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C8 | THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 2012 | THE COURIER-JOURNAL SPORTS | courier-journal.com/sports IN Scorecard To report sports scores E-mail [email protected] or call the sports desk at 502-582-4361, or toll free at 1-800-765-4011, ext. 4361 BASEBALL International North W L Pct. GB Lehigh Valley 10 4.714 Pawtucket 9 5.643 1 Rochester 7 7.500 3 Buffalo 7 7.500 3 Scranton/WB 5 8.385 4 1 2 Syracuse 3 10.231 6 1 2 South W L Pct. GB Gwinnett 10 4.714 Charlotte 7 7.500 3 Durham 6 8.429 4 Norfolk 5 9.357 5 West W L Pct. GB Toledo 8 5.615 Columbus 8 6.571 1 2 Indianapolis 6 7.462 2 Louisville 5 9.357 3 1 2 Wednesday’s games Charlotte 4, Durham 3 Indianapolis 4, Columbus 3 Buffalo 4, Lehigh Valley 1 Pawtucket 6, Syracuse 1 (11) Toledo 13, Louisville 9 Gwinnett 4, Norfolk 1 Scranton/WB 2, Rochester 0 Thursday’s games Columbus at Indianapolis Pawtucket at Syracuse Norfolk at Gwinnett Lehigh Valley at Buffalo Toledo at Louisville, 6:35 Rochester vs. Scranton/WB Durham at Charlotte Friday’s games Durham at Pawtucket Toledo at Louisville, 6:35 Buffalo at Syracuse Norfolk at Scranton/WB Lehigh Valley at Rochester Columbus at Indianapolis Gwinnett at Charlotte Midwest League Wednesday’s games Dayton 9, Fort Wayne 4 Bow. Green 5, Great Lakes 4 Beloit 6, Kane County 3 West Michigan 8, Lake Co. 5 South Bend 4, Lansing 3 Cedar Rapids 5, Peoria 2 Wisconsin 10, Burlington 6 Clinton at Quad Cities Thursday’s games Wisconsin at West Michigan Fort Wayne at Kane County Quad Cities at Dayton Beloit at South Bend Lansing at Burlington Great Lakes at Peoria Lake County at Clinton Ced. Rapids at Bow. Green, 7:35 Friday’s games Wisconsin at West Michigan Quad Cities at Dayton Fort Wayne at Kane County Lake County at Clinton Lansing at Burlington Great Lakes at Peoria Beloit at South Bend Ced. Rapids at Bow. Green, 8:05 South Atlantic League Wednesday’s games Greenville 4, Lexington 2 Greensboro 9, Lakewood 1 Asheville at West Virginia, ppd. Savannah 2, Rome 0 (7) Savannah 4, Rome 3 Kannapolis at Hickory, ppd. Charleston at Augusta, cncld. Delmarva 6, Hagerstown 2 Thursday’s games Delmarva at Greensboro Lexington at Kannapolis, 7:05 Hickory at Savannah Augusta at Greenville West Virginia at Charleston Lakewood at Hagerstown Rome at Asheville Friday’s games Delmarva at Greensboro Rome at Asheville Lexington at Kannapolis, 7:05 Hickory at Savannah Augusta at Greenville West Virginia at Charleston Lakewood at Hagerstown HOCKEY NHL PLAYOFF GLANCE (x-if necessary) FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) Monday’s games Boston 4, Washington 3, Bos- ton leads series 2-1 St. Louis 4, San Jose 3, St. Louis leads series 2-1 Tuesday’s games Florida 4, New Jersey 3, Florida leads series 2-1 Nashville 3, Detroit 1, Nashville leads series 3-1 Phoenix at Chicago, 9, series tied 1-1 Wednesday’s games Ottawa 3, NY Rangers 2, OT, se- ries tied 2-2 Pittsburgh 10, Philadelphia 3, Philadelphia leads series 3-1 Vancouver at Los Angeles, Los Angeles leads series 3-0 Thursday’s games Florida at New Jersey, 7 Boston at Washington, 7:30 Phoenix at Chicago, 8 St. Louis at San Jose, 10:30 Friday’s games x-Phila. at Pittsburgh, 7:30 Detroit at Nashville, 8 Saturday’s games Washington at Boston, 3 x-New Jersey at Florida, 6:30 Ottawa at NY Rangers, 7 San Jose at St. Louis, 7:30 Chicago at Phoenix, 10 Sunday, April 22 x-Boston at Washington, TBD x-Pittsburgh at Phila., TBD x-Nashville at Detroit, TBD x-Los Angeles at Vancouver, TBD Monday, April 23 x-NY Rangers at Ottawa, TBD x-Phoenix at Chicago, TBD x-St. Louis at San Jose, TBD Tuesday, April 24 x-Florida at New Jersey, TBD x-Phila. at Pittsburgh, TBD x-Detroit at Nashville, TBD x-Vancouver at Los Angeles, TBD Wednesday, April 25 x-Washington at Boston, TBD x-San Jose at St. Louis, TBD x-Chicago at Phoenix, TBD Thursday, April 26 x-Ottawa at NY Rangers, TBD x-New Jersey at Florida, TBD x-Los Angeles at Vancouver, TBD COLLEGE SPORTS Baseball N. Kentucky .110 200 4 - 8 10 1 Bellarmine....000 201 0 - 3 4 2 WP - Clark (3-2). LP - Fuchs (3-3). Records - NKU 25-10, Bel- larmine 19-16 N. Kentcky025 031 410 - 16 17 2 Bellarmine400 010 000 - 5 12 3 WP - Ryan (2-3). LP - Shelley (0-1). HR - Asman (NK). Records - NKU 26-10, Bellarmine 19-17. Others scores Lindsey Wilson 18, Brescia 8 Thomas More 12, Wittenberg 6 Union 8, St. Catharine 1 Memphis 10, Murray St. 4 Softball Indiana .............021 010 - 4 8 1 Ball State......050 601 - 12 15 2 WP - Mazzapica (17-3). LP - Murphy (8-9). Abraham, Cawley, Berenter (IU), Rager, Mercado 2 (BS). HR - Gogreve (IU), Montal- to (BS). Records - Indiana 21-21, Ball State 28-12. Bellarmine....000 000 2 - 2 6 1 N. Kentucky ..121 100 x - 5 11 1 WP - Schwaeble (18-5). LP - Meyer (14-9). HR - McQueen (NKU). Records - Bellarmine 27- 24, N. Kentucky 28-15. Bellarmine......012 501 - 9 10 0 N. Kentucky .....010 000 - 1 6 2 WP - Miller (14-15). LP - Caudill (10-10). HR - Summe, Murdoch (B). Records - Bellarmine 28-24, N. Kentucky 28-16. Kentucky .........000 020 1 - 3 5 1 Mississippi ...... 100 000 0 - 1 4 2 WP - Bell (12-8). LP - Bruning (12-13). 2B - Cervantes (UK), Jay- john (M). HR - Cantillo (M). Rec- ords - Kentucky 22-23, Mississip- pi 16-25. Kentucky ...........320 30 - 8 9 0 Mississippi ........000 00 - 0 3 2 WP - Riley (6-6). LP - Jayjohn (3- 11). 2B - Joiner (UK). HR - Cervan- tes (UK). Records - Kentucky 23- 23, Mississippi 16-26. USF .....................000 00 - 0 4 1 Louisville...........000 54 - 9 6 0 WP - Leonard (8-0). LP - Nevins (23-4). 2B - Wolny (UL). HR - Fowler, Trimble (UL). Records - USF 40-8, Louisville 40-2. USF.................000 010 0 - 1 6 1 Louisville .......021 001 x - 4 4 1 WP - Collins (19-1).LP - Nevins (23-3). 2B - Wolny (UL). Records - USF 40-7, Louisville 39-2. Other scores Thomas More 3, Grove City 2 Grove City 4, Thomas More 0 So. Indiana 1, Ky. Wesleyan 0 So. Indiana 5, Ky. Wesleyan 4 Bow. Green 5, E. Kentucky 2 Bow. Green 6, E. Kentucky 1 TENNIS ATP Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters Wedneday at Monte Carlo Second Round Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, d. Andreas Seppi, Italy, 6-1, 6-4. Alexandr Dolgopolov (16), Uk- raine, d. Bernard Tomic, Aus- tralia, 6-2, 5-7, 6-1. Gilles Simon (9), France, d. Fre- derico Gil, Portugal, 6-3, 6-0. Julien Benneteau, France, d. Jurgen Melzer (15), Austria, 6-4, 6-3. Janko Tipsarevic (7), Serbia, d. Albert Montanes, Spain, 6-2, 6-3. Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakh- stan, d. Filippo Volandri, Italy, 7-6 (8), 2-6, 6-2. Rafael Nadal (2), Spain, d. Jark- ko Nieminen, Finland, 6-4, 6-3. Stanislas Wawrinka, Switzer- land, d. Pablo Andujar, Spain, 7-5, 6-3. Nicolas Almagro (8), Spain, d. Potito Starace, Italy, 7-6 (3), 6-1. Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Re- public, d. Marin Cilic, Croatia, 7-6 (3), 6-1. Robin Haase, Netherlands, d. Fabio Fognini, Italy, 6-4, 6-4. Thomaz Bellucci, Brazil, d. Da- vid Ferrer (5), Spain, 6-3, 6-2. Kei Nishikori (12), Japan, d. Paul-Henri Mathieu, France, 6-4, 6-2. THIS DATE 1897 — John J. McDermott wins the first Boston Marathon in 2 hours, 55 minutes, 10 sec- onds. 1930 — Clarence DeMar wins the Boston Marathon for a rec- ord seventh time, in 2:34:48.2. 