Category: External Sports (Page 197 of 821)

Butler, UConn punch tickets to title game

Butler Bulldogs’ Matt Howard (L) and Shawn Vanzant celebrate near the end of their NCAA Final Four college basketball game against the Virginia Commonwealth Rams, in Houston, Texas April 2, 2011. The Bulldogs won the match. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)

Butler 70, VCU 62

Virginia Commonwealth came into Saturday night’s game hot as a pistol from three point range. The Rams hit 44% from behind the arc in the first five games of the tournament, but were unable to keep that accuracy up against the Bulldogs. VCU made 8-of-22 (36%) from 3PT, which is right on their season average.

Butler outrebounded VCU 46-30 which made up for some poor shooting (36%) by the Bulldogs. Those extra possessions allowed Butler to get to the line 26 times as compared to VCU’s 13 free throw attempts.

UConn 56, Kentucky 55

Kemba Walker (18 points on 6-of-15 shooting) didn’t have the greatest night in the scoring department, but the UConn defense showed up and held Kentucky to just 34% shooting from the field. The Huskies were dreadful from long range (1-for-12 from 3PT), but they hit 22-of-37 from 2PT range (59%) which was enough for the win.

For a moment, it looked like Shabazz Napier was going to be the goat after turning the ball over with less than a minute to go and UConn nursing a two-point lead. But after Kentucky missed a go-ahead three, Napier was there to secure the rebound and nail two free throws with 2.0 seconds remaining to seal the win.

Panthers’ GM defends Cam Newton after scathing PFW scouting report

Auburn University quarterback and winner of the Heisman Memorial Trophy, Cam Newton, attends a team practice in Scottsdale, Arizona, January 5, 2011. Auburn University will play the University of Oregon in the 2011 NCAA BCS National Championship football game in Glendale, Arizona. REUTERS/Joshua Lott (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT FOOTBALL PROFILE)

While appearing on CBS Radio in Charlotte on Friday, Carolina GM Marty Hurney defended future Panther Cam Newton against Pro Football Weekly draft analyst Nolan Nawrocki, who had not-so-nice things to say about the 2010 Heisman winner in his annual scouting report.

“I don’t pay much attention,” said Hurney. “(Nolan Nawrocki) has never met Cam Newton. So who’s he talked to? He says he’s talking to decision makers. We have the No. 1 pick. He hasn’t talked to me.”

That’s a fair point by Hurney, although in Nawrocki’s defense he probably can’t get access to the Panthers’ GM either. Hurney did note that Nawrocki did his job, which is “selling books.”

I was half-kidding about the “future Panther Cam Newton” remark, but it is interesting to see Hurney defend a player that many people will be the Panthers pick at No. 1. Not that that means they will draft him, but I only imagine that the Newton-to-Carolina sentiment will grow following Hurney’s comments. (Even if he was just answering a question honestly and wasn’t intending to give a hint as to whom he’ll take with the first pick at the end of the month.)

Final Four Primer

A combination picture shows Butler Bulldogs head coach Brad Stevens (L) and Virginia Commonwealth Rams head coach Shaka Smart during their respective practice sessions in Houston, Texas, April 1, 2011. Their teams will meet in the first of two NCAA Final Four college basketball games on April 2. REUTERS/Jeff Haynes/Lucy Nicholson (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)

Butler and VCU tip things off today at 6 PM ET, so while you wait, here is some opinion from around the internets. Also, be sure to check out our quick and dirty Final Four preview.

Carson Cunningham, Real Clear Sports: In Indiana we play basketball. It sounds cliché, but it’s true and you can try to quantify this. During Butler’s most recent tournament wins over Wisconsin and Florida, for instance, you could’ve noted that Indiana has about three times as many Division I basketball players as Wisconsin, even though the two states’ populations are nearly identical, or that Indiana colleges have produced 14 Final Four teams compared to the state of Florida’s 5, even though Florida has about three times as many people as Indiana. But basketball runs deeper in our veins than stats like this. When we watch Butler play basketball we’re reminded of the time we spent with our dads when we were 5 years old and of what our coaches taught us when we were 6 and 7. Whether it’s watching a dribble-drive to set up a backdoor, a sweet stroke from deep that draws nothing but net, or a lefty hook that represents thousands of hours of practice from Butler’s academic All-American Matt Howard, we can relate. Growing up, we practiced the same things for hours.

Gregg Doyel, CBS Sports: For VCU to continue its rampage toward the national championship, the Rams will have to do exactly what they’ve been doing. But their toughest test of the tournament — tougher even than what might await Monday — will be Butler. Because what VCU has done for five games is impose its will on the opponent. And nobody imposes squat on Butler. Butler is impervious to pressure, impervious to stress, impervious to whatever the other team is trying to do to it. Which means this game won’t just be a test of skill. It will be a test of will.

