Saturday, March 31, 2012

FOXNews.com: Fans burn couches, flip cars after Kentucky's NCAA win

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Fans burn couches, flip cars after Kentucky's NCAA win
Apr 1st 2012, 05:30

Riot police used pepper spray in small amounts for crowd control as thousands of rowdy fans swarmed into the streets near the University of Kentucky campus, some overturning cars and lighting couches ablaze after a victory over cross-state rival Louisville in a Final Four matchup.

Police had been bracing for the possibility of post-game violence and resorted to pepper spray though large amounts of it weren't needed before they ultimately dispersed the throngs, Lexington police spokeswoman Sherelle Roberts said.

She said 150 officers deployed on the streets at one point to quell what she called "a very dangerous situation with the fires and the violence."

"It's a fairly difficult situation, but not anything we didn't plan for," Roberts told The Associated Press.

Lexington City spokeswoman Susan Straub said police made fewer than 10 arrests, and a few injuries were reported after the celebrations turned rowdy in the streets after the Wildcats' 69-61 win in New Orleans.

Many streets had already been blocked off around Kentucky's Lexington campus earlier to make way for the crowds, but sirens blared and police shut down more streets when the blazes broke out. Twitter feeds reported police in riot gear moved in to disperse crowds as some people on the streets were overturning and vandalizing vehicles and others smashed glass bottles.

Straub said the crowds began to disperse by about 11 p.m. EDT, nearly three hours after the game ended. But she said at no point had things "gotten out of control."

Roberts said a street sweeping machine was called in later at night to clean debris where crowds had departed. But authorities had no immediate report on the damages. "I think it would be hard to estimate (damages) at this point," she added.

Earlier in the week, Lexington's mayor and UK's president had exhorted fans to respect property and neighbors. But the city and university were prepared for a fiery celebration after police reported at least a dozen couch fires last week after Kentucky's win over Baylor to earn a Final Four berth.

"We've come at this with a significant show of force," Straub said.

The raucous street scenes triggered a rebuke from UK spokesman Jay Blanton.

"It is unfortunate that a small number of people are using what should be a night of celebration as an excuse to attempt to tarnish the university and the community," Blanton said in a statement. "To the extent that students are involved in any illegal activity or actions that violate the university's student code, they will be dealt with appropriately."

In New Orleans, Micah Fielden, Kentucky's student body president, had earlier urged his fellow students in a tweet not to be destructive. "Let's be smart and act like we've been here before," he wrote on his Twitter feed.

The celebration was controlled when it began as celebrating fans streamed out onto the streets. At stoplights, fans hanging out of their cars chanted "C-A-T-S" while police and firefighters watched from the sidelines before the fires were lit.

Things were more peaceful 70 miles away in Louisville, where heartbroken Cardinals fans gathered on a closed street near campus and chanted "C-A-R-D-S" while waving a school flag.

Louisville fans were divided over whether to root for their rival in Monday's championship game against Kansas.

"Even though it's a Kentucky team, I hope they lose," said Michael Funke, who watched the game from a pizzeria just off campus.

Kentucky and Louisville fans took in the game from bars, restaurants and living rooms as their uneasy co-existence was challenged by the high stakes.

Saturday's game culminated a week of buildup in the state, with many fans recalling the "Dream Game" between the teams in 1983.

That year, Louisville beat Kentucky in overtime in the NCAA Mideast Regional Finals. It was the teams' first meeting since 1959. It took the governor to get the two schools together on an annual basis, and before Saturday the Wildcats were 18-11 since the annual game started in 1983-84.

Saturday's game was the fifth time the schools had met in the NCAA tournament -- the two sides having split the four previous meetings.

Kentucky won the earlier matchup this season, 69-62 on Dec. 31.

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FOXNews.com: Milone helps Oakland beat Triple-A team

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Milone helps Oakland beat Triple-A team
Apr 1st 2012, 06:00

SACRAMENTO, Calif. –  Tommy Milone and the Oakland Athletics showed no signs of jet lag in their first game in the U.S. after opening the regular season in Japan.