1947 — The Toronto Maple Leafs post a 2-1 victory over the Montreal Canadiens to take the NHL Stanley Cup in six games. 1948 — Gerard Cote of Cana- da wins his fourth Boston Mara- thon with a time of 2:31:02. 1950 Nineteen-year-old Ham Kee Yong becomes the youngest to win the Boston Mar- athon with a 2:32:39 clocking. 1965 — The Boston Celtics have five players score 20 or more points in a 129-123 victory over Los Angeles in Game 2 of the NBA Finals. It’s the first time in Finals history there are five 20- point scorers on one team. John Havlicek leads Boston with 24 points,Tom Sanders and Bill Rus- sell each score 23, Tommy Hein- sohn adds 22 and Sam Jones fin- ished with 20. Jerry West leads the Lakers with 45. 1982 Alberto Salazaar breaks the 2:09 mark with a rec- ord 2:08:51 clocking in the Bos- ton Marathon. 1986 — Michael Spinks wins a split decision against Larry Holmes to retain the world heavyweight title in Las Vegas. 1991 — Evander Holyfield re- tains the heavyweight title with a unanimous 12-round decision over 42-year-old challenger George Foreman in Atlantic City, N.J. 1992 — Michael Jordan of the Chicago Bulls wins his sixth straight NBA scoring title with a 30.1 average. 1993 — Kenya’s Cosmas N’de- ti, running his second marathon, beats Kim Jae-Yong of South Ko- rea by 10 seconds to win the Bos- ton Marathon with a time of 2:09.33. Olga Markova of Russia defends her title with a time of 2:25:27. 1998 — San Antonio beats Denver 96-82 to set an NBA rec- ord for the largest single-season turnaround. The Spurs improve by 36 games from 20 wins in 1997. 1998 — Chicago’s Michael Jor- dan scores 44 points to lead the Bulls over the Knicks,111-109, in the final game of the regular sea- son, securing his record 10th NBA scoring title with a 28.7 points per game average. 2000 — Minnesota’s Kevin Garnett becomes the ninth play- er in NBA history to average 20 points, 10 rebounds and five as- sists in a season. The last to do it was Charles Barkley for Phoenix in 1992-93. 2009 — Rafael Nadal becomes the first player to win five straight Monte Carlo Masters ti- tles by beating Novak Djokovic 6-3, 2-6, 6-1. The top-ranked Spaniard, however, loses a set at the clay court tournament for the first time since the 2006 final against Roger Federer. 2010 — Kenya’s Robert Kipro- no Cheruiyot wins the Boston Marathon, breaking the course record with a time of 2:05:52. Ethiopia’s Teyba Erkesso wins the women’s race in 2:26:11 SOCCER MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts Kan. City 6 0 0 18 New York 3 2 1 10 D.C. 2 2 2 8 Houston 2 1 1 7 New England 2 4 0 6 Columbus 2 3 0 6 Chicago 1 1 2 5 Philadelphia 1 3 1 4 Montreal 1 5 1 4 Toronto FC 0 5 0 0 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts Salt Lake 5 2 0 15 San Jose 4 1 1 13 Seattle 3 1 1 10 FC Dallas 3 2 1 10 Chivas USA 3 3 0 9 Colorado 3 3 0 9 Vancouver 2 1 2 8 Los Angeles 2 3 0 6 Portland 1 4 1 4 Saturday’s games Chicago at Toronto FC, 3:30 Houston at Columbus, 7:30 Los Angeles at Colorado, 9 FC Dallas at Vancouver, 10 Kansas City at Portland, 10:30 Phila. at Chivas USA, 10:30 Real Salt Lake at San Jose, 10:30 Sunday’s game New York at D.C. United, 6 GOLF PGA Tour PGA Tour Statistics Through April 15 Scoring Average 1, Rory McIlroy, 68.97. 2, Tiger Woods, 69.03. 3, Justin Rose, 69.31. 4, Lee Westwood, 69.36. 5, Jim Furyk, 69.42. 6, Carl Pet- tersson, 69.49. 7, Keegan Brad- ley, 69.63. 8 (tie), Bubba Watson and Matt Kuchar, 69.73.10, Phil Mickelson, 69.84. Driving Distance 1, Bubba Watson, 313.1. 2, Ja- mie Lovemark, 307.7. 3, Robert Garrigus, 306.6. 4, Dustin John- son, 305.9. 5, Jason Kokrak, 305.4. 6, Charlie Beljan, 303.9. 7, Kyle Stanley, 302.6. 8, Harris English, 302.0. 9 (tie), Jhonattan Vegas and J.B. Holmes, 300.9. Driving Accuracy 1, Jim Furyk, 74.37%. 2, Graeme McDowell, 73.21%. 3, David Toms, 72.22%. 4, John Mallinger, 71.43%. 5, Hunter Mahan, 71.36%. 6, Colt Knost, 71.24%. 7, Heath Slocum, 71.21%. 8, Zach Johnson, 71.03%. 9, Brian Davis, 69.63%. 10, Roberto Castro, 69.51%. Greens in Regulation 1, Lee Westwood, 75.00%. 2, Bubba Watson, 73.60%. 3, John Senden, 71.80%. 4, Hunter Ma- han, 71.20%. 5, Nathan Green, 70.90%. 6, Justin Rose, 70.60%. 7, Will Claxton, 70.60%. 8, Ro- berto Castro, 70.20%. 9, Louis Oosthuizen, 70.20%. 10, Bryce Molder, 70.10%. Total Driving 1, Lee Westwood, 60. 2, Boo Weekley, 61. 3 (tie), John Rollins and Roberto Castro, 66. 5 (tie), Tiger Woods and Louis Oosthui- zen, 70. 7 (tie), John Senden and Jason Dufner, 78. 9, Bo Van Pelt, 82. 10, Two tied with 88. Putting Average 1, Bo Van Pelt, 1.709. 2, Brian Harman,1.710. 3, Zach Johnson, 1.711. 4 (tie), Bob Estes and Carl Pettersson, 1.715. 6, Richard H. Lee, 1.716. 7, Greg Chalmers, 1.717. 8, Aaron Baddeley, 1.718. 9, Ben Crane, 1.721. 10, Jonas Blixt, 1.727. Birdie Average 1, Rory McIlroy, 4.42. 2 (tie), Pe- ter Hanson and Bubba Watson, 4.36. 4, Phil Mickelson, 4.29. 5 (tie), Lee Westwood, Keegan Bradley and Webb Simpson, 4.25. 8, John Senden, 4.23. 9, Bo Van Pelt, 4.21. 10, Two tied with 4.19. Sand Saves 1, Jonas Blixt, 74.14%. 2, Billy Mayfair, 72.73%. 3, David Toms, 68.97%. 4, Lee Westwood, 68.57%. 5, Rory McIlroy, 68.42%. 6, Aaron Baddeley, 65.96%. 7, Martin Flores, 64.81%. 8, Brian Gay, 64.52%. 9, Mark Wilson, 64.29%. 10, Steve Wheatcroft, 64.00%. All-Around Ranking 1, Keegan Bradley, 187. 2, Rory McIlroy, 213. 3 (tie), Lee West- wood and Tiger Woods, 243. 5, Bo Van Pelt, 259. 6, Peter Han- son, 285. 7, Justin Rose, 291. 8, Bubba Watson, 307. 9 (tie), Ja- son Dufner and John Senden, 309. Official Money Leaders 1, Bubba Watson, (8), $3,124,138. 2, Hunter Mahan, (8), $3,094,040. 3, Phil Mickel- son, (9), $2,515,481. 4, Rory McIl- roy, (4), $2,424,000. 5, Justin Rose, (8), $2,175,206. 6, Carl Pet- tersson, (9), $2,145,253. 7, Kyle Stanley, (11), $2,008,919. 8, Johnson Wagner, (11), $2,008,193. 9, Mark Wilson, (12), $1,927,685.10, Tiger Woods, (6), $1,811,000. Champions Tour Champions Tour Statistics Through April 15 Scoring 1, Michael Allen, 68.56. 2, Fred Couples, 68.67. 3, Kenny Perry, 69.00. 4, Bernhard Langer, 69.22. 5, Jay Haas, 69.50. 6, Jeff Sluman, 69.56. 7, Bill Glasson, 69.80. 8, Peter Senior, 69.87. 9, John Cook, 70.00. 10, Tom Leh- man, 70.07. Driving Distance 1, Kenny Perry, 294.2. 2, John Huston, 291.8. 3, Fred Couples, 290.1. 4, Steve Lowery, 288.3. 5, Michael Allen, 286.3. 6, Tom Lehman, 285.4. 7, Mark Calca- vecchia, 284.0. 8, Tom Purtzer, 282.1. 9, Brad Bryant, 281.4. 