Pat Forde, ESPN: In its current 13-game winning streak, the Bulldogs’ games have averaged 62.2 possessions. That makes the contrast Saturday against Virginia Commonwealth rather stark. VCU has excelled this NCAA tournament at speeding up opponents, with its previous three games averaging 69.7 possessions. The Rams’ “Havoc” style was especially effective in the Southwest Regional final against Kansas, which was harassed into eight first-half turnovers and gave up a lot of open shots in transition as the Rams raced to a 14-point halftime lead. So the push and pull of pace will be paramount Saturday when the two teams hook up in the “Believe It or Not!” national semifinal.

Richard Justice, Houston Chronicle:
In the most delicious matchup of this Final Four, Liggins today almost certainly will be asked to slow down the best player in the NCAA Tournament. Connecticut junior Kemba Walker is generously listed at 6-1, and that’s irrelevant anyway. When you watch him play, when you see him work for the ball, wear down defenders and create opportunities both for himself and others, his height becomes irrelevant. No matter what else Walker accomplishes in basketball — and he’s almost certain to be a top-10 pick in this summer’s NBA draft – it may not be more impressive than what’s he done these last few weeks, putting a team on his back and taking it from the middle of the pack in the Big East to the threshold of a national championship.

Eamonn Brennan, ESPN: Jeremy Lamb has become a star. There’s no getting around it: This is Kemba Walker’s team. In many ways, from Maui to Manhattan to Anaheim to Houston, this has been his season. But UConn’s presence in the Final Four has just as much to do with Lamb’s emergence as a bona-fide star in his own right. The UConn forward has gone from a lanky, raw freshman to a versatile, comprehensive scorer. He’s made 11 of his 15 3-pointers in UConn’s four NCAA tournament wins, and he’s complemented that outside attack with an array of drives, pull-ups and pretty mid-range floaters. Can Lamb keep this up? If he does, he makes UConn’s Walker-led attack even more dangerous, and that’s bad news for the other three members of this unlikely Final Four.

Ken Davis, NBC Sports:
One day before Kentucky defeated North Carolina in the East Regional championship game, Kentucky coach John Calipari shared an interview podium with his starters. Calipari calls Knight one of the most conscientious, hard-working players he has ever been around. So, when he was asked to describe how Knight has the confidence to take the game-winning shots he has become known for in the NCAA Tournament, Calipari gave an answer that revealed much more about his young star. “He will be in the gym at 11 at night,” Calipari said. “Then he will be in the training room icing his knees or his legs at 6 in the morning. Academically, he got mad the other day when he got a 91. What class was it that you got that 91 on a test?” “Sociology,” Knight answered. “Still got an A, but he is mad,” Calipari said. “He’s conscientious. So he feels that he will make that shot. And more importantly, why I put the ball in his hands, he is not afraid to miss it. If you really want to be that guy, you have no fear. ‘If I miss this shot, I miss it. I am not afraid to miss this shot. Life will not end.’ I feel comfortable putting it in his hands because I know his work ethic.”

Pair of idiot Dodger fans attack Giant fans, leave one man in critical condition

Los Angeles Dodgers at batting practice before their Opening Day MLB National League baseball game against the San Francisco Giants in Los Angeles, California March 31, 2011. REUTERS/Alex Gallardo (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT BASEBALL)

I’m all for razzing another fan who wears the opposing team’s colors when they attend a sporting event. If you’re going to wear Red Sox gear in the Bronx, you’re going to have to listen to how your mother is a hooker, and vice versa if you head to Beantown wearing Skankee stuff.

But just because somebody wears your rivals’ colors, doesn’t give you the right to give them the beating of a lifetime in the parking lot following the game like these asshole Dodger fans did last night to a couple of Giant patrons.

From the L.A. Times:

Los Angeles police were searching Friday for two Dodgers fans responsible for assaulting and critically injuring a man wearing San Francisco Giants apparel following Thursday’s game.

“The man suffered a serious head injury during the assault after the game,” said Los Angeles Police Department Sgt. Sanford Rosenberg, watch commander at the Northeast Station.

Rosenberg said the victim was one of three Giants fans attacked in the parking lot around the end of the game by two unidentified men wearing Dodgers clothing.

The unprovoked attack occurred about 8:30 p.m. in Parking Lot 2 when two men in Dodgers clothing approached three victims in Giants apparel, police said.

The men then attacked the trio, kicking and punching them and shouting expletives about the Giants as they delivered the blows, Rosenberg said. The attack left one victim hospitalized in critical but stable condition, Rosenberg said.

Here’s hoping these two Dodger fans are hit by a semi-truck going just fast enough to break every bone in their bodies and drag them for two miles down a stretch of highway, but not fast enough to actually kill them. Then, when they’re laid up in the hospital for the next few months (subsequently going poor from all the medial expenses they’ve endured), they get to watch the Giants repeat as World Series champs. Oh, and they each get massive bed sores.

Yeah, I just wrote that. I actually cleaned it up a great deal, too.

My thoughts go out to the gentleman in critical condition. I hope he makes a full recovery and can take solace in the fact that 1) the Giants are defending World Series champions and 2) those men that beat him probably can’t even read.

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