Milone pitched six perfect innings Saturday night with six strikeouts to lead the A's to a 9-0 victory over the Sacramento River Cats, Oakland's Triple-A affiliate.

The A's returned to Oakland on Thursday evening after a week in Japan, where they split two games with the Seattle Mariners.

Several Oakland players said before Saturday's game that they still were getting their body clocks adjusted.

Milone wasn't one of them. The left-hander said he slept on the plane ride home from Tokyo to adjust to the time change. He was fresh and ready for his starting assignment, then went out and locked down the No. 3 spot in Oakland's rotation.

"I knew what I was doing out there, and it would have been cool to keep going," said Milone, who left after throwing 80 pitches.

Andrew Carignan pitched a scoreless seventh inning, walking two batters, to complete a no-hitter for the A's. The game was called after seven innings due to rain that began during the bottom of the seventh.

The A's got a three-run homer from Coco Crisp in the second inning and a solo homer by Josh Donaldson in the fifth.

Milone dominated the Sacramento batters. The River Cats hit only four balls beyond the infield.

"It's what we've seen all spring," Oakland manager Bob Melvin said. "When he misses, it's usually by design. Great command, I mean, you see his mechanics. Real still head and he really has a great feel for pitching and reading hitters. He can read swings real well."

Melvin joked that he wanted to let Milone pitch to one more batter because he hadn't yet reached his pitch limit after six innings. He decided against it.

"I told (catcher Kurt Suzuki), 'I'm not going out there in the middle of a perfect game and taking this guy out of the game,'" Melvin said. "You're either done right now or you're going out for the full inning."

Milone looked far from done before leaving his longest and strongest performance of the spring as he sailed through the Sacramento batting order three times.

"Obviously, you try to go out there and throw zeroes every inning," Milone said. "I came out right away and showed the command I had, and I kind of realized after three or four innings what I had going. But really, we all just came out ready to play tonight."

Oakland's offense also got in the groove quickly, roughing up Sacramento starter Jarrod Parker, who walked the first two batters he faced and hit Suzuki with a pitch two batters later to load the bases with two outs.

Parker appeared to get out of the first-inning jam when Josh Reddick lofted a fly ball to center field. Grant Green got under the ball but then dropped it, allowing all three base runners to score.

Crisp's shot over the right field fence highlighted a three-run Oakland second inning and the A's added two more runs in the third.

NOTES: Manny Ramirez, who did not travel with the A's to Japan, strained a hamstring last week and did not join the team in Sacramento. Melvin said Ramirez would not play in the three-game Bay Bridge exhibition series against the San Francisco Giants. ... Left-hander Dallas Braden, who was placed on the 15-day disabled list earlier this week, suffered a setback in his recovery from shoulder surgery when he strained his throwing shoulder last week. "He's not throwing right now," Melvin said. "We're on hold with that. I don't have a timetable with him."

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FOXNews.com: Clippers 105, Jazz 96; Los Angeles logran 5ta victoria

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Clippers 105, Jazz 96; Los Angeles logran 5ta victoria
Apr 1st 2012, 05:42

LOS ANGELES –  Chris Paul anotó 26 puntos, Blake Griffin agregó 24 y los Clippers de Los Angeles vencieron el sábado por 105-96 al Jazz de Utah y lograron su quinta victoria consecutiva por primera vez desde 2006.

Randy Foye agregó 17 puntos y DeAndre Jordan logró 10 rebotes para los Clippers, que han adquirido inercia en la competición. Los Clippers han ganado seis encuentros consecutivos de locales y se encuentran un juego detrás de los Lakers, que están en la cima de la División del Pacífico.

Los Lakers no ganaban cinco encuentros consecutivos desde su comienzo 5-1 en la temporada 2006-2007.

Al Jefferson encabezó al Jazz con 26 puntos, en tanto que Paul Millsap sumó 18; Gordon Hayward, 14, y C.J. Miles, 13. Utah se había acercado a cuantro puntos de diferencia en el tercer periodo y su derrota fue la tercera consecutiva.