10, Russ Cochran, 280.5. ROLL CALL BASKETBALL National Basketball Assoc. NBA—Fined Dallas G Delonte West $25,000 for a physical taunt by poking Utah’s Gordon Hayward in the ear during an April 16 game. CLEVELAND CAVALIERS- —Recalled F Luke Harangody from Canton (NBADL). NEW ORLEANS HORNETS- —Signed C Darryl Watkins to a 10-day contract. Waived C Chris Johnson. HOCKEY NHL—Suspended Phoenix F Raffi Torres indefinitely for a hit that knocked Chicago F Marian Hossa out of an April 17 game. NASHVILLE PREDATORS- —Signed LW Josh Shalla to a three-year contract and as- signed him to Milwaukee (AHL). PHOENIX COYOTES—Re- called F Matt Watkins from Port- land (AHL). COLLEGE GEORGE WASHINGTON- —Named Megan Duffy wom- en’s assistant basketball coach. PROVIDENCE—Named Dan Durkin and Kristeena Alexander women’s assistant basketball coaches. TENNESSEE—Announced women’s basketball coach Pat Summitt will take the title of ‘‘head coach emeritus’’ and pro- moted assistant coach Holly Warlick to head coach. TEXAS SOUTHERN—Named Cynthia Cooper-Dyke women’s basketball coach. TOLEDO—Announced the NCAA denied its appeal on next year’s postseason ban for the men’s basketball team because of below-standard Academic Performance Rate scores. The team will be forced to give up three regular-season games and cut its practice time. Pick-up your posters today at The Courier-Journal, 525 West Broadway, Louisville, KY 40202. COLLECT BOTH UK FRONT PAGE COVER POSTERS $20 EACH OR BOTH FOR $25 Each of these 12” x 19” collectible posters are printed on high gloss paper suitable for framing and are only RETURN TO GLORY $1.00 retail For home delivery pricing see Page 2. Business B4 Comics D4 Deaths B6 Editorial A8 Features D1 Lottery A2 Markets B5 Metro B1 Movies D3 Racing C8 Sports C1 TV D5 INDEX 32 PAGES Louisville area: Partly cloudy with scattered rain possible today. Partly cloudy tomorrow with scattered rain. WEATHER| B2 TODAY TOMORROW 81 61 75 36-HOUR FORECAST Call us today at 584-3600 or 888-584-3600 The Courier-Journal today offers a combined one-edi- tion newspaper in order to give all of our readers the NCAA championship game story. TO OUR READERS NEW ORLEANS W on and done. The University of Kentucky is NCAA men’s basketball champion for the eighth time and Wildcats coach John Calipari for the first after beating Kansas 67-59 before a crowd of 70,913 Monday night in the Mer- cedes-Benz Superdome. After a season in which this young team that started three fresh- men and two sopho- mores was debated and discussed be- cause of its youth (and because at least two of those fresh- men are expected to be NBA draft lottery picks), there can be no discussion about this: The Wildcats were the best team all season, they were the best team in the NCAA Tournament and they played like the best team in the na- tion on the sport’s biggest stage Monday night. “I’m so proud of these young men,” Calipari said. “This is not about me, it’s about these 13 players, this is about the Big Blue Nation. I’ve never had any team that has sacri- ficed for each other like this team. They deserve this win, they really do.” UK led by as many as 18 in the first half, but the game was within six in the final minute before Antho- ny Davis, the NCAA’s all-time fresh- man leader in blocked shots, skied out to go after an Elijah Johnson 3- point try that would’ve cut the lead in half. Johnson saw him in the air, pulled the ball down, and traveled. A couple of free throws later, it was over. Calipari turned to his WILDCATS BEAT KANSAS FOR 8TH NCAA TITLE Eric Crawford See CRAWFORD, Page A6 Kentucky’s Michael Kidd-Gilchrist leaps onto Terrence Jones in the celebration after Monday night’s victory over Kansas at the Superdome. MICHAEL CLEVENGER/THE COURIER-JOURNAL ON THE WEB Enjoy more stories, photos and videos at www.courier-jour- nal.com/ncaa BIG TIME IN BIG EASY University of Kentucky fans enjoy the big day and the big game in the Big Easy. A6 A CAT-ACLYSMIC SEASON Read more about the stories be- hind the stats for the Kentucky Wildcats. C1 LEXINGTON GOES WILD Police encountered another night of raucous crowds around the UK campus. A6 A gunman opened fire at a small Christian university in Oakland Monday, killing at least seven people and wounding three. The suspect, a former student, was captured at a nearby shop- ping center. A3 GUNMAN KILLS 7 AT SCHOOL TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 2012 | USPS 135560 NEW ORLEANS —University of Kentucky basketball fans like their nicknames, preferably with the same prefix. There were The Unforgettables in 1992, The Untouchables in 1996 and The Unbelievables in 1997. This year’s Wildcats, then, could be called The Undenia- bles. They weathered every Kansas storm, held off one final, frantic comeback bid and won the program’s eighth NCAA championship Monday night with a 67-59 victory in the title game at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome. Sophomore Terrence Jones, who said he couldn’t leave school after last season because of the team’s Final Four de- feat by a single point, cradled the trophy like a baby while teammates cut down the nets. “It’s beautiful,” he said. “I’m not going to let it go.” For a moment, though, it was shaping up like coach John NO.1 AND DONE University of Kentucky players break out in celebration after leading the school to its first men’s basketball national championship since1998. SAM UPSHAW JR./THE COURIER-JOURNAL Calipari’s young Cats refuse to be denied a national title See CHAMPS, Page C4 CONGRATULATIONS KENTUCKY 2012 COLLEGE BASKETBALL NATIONAL CHAMPIONS NEW ORLEANS —Anthony Davis’ amazing freshman season ended with his most spectacular stunt yet: He dictated Kentucky’s 67-59 NCAA championship game victory over Kansas and only made a single basket. One. No dunks. No lobs. No baby hooks. No 3-pointers. No drives. Just one 15-foot jumper nearly 35 minutes into the game. No problem. By game’s end, when the confetti float- ed down from the roof of the Superdome and John Calipari’s players wrapped each other up in celebratory hugs, there was also no doubt which Ken- tucky player was parked inside the minds of every Kan- sas player. Anthony Davis, only the fourth freshman to be named Most Outstanding Player in the Final Four. Even without scoring, Davis a huge playmaker Rick Bozich See BOZICH, Page C5 TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 2012 » SECTION C Sports Sports By Kyle Tucker [email protected] The Courier-Journal KENTUCKY 67, KANSAS 59 EIGHTH WONDER It has been 14 years since Kentucky won its last NCAA title. Here's a look at all eight championships: 1948 Kentucky 58, Baylor 42 1949 Kentucky 46, Okla. A&M 36 1951 Kentucky 68, Kansas State 58 1958 Kentucky 84, Seattle 72 1978 Kentucky 94, Duke 88 1996 Kentucky 76, Syracuse 67 1998 Kentucky 78, Utah 69 2012 Kentucky 67, Kansas 59 INSIDE THIS SECTION Celebration at Rupp Arena today, C5 Kansas rallies late but falls short, C5 Business B4 Comics D4 Deaths B6 Editorial A8 Features D1 Lottery A2 Markets B5 Metro B1 Movies D3 Racing C8 Sports C1 TV D5 IN INDEX INDEX INDEX INDEX DEX X 32 PAGES TODAY TOMORROW 1 61 75 Call us today at 584-3600 or 888-584-3600 tion after Monday night’s victory over Kansas at the Superdome. CON N N N N N G G GR GR GRA GRA GRA GRA GRA GRA GRA RA AT T T T TU TU 2012 C C O O OL L L LL L L LE E EG GE GE BASKETB a single basket. One. No dunks. No lobs. No baby hooks. No 3-pointers. No drives. Just one 15-foot jumper nearly 35 minutes into the game. No problem. By game’s end, when the confetti float- ed down from the roof of the Superdome