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Rick Pitino’s main chess move – take Terrence Jones away – didn’t work

Friday’s game between the University of Louisville and the University of Kentucky was more of a chess match than UK’s 78-63 winning margin might suggest. The most important in-game adjustment belonged to UK coach John Calipari. It wasn’t dramatic, but it did help establish UK’s offensive rhythm. With the Wildcats trailing 14-12 and shooting poorly, Calipari told Darius Miller to post up. Miller backed Kyle Kuric into the paint, scored and was fouled for a three-point play.

Terrence Jones

Terrence Jones - photo by Walter Cornett | WildcatWorld.com

Friday's game between the University of and the University of was more of a chess match than 's 78-63 winning margin might suggest.  The most important in-game adjustment belonged to UK coach . It wasn't dramatic, but it did help establish UK's offensive rhythm.  With the Wildcats trailing 14-12 and shooting poorly, Calipari told Darius Miller to post up. Miller backed Kyle Kuric into the paint, scored and was fouled for a three-point play.

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On This Day In UK Basketball History

On March 28, 1992, in what many called the “best NCAA Tournament game ever,” Kentucky takes defending NCAA champion Duke into overtime before losing 104-103 in the East Regional finals in Philadelphia. A last-second shot by Christian Laettner sends Duke to the Final Four, and breaks the hearts of Wildcat fans everywhere. It is Cawood Ledford’s last game as the “Voice of the Wildcats.”

 

On March 28, 1998, against Stanford, Kentucky rallied from a 10-point second-half deficit, then grabbed a 5-point overtime lead, before fending off the Cardinals to advance to the title game for the third straight season. Jeff Sheppard canned three long-range three-pointers - two in the final three minutes and one in overtime - en route to a career-high 27 points.

 

On March 28, 2014, unranked Kentucky beat No. 5 Louisville 74-69, in the 2014 NCAA Tournament Sweet 16.  Aaron Harrison buried a three-pointer from the left corner with 39 seconds left that put UK ahead to stay before 41,072 in Lucas Oil Stadium.

 

On March 28, 2015, No. 1 Kentucky defeated No. 8 Notre Dame, 68-66, in the 2015 NCAA Tournament Elite Eight.  With its 37-0 record on the line, Kentucky trailed Notre Dame 59-53 with 6:14 left. UK rallied in front of 19,464 fans in Cleveland’s Quicken Loans Arena and preserved its perfect season thanks to a crucial blocked shot by Willie Cauley-Stein and two game-deciding free throws from Andrew Harrison in the final seconds.

 

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