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FOXNews.com: Revolution add to Galaxy's home woes

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Revolution add to Galaxy's home woes
Apr 1st 2012, 05:33

Carson, CA –  The New England Revolution piled more misery on the Los Angeles Galaxy on Saturday, claiming a 3-1 win at The Home Depot Center to hand the reigning champions their second home loss of the early season.

The Home Depot Center was the epitome of a fortress last season as the Galaxy went through the entire Major League Soccer season unbeaten at home. But 2012 has proved to be an entirely different animal for Bruce Arena's men as they have taken just three points from three games in Carson, CA this year.

The Revolution made waves early on, grabbing first-half goals from Kelyn Rowe and Chris Tierney. Saer Sene scored his second MLS goal in as many matches to give the visitors a resounding three-goal lead in the second half, while Robbie Keane pulled back a consolation goal for Los Angeles in the 78th minute, his third goal of the MLS season.

Rowe opened the scoring in the 10th minute as he latched on to a cross and hit a one-time effort directly at Josh Saunders. Saunders made a reaction save, but the rebound fell back into the path of Rowe who made no mistake with the second attempt, roofing the ball into the net.

Tierney then doubled the lead three minutes later following some great build- up play from the Revs. Kevin Alston and Shalrie Joseph played a quick one-two to release the defender in the box. Alston sent a low cross to the back post and Tierney arrived to slide the ball past Saunders at his near post.

The Galaxy's hole got deeper in the second half as they conceded yet again in the 65th minute. Ryan Guy delivered a perfect cross that was met by Sene, and the Frenchman nodded home New England's third of the night from close range.

Los Angeles answered with a goal 12 minutes from time as Edson Buddle played a brilliant through ball to spring Keane in on goal. The Ireland international made his way around Matt Reis before slotting into the empty net.

The goal energized the Galaxy, but the Revolution's win was never in doubt as a well-organized defensive display from the visitors kept the home side at bay.

After a slow start to the season, first-year head coach Jay Heaps has his side playing some impressive soccer of late. The Revolution (2-2-0) have won two straight against Western Conference opponents, a streak that they will hope to continue next time out when they face FC Dallas at FC Dallas Stadium on Thursday.

Los Angeles (1-2-0) will look to rebound in its next outing, but it will face a stern test as it heads to Livestrong Sporting Park to face Sporting Kansas City on April 7.

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FOXNews.com: Nets 111, Kings 99; Morrow acierta 6 canastas triples

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Nets 111, Kings 99; Morrow acierta 6 canastas triples
Apr 1st 2012, 05:02

SACRAMENTO, California, EE.UU. –  Anthony Morrow acertó seis canastas triples y anotó 24 puntos para que los Nets de Nueva Jersey derrotaran el sábado por 111-99 a los Kings de Sacramento y lograran su tercera victoria consecutiva, su racha más prolongada en la temporada.

Deron Williams logró 19 puntos, 15 asistencias y seis rebotes para los Nets, que habían perdido 12 de sus anteriores 13 partidos de visitantes en Sacramento. Gerald Wallace agregó 18 puntos, Kris Humphries tuvo 14 puntos y 12 rebotes, y Johan Petro, consiguió 12 tantos.

Los Nets, con foja de 12-16 de visitantes, son uno de los dos equipos — junto con Nueva Orleáns — que tienen mejor desempeño fuera de su cancha que de locales.

Tyreke Evans consiguió 23 puntos para los Kings, que han perdido cinco de sus últimos seis encuentros. DeMarcus Cousins logró 14 unidades, Marcus Thornton, 13, en tanto que Isaiah Thomas tuvo 11 tantos y seis asistencias.

Por los Kings, el dominicano Francisco García logró dos puntos y dos rebotes en 14:46 minutos de juego. García falló dos intentos de canasta triple y acertó una canasta doble de tres intentos.

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FOXNews.com: Big comeback leads Kansas to 64-62 win over Ohio State

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Big comeback leads Kansas to 64-62 win over Ohio State
Apr 1st 2012, 04:58

NEW ORLEANS –  The tightrope walk rocks on for the Jayhawks.