and John Calipari’s players wrapped each other up in celebratory hugs, there was also no doubt which Ken- tucky player was parked inside the minds of every Kan- sas player. Anthony Davis, only the fourth freshman to be named Most Outstanding Player in the Final Four. See BOZICH, Page C5 CJ-0000330578 COMMONWEALTH DODGE WE WON’T BE UNDERSOLD! WEWILLBEATANYADVERTISEDPRICEONANYNEWDODGEANDRAMCARORTRUCKORWE WILLGIVEYOU $ 1000CASH BACK! OFFERONLYFORSATURDAY,SUNDAY&MONDAY! COMMONWEALTH DODGE 6408 PRESTON HWY 866-871-4172 Sales Price Plus Tax, License & Fees. Offer Expires 4/23/12. †Advertised price offer must be current (through 4/23/12) from competitive Louisville Area Dodge/Ram dealer. Commonwealth Dodge reserves the right to purchase offer from Louisville Area competitive dealer. Offer expires 4/23/12. NEW 2012 DODGE E E E E E DURANGO SXT 4X4 MSRP $32,029 SAVE $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ SALE PRICE NEW 2012 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN 6 CYL ENGINE MSRP $22,719 SAVE $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ MSRP $22,719 SALE PRICE NEW 2012 DODGE E E E E E E E E E AVENGER SE #2800300 MSRP $23,429 SAVE $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ SALE PRICE NEW 2012 DODGE E CHARGER SE #2600250 MSRP $28,604 SAVE $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ SALE PRICE NEW 2012 DODGE RAM 1500 REG. CAB 6 SPEED AUTO TRANS, 4.7 V8 ENGINE, #2331250 MSRP $22,444 SAVE $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ V8 ENGINE, #2331250 MSRP $22,444 SALE PRICE RAM 1500 QUAD CAB 4.7L, 6 SPEED SAVE $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ SALE PRICE HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS Baseball Heritage Hills000 000 0 - 0 4 0 No. Harrison..000 001 x - 1 8 1 WP - Murphy. LP - Ward. 2B - Bolin (NH). Records - Heritage Hills 9-6, North Harrison 9-1. Crawford Co.203 000 0 - 5 5 4 So. Central.146 310 x - 15 13 1 WP - Boston. LP - Allen. 2B - Bowles (CC), Boston (SC), West (SC). 3B - Knear (SC). HR - Boston (SC) 2. Records - Crawford Coun- ty 5-2, South Central 9-2. Tuesday’s games So. Central ....200112 0 - 6 5 0 Clarksville....000 000 0 - 0 2 4 WP - Veith (3-1). LP - Wallace (1-2). 2B - O’Conner (SC), Jones (SC). Records - South Central 8-2, Clarksville 5-6. W. Washington...120 000 4 - 7 Shoals ................231 013 0 - 10 Softball Madison........000 000 0 - 0 2 1 Floyd Cent....000 002 x - 2 6 1 WP - Cato (4-2). LP - Bickers (1-1). Records - Madison 4-4, Floyd Central 13-2. Charlestown..142 204 - 13 9 1 Borden.............000 000 - 0 0 7 WP - Webster (8-3). LP - Farvour (3-4). 2B - Ashby (C). Records - Charlestown 8-3, Borden 3-4. Providence ..000 000 2 - 2 5 2 Corydon ........ 100 200 x - 3 5 1 WP - Crawhorn (6-7). LP - Col- lett (2-2). Records - Providence 6-6, Corydon 6-9. Henryville ...210 010 2 - 6 10 6 Lanesville .006 052 x - 13 12 5 WP - Zeller (2-1). LP - Basham (4-2). 2B - Richey (H), Basham (H), DeWeese (L), Schoen (L), Smith (L). Records - Henryville 5-3, Lanesville 6-2. Girls’ tennis SHAWE 4, N. WASH. 1 Singles: 1. Liz Grote (S) d. Courtney Amick 7-6 (7-4), 6-2; 2. Taylor Grote (S) d. Tiffanie Brison 4-6, 6-3, 6-4; 3. Bailey Davis (S) d. Melanie Dieterlen 7-5, 6-0. Doubles: 1. Alex Seals and Ashley Johnson (NW) d. Taylor Davis and Chloe Storm 7-5, 5-7, 6-1; 2. Brittany Snodgrass and Caitlin Kelley (S) d. Amanda Kemp and Christen Walker 6-1, 6-1. Boys’ track Tuesday’s meet Jennings County 101, Silver Creek 31. Discus – Alsup (JC), 128-1; Shot put – Alsup (JC), 42-6; Long jump – McClanahan (JC), 18-0; High jump – Jackson (JC), 6-0; Pole vault – Pifer (JC), 9-6; 3,200 relay – Jennings County, 8:52.2; 110 hurdles – Staples (JC), 17.9; 100 – McClanahan (JC), 12.0; 1,600 – Haas (SC), 4:40.5; 400 relay – Jennings County, 47.4; 300 hurdles – Gasper (JC), 46.2; 800 – McCoy (JC), 2:09.7; 200 – McClanahan (JC), 24.2; 3,200 – Haas (SC), 10:13.5; 1,600 relay – Jennings County, 3:45.1. Girls’ track Tuesday’s meet Jennings County 65, Silver Creek 54. Discus – Christman (SC), 100- 6.5; Shot put – Chrisman (SC), 31-5; Long jump – Clemons (SC), 14-0; High jump – Back- herms (SC), 4-4; 3,200 relay – Silver Creek, 10:52.63; 100 hur- dles – Ertel (JC), 15.69; 100 – Brown (JC), 13.09; 1,600 – Cle- mons (SC), 5:49.74; 400 relay – Jennings County, 54.03; 400 – Shields (SC), 1:05.38; 300 hur- dles – Ertel (JC), 49.82; 800 – Shields (SC), 2:40.94; 200 Brown (JC), 27.56; 3,200 – Sharp (SC), 12:43.76; 1,600 relay – Jennings County, 4:37.81. BOXING Fight Schedule April 20 At Bell Centre, Montreal (ESPN2), Adonis Stevenson vs. Noe Gonzalez, 12, super middle- weights. At Biloxi, Miss. (SHO), Jermain Taylor vs. Caleb Truax, 10, mid- dleweights; Erislandy Lara vs. Ronald Hearns, 10, junior mid- dleweights; Erislandy Lara vs. Ronald Hearns, 10, junior mid- dleweights. April 21 At Schwerin, Germany, Karoly Balzsay vs. Dimitri Sartison, 12, for Balzsay’s WBA World super middleweight title; Rafael Beja- ran vs. Ante Bilic, 12, for Beja- ran’s WBO European middle- weight title; Jurgen Brahmer vs. Vikapita Meroro,10, light heavy- weights. At the Don Haskins Center, El Paso, Texas (SHO), Abner Mares vs. Eric Morel, 12, for the vacant WBC super bantamweight title; Anselmo Moreno vs. David De La Mora, 12, for Moreno’s WBA Su- per World bantamweight title; Luis Ramos Jr. vs. Daniel Attah, 10, lightweights; Librado An- drade vs. Rowland Bryant,10, su- per middleweights. At Morelia, Mexico, Jesus Sil- vestre vs. Edwin Diaz, 12, for the interim WBA World minimum- weight title; Cristian Mijares vs. Cruz Carvajal, 12 rounds, junior featherweights; Marvin Quinte- ro vs. Al Sabaupan, 12 rounds, IBF lightweight title eliminator At San Juan, Argentina, Omar Narvaez vs. Jose Cabrera, 12 rounds, for Narvaez’s WBO ju- nior bantamweight title. April 26 At Panama City, Panama, Car- los Tamara vs. Ricardo Nunez, 12, IBF flyweight eliminator. At the Crowne Plaza Hotel, Tul- sa, Okla., Carson Jones vs. Allen Conyers,12, for Jones’ USBA wel- terweight title. April 27 At Resorts, Atlantic City, N.J., Omar Sheika vs. Yusaf Mack, 12, for the USBA light heavyweight title. At the Buffalo Run Casino, Mi- ami, Okla. (SHO), Thomas Os- thuizen vs. Maxim Vlasov, 12, for Osthuizen’s IBO middleweight title; Luis del Valle vs. Christo- pher Martin, 10, super bantam- weights. At Austin, Texas (ESPN2), Is- mayl Sillakh vs. Denis Grachev, 10, light heavyweights; Javier Fortuna vs. Yuandale Evans, 10, lightweights. April 28 At Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, N.J. (HBO), Bernard Hopkins vs. Chad Dawson, 12, for Hop- kins’ WBC light heavyweight ti- tle; Seth Mitchell vs. Chazz With- erspoon, 10 rounds, heavy- weights. At Maracay, Venezuela, Liborio Solis vs. Santiago Ivan Acosta, 12, for Solis’ interim WBA World super flyweight title. At Miami, Okla. (SHO), Thomas Oosthuizen vs. Marcus Johnson, 10, super middleweights; Orlan- do Del Valle vs. Christopher Mar- tin, 10, junior featherweights. Time: 04-18-2012 22:50 User: jpatterson PubDate: 04-19-2012 Zone: IN Edition: 1 Page Name: C8 Color: Cyan Magenta Yellow Black

