even opinionated sports aficianados, but it is also for those that know better than to troll along and be a rough and tough one on a keyboard. Enjoy things instead of negativity all the time. LIFE'S GOOD 'BRUH!
Thank you,
Dedicated members from Sports CR3W, affiliation with myCR3W Inc (Apps), a registered trademark and all right reserved.