Kansas, the underrated, undervalued team that's been teetering on the edge of the tournament since before it even began, is now one of the last two left.

Tyshawn Taylor made two big free throws late, and All-American Thomas Robinson finished with 19 points and eight rebounds Saturday night to lift the Jayhawks to a come-from-behind 64-62 win over Ohio State in the Final Four -- a game Kansas led for a grand total of 3 minutes, 48 seconds.

After scoring the game's first bucket, Kansas didn't lead again until Travis Releford made two free throws with 2:48 left. That lasted for 11 seconds, but the Jayhawks (32-6), who trailed by as many as 13, overcame another deficit and finally held on against the Buckeyes (31-8).

"It's just been our thing all year, coming back," Robinson said. "I don't like doing it, but for some reason my team is pretty good when we're down."

More than pretty good. Kansas is one more magic act from bringing its second title in five years back to Allen Fieldhouse. It might take exactly that. The opponent is Kentucky, the big-time favorite to win it all, and a 69-61 winner over Louisville in the evening's first semifinal. The Wildcats are an early 6.5-point favorite.

"It's a dream to play the best team in the country, up `til now, hands down, the most consistent," Kansas coach Bill Self said. "It's a thrill. And I think it's even more of a thrill for us, because I don't think anybody thought we could get here."

Taylor's two free throws with 8.3 seconds left gave Kansas a 64-61 lead, matching its biggest of the game. The Jayhawks intentionally fouled Aaron Craft with 2.9 seconds left. Craft made the first, then quickly clanked the second one off the front of the rim but was called for a lane violation.

Kansas dribbled out the clock and celebrated a win that played out sort of the way the whole season has in Lawrence.

With most of the experienced players from last year gone, Self at times wondered if this team was even tournament material. The Jayhawks still won the Big 12 title -- for the eighth straight time -- but came into the tournament as what some felt was an underrated No. 2 seed.

They played down to their billing in their second game, against Purdue, barely escaping with a 63-60 win that looked a lot like this game in the Superdome.

"It was two different games," Self said of the latest escape act. "They dominated us the first half. We were playing in quicksand it looked like. And the light came on. We were able to play through our bigs; we were able to get out and run, but the biggest thing is we got stops."

Kansas' next test will feature a coaching rematch between Self and John Calipari, who was with Memphis in 2008 when the Tigers missed four free throws down the stretch and blew a nine-point lead in an overtime loss to Mario Chalmers and the Jayhawks.

A big comeback. Sound familiar? This year's Jayhawks also overcame a 19-point deficit to win their final regular-season meeting against Missouri -- their long-time, SEC-bound archrival.

"It's a 40-minute game," Self said. "There's no 13-point plays. You have to grind it and get one stop at a time."

This was a heartbreaker for the Buckeyes, who came in as co-Big Ten champions and a slight favorite in a game -- a rematch of a 78-67 Kansas win back in December when Ohio State's All-American, Jared Sullinger, was not available.

Sullinger was there a-plenty Saturday night, but he struggled. He finished with 11 points on 5-for-19 shooting, no fewer than three of them blocked by Jeff Withey, the Kansas center who finished with seven swats. Sullinger also had 11 rebounds and 3 blocks, but the sophomore who gave up NBA lottery money to return and win a championship will go without for at least another year.

When the buzzer sounded, he plopped at midcourt, clearly pooped -- and maybe wondering how his team let this game slip away.

"These guys got tears in their eyes, blank stares on their faces," Sullinger said. "It's tough on me."

Ohio State-Kansas was billed as "The Other Game" of this Final Four -- garnering much less ink than the Kentucky-Louisville blood feud that preceded it -- and started off looking like every bit the undercard.

The Buckeyes built an early 13-point lead on the strength of the shooting of William Buford, who came out of a 13-for-44 tournament slump to lead the Buckeyes with 19 points on 6 for 10 from the floor. Kansas trailed 34-25 at the half and only a steal and layup before the buzzer prevented the Jayhawks from a season-low.