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Page 1: C8 SPORTS Scorecard To report sports scores E-mail sports ...nyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7ns17sp311/data/75773_IN20120419C8NB.pdf · ... THE COURIER-JOURNAL SPORTS ... Lansing at Burlington

C8 | THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 2012 | THE COURIER-JOURNAL SPORTS | courier-journal.com/sports IN

ScorecardTo report sports scoresE-mail [email protected] or callthe sports desk at 502-582-4361, or toll freeat 1-800-765-4011, ext. 4361

BASEBALLInternational

North W L Pct. GBLehigh Valley 10 4.714 —Pawtucket 9 5.643 1Rochester 7 7.500 3Buffalo 7 7.500 3Scranton/WB 5 8.385 4 1⁄2Syracuse 3 10.231 6 1⁄2South W L Pct. GBGwinnett 10 4.714 —Charlotte 7 7.500 3Durham 6 8.429 4Norfolk 5 9.357 5West W L Pct. GBToledo 8 5.615 —Columbus 8 6.571 1⁄2Indianapolis 6 7.462 2Louisville 5 9.357 3 1⁄2

Wednesday’s gamesCharlotte 4, Durham 3Indianapolis 4, Columbus 3Buffalo 4, Lehigh Valley 1Pawtucket 6, Syracuse 1 (11)Toledo 13, Louisville 9Gwinnett 4, Norfolk 1Scranton/WB 2, Rochester 0

Thursday’s gamesColumbus at IndianapolisPawtucket at SyracuseNorfolk at GwinnettLehigh Valley at BuffaloToledo at Louisville, 6:35Rochester vs. Scranton/WBDurham at Charlotte

Friday’s gamesDurham at PawtucketToledo at Louisville, 6:35Buffalo at SyracuseNorfolk at Scranton/WBLehigh Valley at RochesterColumbus at IndianapolisGwinnett at Charlotte

Midwest LeagueWednesday’s games

Dayton 9, Fort Wayne 4Bow. Green 5, Great Lakes 4Beloit 6, Kane County 3West Michigan 8, Lake Co. 5South Bend 4, Lansing 3Cedar Rapids 5, Peoria 2Wisconsin 10, Burlington 6Clinton at Quad Cities

Thursday’s gamesWisconsin at West MichiganFort Wayne at Kane CountyQuad Cities at DaytonBeloit at South BendLansing at BurlingtonGreat Lakes at PeoriaLake County at ClintonCed. Rapids at Bow. Green, 7:35

Friday’s gamesWisconsin at West MichiganQuad Cities at DaytonFort Wayne at Kane CountyLake County at ClintonLansing at BurlingtonGreat Lakes at PeoriaBeloit at South BendCed. Rapids at Bow. Green, 8:05South Atlantic League

Wednesday’s gamesGreenville 4, Lexington 2Greensboro 9, Lakewood 1Asheville at West Virginia, ppd.Savannah 2, Rome 0 (7)Savannah 4, Rome 3Kannapolis at Hickory, ppd.Charleston at Augusta, cncld.Delmarva 6, Hagerstown 2

Thursday’s gamesDelmarva at GreensboroLexington at Kannapolis, 7:05Hickory at SavannahAugusta at GreenvilleWest Virginia at CharlestonLakewood at HagerstownRome at Asheville

Friday’s gamesDelmarva at GreensboroRome at AshevilleLexington at Kannapolis, 7:05Hickory at SavannahAugusta at GreenvilleWest Virginia at CharlestonLakewood at Hagerstown

HOCKEYNHL

PLAYOFF GLANCE(x-if necessary)FIRST ROUND

(Best-of-7)Monday’s games

Boston 4, Washington 3, Bos-ton leads series 2-1

St. Louis 4, San Jose 3, St. Louisleads series 2-1

Tuesday’s gamesFlorida 4, New Jersey 3, Florida

leads series 2-1Nashville 3, Detroit 1, Nashville

leads series 3-1Phoenix at Chicago, 9, series

tied 1-1Wednesday’s games

Ottawa 3, NY Rangers 2, OT, se-ries tied 2-2Pittsburgh 10, Philadelphia 3,

Philadelphia leads series 3-1Vancouver at Los Angeles, Los

Angeles leads series 3-0Thursday’s games

Florida at New Jersey, 7Boston at Washington, 7:30Phoenix at Chicago, 8St. Louis at San Jose, 10:30

Friday’s gamesx-Phila. at Pittsburgh, 7:30Detroit at Nashville, 8

Saturday’s gamesWashington at Boston, 3x-New Jersey at Florida, 6:30Ottawa at NY Rangers, 7San Jose at St. Louis, 7:30Chicago at Phoenix, 10

Sunday, April 22x-Boston at Washington, TBDx-Pittsburgh at Phila., TBDx-Nashville at Detroit, TBDx-Los Angeles at Vancouver, TBD

Monday, April 23x-NY Rangers at Ottawa, TBDx-Phoenix at Chicago, TBDx-St. Louis at San Jose, TBD

Tuesday, April 24x-Florida at New Jersey, TBDx-Phila. at Pittsburgh, TBDx-Detroit at Nashville, TBDx-Vancouver at Los Angeles, TBD

Wednesday, April 25x-Washington at Boston, TBDx-San Jose at St. Louis, TBDx-Chicago at Phoenix, TBD

Thursday, April 26x-Ottawa at NY Rangers, TBDx-New Jersey at Florida, TBDx-Los Angeles at Vancouver, TBD

COLLEGE SPORTSBaseball

N. Kentucky .110 200 4 - 8 10 1Bellarmine....000 201 0 - 3 4 2

WP - Clark (3-2). LP - Fuchs(3-3). Records - NKU 25-10, Bel-larmine 19-16N.Kentcky025 031410 -1617 2Bellarmine400 010 000 - 5 12 3

WP - Ryan (2-3). LP - Shelley(0-1). HR - Asman (NK). Records -NKU 26-10, Bellarmine 19-17.

Others scoresLindsey Wilson 18, Brescia 8Thomas More 12, Wittenberg 6Union 8, St. Catharine 1Memphis 10, Murray St. 4

SoftballIndiana .............021 010 - 4 8 1Ball State......050 601 - 12 15 2

WP - Mazzapica (17-3). LP -Murphy (8-9).Abraham,Cawley,Berenter (IU), Rager, Mercado 2(BS). HR - Gogreve (IU), Montal-to (BS). Records - Indiana 21-21,Ball State 28-12.Bellarmine....000 000 2 - 2 6 1N. Kentucky ..121 100 x - 5 11 1

WP - Schwaeble (18-5). LP -Meyer (14-9). HR - McQueen(NKU). Records - Bellarmine 27-24, N. Kentucky 28-15.Bellarmine......012 501 - 9 10 0N. Kentucky .....010 000 - 1 6 2

WP - Miller (14-15). LP - Caudill(10-10). HR - Summe, Murdoch(B). Records - Bellarmine 28-24,N. Kentucky 28-16.Kentucky.........000 020 1 - 3 5 1Mississippi ......100 000 0 - 1 4 2

WP - Bell (12-8). LP - Bruning(12-13). 2B - Cervantes (UK), Jay-john (M). HR - Cantillo (M). Rec-ords - Kentucky 22-23, Mississip-pi 16-25.Kentucky ...........320 30 - 8 9 0Mississippi ........000 00 - 0 3 2

WP - Riley (6-6). LP - Jayjohn (3-11). 2B - Joiner (UK).HR - Cervan-tes (UK). Records - Kentucky 23-23, Mississippi 16-26.USF .....................000 00 - 0 4 1Louisville...........000 54 - 9 6 0

WP - Leonard (8-0). LP - Nevins(23-4). 2B - Wolny (UL). HR -Fowler, Trimble (UL). Records -USF 40-8, Louisville 40-2.USF.................000 010 0 - 1 6 1Louisville .......021 001 x - 4 4 1

WP - Collins (19-1). LP - Nevins(23-3).2B - Wolny (UL).Records -USF 40-7, Louisville 39-2.

Other scoresThomas More 3, Grove City 2Grove City 4, Thomas More 0So. Indiana 1, Ky. Wesleyan 0So. Indiana 5, Ky. Wesleyan 4Bow. Green 5, E. Kentucky 2Bow. Green 6, E. Kentucky 1

TENNISATP

Monte-Carlo Rolex MastersWedneday at Monte Carlo

Second RoundNovak Djokovic (1), Serbia, d.

Andreas Seppi, Italy, 6-1, 6-4.Alexandr Dolgopolov (16), Uk-

raine, d. Bernard Tomic, Aus-tralia, 6-2, 5-7, 6-1.

Gilles Simon (9), France, d. Fre-derico Gil, Portugal, 6-3, 6-0.

Julien Benneteau, France, d.Jurgen Melzer (15), Austria, 6-4,6-3.

Janko Tipsarevic (7), Serbia, d.Albert Montanes, Spain, 6-2,6-3.

Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakh-stan,d.Filippo Volandri, Italy,7-6(8), 2-6, 6-2.

Rafael Nadal (2), Spain, d. Jark-ko Nieminen, Finland, 6-4, 6-3.

Stanislas Wawrinka, Switzer-land, d. Pablo Andujar, Spain,7-5, 6-3.

Nicolas Almagro (8), Spain, d.Potito Starace, Italy, 7-6 (3), 6-1.

Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Re-public, d. Marin Cilic, Croatia,7-6 (3), 6-1.

Robin Haase, Netherlands, d.Fabio Fognini, Italy, 6-4, 6-4.

Thomaz Bellucci, Brazil, d. Da-vid Ferrer (5), Spain, 6-3, 6-2.

Kei Nishikori (12), Japan, d.Paul-Henri Mathieu, France, 6-4,6-2.

THIS DATE1897 — John J. McDermott

wins the first Boston Marathonin 2 hours, 55 minutes, 10 sec-onds.1930 — Clarence DeMar wins

the Boston Marathon for a rec-ord seventh time, in 2:34:48.2.1947 — The Toronto Maple

Leafs post a 2-1 victory over theMontreal Canadiens to take theNHL Stanley Cup in six games.1948 — Gerard Cote of Cana-

da wins his fourth Boston Mara-thon with a time of 2:31:02.1950 — Nineteen-year-old

Ham Kee Yong becomes theyoungest to win the Boston Mar-athon with a 2:32:39 clocking.1965 — The Boston Celtics

have five players score 20 ormore points in a 129-123 victoryover Los Angeles in Game 2 ofthe NBA Finals. It’s the first timein Finals history there are five 20-point scorers on one team. JohnHavlicek leads Boston with 24points,Tom Sanders and Bill Rus-sell each score 23, Tommy Hein-sohn adds 22 and Sam Jones fin-ished with 20. Jerry West leadsthe Lakers with 45.1982 — Alberto Salazaar

breaks the 2:09 mark with a rec-ord 2:08:51 clocking in the Bos-ton Marathon.1986 — Michael Spinks wins a

split decision against LarryHolmes to retain the worldheavyweight title in Las Vegas.1991 — Evander Holyfield re-

tains the heavyweight title witha unanimous 12-round decisionover 42-year-old challengerGeorge Foreman in Atlantic City,N.J.1992 — Michael Jordan of the

Chicago Bulls wins his sixthstraight NBA scoring title with a30.1 average.1993 — Kenya’s Cosmas N’de-

ti, running his second marathon,beats Kim Jae-Yong of South Ko-rea by10 seconds to win the Bos-ton Marathon with a time of2:09.33. Olga Markova of Russiadefends her title with a time of2:25:27.1998 — San Antonio beats

Denver 96-82 to set an NBA rec-ord for the largest single-seasonturnaround. The Spurs improveby 36 games from 20 wins in1997.

1998 — Chicago’s Michael Jor-dan scores 44 points to lead theBulls over the Knicks, 111-109, inthe final game of the regular sea-son, securing his record 10thNBA scoring title with a 28.7points per game average.

2000 — Minnesota’s KevinGarnett becomes the ninth play-er in NBA history to average 20points, 10 rebounds and five as-sists in a season. The last to do itwas Charles Barkley for Phoenixin 1992-93.

2009 — Rafael Nadal becomesthe first player to win fivestraight Monte Carlo Masters ti-tles by beating Novak Djokovic6-3, 2-6, 6-1. The top-rankedSpaniard, however, loses a set atthe clay court tournament for thefirst time since the 2006 finalagainst Roger Federer.

2010 — Kenya’s Robert Kipro-no Cheruiyot wins the BostonMarathon, breaking the courserecord with a time of 2:05:52.Ethiopia’s Teyba Erkesso winsthe women’s race in 2:26:11

SOCCERMLS

EASTERN CONFERENCEW L T Pts

Kan. City 6 0 0 18New York 3 2 1 10D.C. 2 2 2 8Houston 2 1 1 7New England 2 4 0 6Columbus 2 3 0 6Chicago 1 1 2 5Philadelphia 1 3 1 4Montreal 1 5 1 4Toronto FC 0 5 0 0

WESTERN CONFERENCEW L T Pts

Salt Lake 5 2 0 15San Jose 4 1 1 13Seattle 3 1 1 10FC Dallas 3 2 1 10Chivas USA 3 3 0 9Colorado 3 3 0 9Vancouver 2 1 2 8Los Angeles 2 3 0 6Portland 1 4 1 4

Saturday’s gamesChicago at Toronto FC, 3:30Houston at Columbus, 7:30Los Angeles at Colorado, 9FC Dallas at Vancouver, 10Kansas City at Portland, 10:30Phila. at Chivas USA, 10:30Real Salt Lake at San Jose, 10:30

Sunday’s gameNew York at D.C. United, 6

GOLFPGA Tour

PGA Tour StatisticsThrough April 15Scoring Average

1, Rory McIlroy, 68.97. 2, TigerWoods, 69.03. 3, Justin Rose,69.31. 4, Lee Westwood, 69.36.5, Jim Furyk, 69.42. 6, Carl Pet-tersson, 69.49. 7, Keegan Brad-ley, 69.63. 8 (tie), Bubba Watsonand Matt Kuchar, 69.73. 10, PhilMickelson, 69.84.

Driving Distance1, Bubba Watson, 313.1. 2, Ja-

mie Lovemark, 307.7. 3, RobertGarrigus, 306.6. 4, Dustin John-son, 305.9. 5, Jason Kokrak,305.4.6,Charlie Beljan,303.9.7,Kyle Stanley, 302.6. 8, HarrisEnglish, 302.0. 9 (tie), JhonattanVegas and J.B. Holmes, 300.9.

Driving Accuracy1, Jim Furyk, 74.37%. 2,

Graeme McDowell, 73.21%. 3,David Toms, 72.22%. 4, JohnMallinger, 71.43%. 5, HunterMahan, 71.36%. 6, Colt Knost,71.24%. 7, Heath Slocum,71.21%. 8, Zach Johnson,71.03%. 9, Brian Davis, 69.63%.10, Roberto Castro, 69.51%.

Greens in Regulation1, Lee Westwood, 75.00%. 2,

Bubba Watson, 73.60%. 3, JohnSenden, 71.80%. 4, Hunter Ma-han, 71.20%. 5, Nathan Green,70.90%. 6, Justin Rose, 70.60%.7, Will Claxton, 70.60%. 8, Ro-berto Castro, 70.20%. 9, LouisOosthuizen, 70.20%. 10, BryceMolder, 70.10%.

Total Driving1, Lee Westwood, 60. 2, Boo

Weekley, 61. 3 (tie), John Rollinsand Roberto Castro, 66. 5 (tie),Tiger Woods and Louis Oosthui-zen, 70. 7 (tie), John Senden andJason Dufner, 78. 9, Bo Van Pelt,82. 10, Two tied with 88.

Putting Average1, Bo Van Pelt, 1.709. 2, Brian

Harman, 1.710. 3, Zach Johnson,1.711. 4 (tie), Bob Estes and CarlPettersson, 1.715. 6, Richard H.Lee, 1.716. 7, Greg Chalmers,1.717. 8, Aaron Baddeley, 1.718.9, Ben Crane, 1.721. 10, JonasBlixt, 1.727.

Birdie Average1, Rory McIlroy, 4.42. 2 (tie), Pe-

ter Hanson and Bubba Watson,4.36. 4, Phil Mickelson, 4.29. 5(tie), Lee Westwood, KeeganBradley and Webb Simpson,4.25. 8, John Senden, 4.23. 9, BoVan Pelt, 4.21. 10, Two tied with4.19.

Sand Saves1, Jonas Blixt, 74.14%. 2, Billy

Mayfair, 72.73%. 3, David Toms,68.97%. 4, Lee Westwood,68.57%. 5, Rory McIlroy,68.42%. 6, Aaron Baddeley,65.96%. 7, Martin Flores,64.81%.8,Brian Gay,64.52%.9,Mark Wilson, 64.29%. 10, SteveWheatcroft, 64.00%.

All-Around Ranking1, Keegan Bradley, 187. 2, Rory

McIlroy, 213. 3 (tie), Lee West-wood and Tiger Woods, 243. 5,Bo Van Pelt, 259. 6, Peter Han-son, 285. 7, Justin Rose, 291. 8,Bubba Watson, 307. 9 (tie), Ja-son Dufner and John Senden,309.

Official Money Leaders1, Bubba Watson, (8),

$3,124,138. 2, Hunter Mahan,(8), $3,094,040. 3, Phil Mickel-son, (9),$2,515,481.4,Rory McIl-roy, (4), $2,424,000. 5, JustinRose, (8), $2,175,206. 6, Carl Pet-tersson, (9), $2,145,253. 7, KyleStanley, (11), $2,008,919. 8,Johnson Wagner, (11),$2,008,193.9,Mark Wilson, (12),$1,927,685.10, Tiger Woods, (6),$1,811,000.

Champions TourChampions Tour Statistics

Through April 15Scoring

1, Michael Allen, 68.56. 2, FredCouples, 68.67. 3, Kenny Perry,69.00. 4, Bernhard Langer,69.22. 5, Jay Haas, 69.50. 6, JeffSluman, 69.56. 7, Bill Glasson,69.80. 8, Peter Senior, 69.87. 9,John Cook, 70.00. 10, Tom Leh-man, 70.07.

Driving Distance1, Kenny Perry, 294.2. 2, John

Huston, 291.8. 3, Fred Couples,290.1. 4, Steve Lowery, 288.3. 5,Michael Allen, 286.3. 6, TomLehman, 285.4. 7, Mark Calca-vecchia, 284.0. 8, Tom Purtzer,282.1. 9, Brad Bryant, 281.4. 10,Russ Cochran, 280.5.

ROLL CALLBASKETBALL

National Basketball Assoc.NBA—Fined Dallas G Delonte

West $25,000 for a physicaltaunt by poking Utah’s GordonHayward in the ear during anApril 16 game.

CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-—Recalled F Luke Harangodyfrom Canton (NBADL).

NEW ORLEANS HORNETS-—Signed C Darryl Watkins to a10-day contract. Waived C ChrisJohnson.

HOCKEYNHL—Suspended Phoenix F

Raffi Torres indefinitely for a hitthat knocked Chicago F MarianHossa out of an April 17 game.

NASHVILLE PREDATORS-—Signed LW Josh Shalla to athree-year contract and as-signed him to Milwaukee (AHL).

PHOENIX COYOTES—Re-called F Matt Watkins from Port-land (AHL).

COLLEGEGEORGE WASHINGTON-

—Named Megan Duffy wom-en’s assistant basketball coach.

PROVIDENCE—Named DanDurkin and Kristeena Alexanderwomen’s assistant basketballcoaches.

TENNESSEE—Announcedwomen’s basketball coach PatSummitt will take the title of‘‘head coach emeritus’’ and pro-moted assistant coach HollyWarlick to head coach.

TEXAS SOUTHERN—NamedCynthia Cooper-Dyke women’sbasketball coach.

TOLEDO—Announced theNCAA denied its appeal on nextyear’s postseason ban for themen’s basketball team becauseof below-standard AcademicPerformance Rate scores. Theteam will be forced to give upthree regular-season games andcut its practice time.

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*Loan example as of 3/15/2012: $150,000 30-year fixed rate mortgage loan. 4.232% Annual Percentage Rate with 360 payments of $726.97. Primary checking account with automatic deduction of loan payment required for promotional closing costs. $999 closing costsdoes not include title insurance. Maximum loan amount $417,000. Terms, costs and rates subject to change daily. Limited time offer. Loan subject to underwriting and approval. Examples exclude partial month’s interest and do not include monthly taxes and homeowner’sinsurance so your actual payment may be greater. Republic Bank NMLS #402606.

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TheCourier-Journal todayoffers a combined one-edi-tion newspaper in order togive all of our readers theNCAA championship gamestory.

TO OUR READERS

NEWORLEANS

Won and done.

The University ofKentucky is NCAAmen’s basketballchampion for the

eighth timeandWildcats coachJohnCalipari for the first after beatingKansas 67-59 before a crowd of70,913 Monday night in the Mer-cedes-Benz Superdome.

After a season in which thisyoung team thatstarted three fresh-men and two sopho-mores was debatedand discussed be-cause of its youth(and because at leasttwo of those fresh-men are expected tobe NBA draft lotterypicks), there can beno discussion aboutthis:

The Wildcats were the best teamallseason, theywerethebest teaminthe NCAA Tournament and theyplayed like the best team in the na-tion on the sport’s biggest stageMonday night.

“I’m so proud of these youngmen,” Calipari said. “This is notaboutme, it’s about these13 players,this isabout theBigBlueNation. I’venever had any team that has sacri-ficed for each other like this team.They deserve this win, they reallydo.”

UK led by as many as 18 in thefirst half, but the game was withinsix in the finalminute beforeAntho-nyDavis, theNCAA’s all-time fresh-man leader in blocked shots, skiedout to go after an Elijah Johnson 3-point trythatwould’vecuttheleadinhalf. Johnson saw him in the air,pulled the ball down, and traveled.

A couple of free throws later, itwas over. Calipari turned to his

WILDCATS BEAT KANSAS FOR 8TH NCAA TITLE

EricCrawford

See CRAWFORD, Page A6

Kentucky’s Michael Kidd-Gilchrist leaps onto Terrence Jones in the celebration after Monday night’s victory over Kansas at the Superdome.MICHAEL CLEVENGER/THE COURIER-JOURNAL

ON THEWEBEnjoy more stories, photos andvideos at www.courier-jour-nal.com/ncaa

BIG TIME IN BIG EASYUniversity of Kentucky fans enjoythe big day and the big game inthe Big Easy. A6

A CAT-ACLYSMIC SEASONRead more about the stories be-hind the stats for the KentuckyWildcats. C1

LEXINGTON GOESWILDPolice encountered another nightof raucous crowds around the UKcampus. A6

A gunman opened fire at a small Christianuniversity in Oakland Monday, killing at leastsevenpeople andwounding three.The suspect, aformer student, was captured at a nearby shop-ping center. A3

GUNMAN KILLS 7 AT SCHOOL

TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 2012 | USPS 135560

1

NEWORLEANS—UniversityofKentuckybasketball fansliketheirnicknames,preferablywiththesameprefix.Therewere TheUnforgettables in1992, TheUntouchables in1996andTheUnbelievables in1997.

This year’s Wildcats, then, could be called The Undenia-bles.TheyweatheredeveryKansasstorm,heldoffonefinal,frantic comeback bid and won the program’s eighth NCAAchampionshipMonday night with a 67-59 victory in the titlegameat theMercedes-BenzSuperdome.

Sophomore Terrence Jones, who said he couldn’t leaveschool after last season because of the team’s Final Four de-feat by a single point, cradled the trophy like a baby whileteammatescutdownthenets.

“It’sbeautiful,”hesaid. “I’mnotgoing to let it go.”For amoment, though, it was shaping up like coach John

NO.1 AND DONEUniversity of Kentucky players break out in celebration after leading the school to its first men’s basketball national championship since 1998. SAM UPSHAW JR./THE COURIER-JOURNAL

Calipari’s young Cats refuseto be denied a national title

See CHAMPS, Page C4

KY K1

CONGRATULATIONS KENTUCKY2012 COLLEGE BASKETBALL NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

NEWORLEANS—Anthony Davis’amazing freshman season ended with hismost spectacular stunt yet: He dictatedKentucky’s 67-59 NCAA championshipgame victory over Kansas and only madea single basket. One.

No dunks. No lobs. No baby hooks. No3-pointers. No drives. Just one 15-footjumper nearly 35 minutes into the game.

No problem.By game’s end, when the confetti float-

ed down from the roof of the Superdomeand John Calipari’s players wrapped each other up incelebratory hugs, there was also no doubt which Ken-tucky player was parked inside the minds of every Kan-sas player.

Anthony Davis, only the fourth freshman to be namedMost Outstanding Player in the Final Four.

Even without scoring,Davis a huge playmaker

RickBozich

See BOZICH, Page C5

TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 2012 » SECTION C

SportsSports

By Kyle [email protected] Courier-Journal

KENTUCKY 67, KANSAS 59

EIGHTHWONDERIt has been 14 years since Kentuckywon its last NCAA title. Here's a lookat all eight championships:

1948Kentucky 58,Baylor 42

1949Kentucky 46,Okla. A&M 36

1951Kentucky 68,

Kansas State 58

1958Kentucky 84,Seattle 72

1978Kentucky 94,

Duke 88

1996Kentucky 76,Syracuse 67

1998Kentucky 78,

Utah 69

2012Kentucky 67,Kansas 59

INSIDE THIS SECTIONCelebration at Rupp Arena today, C5Kansas rallies late but falls short, C5

Business B4Comics D4Deaths B6Editorial A8Features D1Lottery A2

Markets B5Metro B1Movies D3Racing C8Sports C1TV D5

INDINDEXINDEXINDEXINDEXDEXX 32 PAGES

TODAY TOMORROW

1 61 75

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tion after Monday night’s victory over Kansas at the Superdome.

CONONNNNNGGGGRGRAGRAGRAGRAGRAGRAGRAGRARAATTTTUTUTUL2012 COCOOLOLOLLLLLELELELEEGEGEGEGE BASKETBA

a single basket. One.No dunks. No lobs. No baby hooks. No

3-pointers. No drives. Just one 15-footjumper nearly 35 minutes into the game.

No problem.By game’s end, when the confetti float-

ed down from the roof of the Superdomeand John Calipari’s players wrapped each other up incelebratory hugs, there was also no doubt which Ken-tucky player was parked inside the minds of every Kan-sas player.

Anthony Davis, only the fourth freshman to be namedMost Outstanding Player in the Final Four.

See BOZICH, Page C5

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HIGH SCHOOLSPORTS

BaseballHeritage Hills000 000 0 - 0 4 0No. Harrison..000 001 x - 1 8 1

WP - Murphy. LP - Ward. 2B -Bolin (NH). Records - HeritageHills 9-6, North Harrison 9-1.Crawford Co.203 000 0 - 5 5 4So. Central .146 310 x - 15 13 1

WP - Boston. LP - Allen. 2B -Bowles (CC), Boston (SC), West(SC).3B - Knear (SC).HR - Boston(SC) 2.Records - Crawford Coun-ty 5-2, South Central 9-2.

Tuesday’s gamesSo. Central ....200 112 0 - 6 5 0Clarksville....000 000 0 - 0 2 4

WP - Veith (3-1). LP - Wallace(1-2). 2B - O’Conner (SC), Jones(SC). Records - South Central8-2, Clarksville 5-6.W. Washington...120 000 4 - 7Shoals ................231 013 0 - 10

SoftballMadison........000 000 0 - 0 2 1Floyd Cent....000 002 x - 2 6 1

WP - Cato (4-2). LP - Bickers(1-1). Records - Madison 4-4,Floyd Central 13-2.Charlestown..142 204 - 13 9 1Borden.............000 000 - 0 0 7

WP - Webster (8-3).LP - Farvour(3-4). 2B - Ashby (C). Records -Charlestown 8-3, Borden 3-4.Providence ..000 000 2 - 2 5 2Corydon ........100 200 x - 3 5 1

WP - Crawhorn (6-7). LP - Col-lett (2-2). Records - Providence6-6, Corydon 6-9.Henryville ...210 010 2 - 6 10 6Lanesville .006 052 x - 13 12 5

WP - Zeller (2-1). LP - Basham(4-2). 2B - Richey (H), Basham(H), DeWeese (L), Schoen (L),Smith (L). Records - Henryville5-3, Lanesville 6-2.

Girls’ tennisSHAWE 4, N. WASH. 1

Singles: 1. Liz Grote (S) d.Courtney Amick 7-6 (7-4), 6-2; 2.Taylor Grote (S) d. Tiffanie Brison4-6,6-3,6-4;3.Bailey Davis (S) d.Melanie Dieterlen 7-5, 6-0.

Doubles: 1. Alex Seals andAshley Johnson (NW) d. TaylorDavis and Chloe Storm 7-5, 5-7,6-1; 2. Brittany Snodgrass andCaitlin Kelley (S) d. AmandaKemp and Christen Walker 6-1,6-1.

Boys’ trackTuesday’s meet

Jennings County 101, SilverCreek 31.Discus – Alsup (JC), 128-1;

Shot put – Alsup (JC), 42-6;Long jump – McClanahan (JC),18-0; High jump – Jackson (JC),6-0; Pole vault – Pifer (JC), 9-6;3,200 relay – Jennings County,8:52.2; 110 hurdles – Staples(JC), 17.9; 100 – McClanahan(JC), 12.0; 1,600 – Haas (SC),4:40.5; 400 relay – JenningsCounty, 47.4; 300 hurdles –Gasper (JC), 46.2; 800 – McCoy(JC), 2:09.7; 200 – McClanahan(JC), 24.2; 3,200 – Haas (SC),10:13.5; 1,600 relay – JenningsCounty, 3:45.1.

Girls’ trackTuesday’s meet

Jennings County 65, SilverCreek 54.Discus – Christman (SC), 100-

6.5; Shot put – Chrisman (SC),31-5; Long jump – Clemons(SC), 14-0; High jump – Back-herms (SC), 4-4; 3,200 relay –Silver Creek, 10:52.63; 100 hur-dles – Ertel (JC), 15.69; 100 –Brown (JC), 13.09; 1,600 – Cle-mons (SC), 5:49.74; 400 relay –Jennings County, 54.03; 400 –Shields (SC), 1:05.38; 300 hur-dles – Ertel (JC), 49.82; 800 –Shields (SC), 2:40.94; 200 –Brown (JC),27.56;3,200 – Sharp(SC), 12:43.76; 1,600 relay –Jennings County, 4:37.81.

BOXINGFight Schedule

April 20At Bell Centre, Montreal

(ESPN2), Adonis Stevenson vs.Noe Gonzalez, 12, super middle-weights.

At Biloxi, Miss. (SHO), JermainTaylor vs. Caleb Truax, 10, mid-dleweights; Erislandy Lara vs.Ronald Hearns, 10, junior mid-dleweights; Erislandy Lara vs.Ronald Hearns, 10, junior mid-dleweights.

April 21At Schwerin, Germany, Karoly

Balzsay vs. Dimitri Sartison, 12,for Balzsay’s WBA World supermiddleweight title; Rafael Beja-ran vs. Ante Bilic, 12, for Beja-ran’s WBO European middle-weight title; Jurgen Brahmer vs.Vikapita Meroro,10, light heavy-weights.

At the Don Haskins Center, ElPaso, Texas (SHO), Abner Maresvs. Eric Morel, 12, for the vacantWBC super bantamweight title;Anselmo Moreno vs.David De LaMora, 12, for Moreno’s WBA Su-per World bantamweight title;Luis Ramos Jr. vs. Daniel Attah,10, lightweights; Librado An-drade vs.Rowland Bryant,10,su-per middleweights.

At Morelia, Mexico, Jesus Sil-vestre vs. Edwin Diaz, 12, for theinterim WBA World minimum-weight title; Cristian Mijares vs.Cruz Carvajal, 12 rounds, juniorfeatherweights; Marvin Quinte-ro vs. Al Sabaupan, 12 rounds,IBF lightweight title eliminator

At San Juan, Argentina, OmarNarvaez vs. Jose Cabrera, 12rounds, for Narvaez’s WBO ju-nior bantamweight title.

April 26At Panama City, Panama, Car-

los Tamara vs. Ricardo Nunez,12, IBF flyweight eliminator.

At the Crowne Plaza Hotel, Tul-sa, Okla., Carson Jones vs. AllenConyers,12, for Jones’ USBA wel-terweight title.

April 27At Resorts, Atlantic City, N.J.,

Omar Sheika vs. Yusaf Mack, 12,for the USBA light heavyweighttitle.

At the Buffalo Run Casino, Mi-ami, Okla. (SHO), Thomas Os-thuizen vs. Maxim Vlasov, 12, forOsthuizen’s IBO middleweighttitle; Luis del Valle vs. Christo-pher Martin, 10, super bantam-weights.

At Austin, Texas (ESPN2), Is-mayl Sillakh vs. Denis Grachev,10, light heavyweights; JavierFortuna vs. Yuandale Evans, 10,lightweights.

April 28At Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic

City,N.J. (HBO),Bernard Hopkinsvs. Chad Dawson, 12, for Hop-kins’ WBC light heavyweight ti-tle; Seth Mitchell vs. Chazz With-erspoon, 10 rounds, heavy-weights.

At Maracay, Venezuela, LiborioSolis vs. Santiago Ivan Acosta,12, for Solis’ interim WBA Worldsuper flyweight title.

At Miami, Okla. (SHO), ThomasOosthuizen vs. Marcus Johnson,10, super middleweights; Orlan-do Del Valle vs. Christopher Mar-tin, 10, junior featherweights.

Time: 04-18-2012 22:50 User: jpatterson PubDate: 04-19-2012 Zone: IN Edition: 1 Page Name: C 8 Color: CyanMagentaYellowBlack