Things changed when Ohio State came out and promptly missed its first 10 shots from the field, while Deshaun Thomas -- the Ohio State big man in charge of shutting down Robinson -- headed to the bench with his third foul.

That opened things up for KU: A couple easy layups for Robinson and a kick-out to Elijah Johnson for a 3-pointer were part of a 13-4 run to open the half. It tied the game at 38 and set up for a nip-and-tuck finish between these No. 2 seeds, each of which were in the hunt for top seeding all the way up to Selection Sunday.

Releford finished with 15 points and six rebounds for the Jayhawks. Johnson had 13 points and 10 boards. Taylor finished with 10 points and nine assists -- not bad considering the time Craft spent glued to him much of the night.

Craft said he thought a quick brick and a rebound on the final free throw was his best chance to save the game. There wasn't much of an argument after he got called for the lane violation, however.

"There is no explanation," Craft said. "Apparently I crossed before it hit the rim. I just knew I had to miss it. I thought that would be the best way for us to get the ball back."

That end-game was set up when Releford made two free throws with 1:37 left to put KU ahead 60-59. Buford tried to take the ball to the basket on the next possession, but Withey swatted it away. Johnson followed with a layup -- hardly as dramatic as his game-winner against Purdue, but enough for a three-point lead, which seemed like a million for the Jayhawks in this one.

Not that the Jayhawks need a big lead -- or any lead.

"I think we're trying to make it fun for y'all," Robinson said. "Seriously, I wish it would stop. I mean, I'd feel better at the end."

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FOXNews.com: Calipari (and Kentucky) get Kansas again for title

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Calipari (and Kentucky) get Kansas again for title
Apr 1st 2012, 05:00

NEW ORLEANS –  Well, this matchup is going to look familiar.

John Calipari and his Kentucky juggernaut will face Kansas for the national championship on Monday night. That would be the same school that beat Memphis in overtime for the NCAA title in 2008, back when Calipari was coaching the Tigers.

It also would be the same Kansas team that the Wildcats beat back in November.

"We're worried about us playing at our best," Calipari said after Kentucky held off pesky Louisville 69-61 in the first semifinal. "We did not play at our best tonight. We played good, but that wasn't our best. You know what? So maybe Monday is our best. We're just worried about us."

Top-seeded Kentucky (37-2) is back in the title game for the first time since 1998, when it won its seventh NCAA championship.

Down 13 in the first half, resilient Kansas (32-6) needed a furious comeback against Ohio State to reach the championship game, where it will play for its fourth NCAA title.

"It's a dream to play the best team in the country, who is up until now, hands down, the most consistent," Kansas coach Bill Self said. "It's a thrill. And I think it's even more of a thrill for us, because I don't think anybody thought we could get here.

That 2008 squad Calipari had in Memphis was stocked with talent, led by future NBA MVP Derrick Rose. But the Tigers missed four free throws down the stretch and blew a nine-point lead in an overtime loss to Mario Chalmers and the Jayhawks.

These Wildcats, however, are in a totally different class. Anthony Davis has won just about every player of the year award there is, and Louisville coach Rick Pitino likened him to Bill Russell after Saturday night's game.

No wonder. The 19-year-old doesn't look like a freshman, and he certainly doesn't play like one, recording his 20th double-double against Louisville with 18 points and 14 rebounds. He missed just one of his eight shots, and also had five blocks and a steal.

"Anthony Davis is as fine a basketball player as there is," Pitino said.

Then there are the rest of the Wildcats.

They shot a blistering 57 percent Saturday night and had two other players besides Davis in double figures. Darius Miller had 13 points, and Doron Lamb had 10. Michael Kidd-Gilchrist had nine despite playing just 23 minutes because of foul trouble.

"Kentucky is a great basketball team, with great effort," Pitino said.

He doesn't need to tell the Jayhawks; they experienced it firsthand in the State Farm Champions Classic, a rare regular-season game against college basketball's two winningest programs.

With the score tied at 30 a minute into the second half, the Wildcats broke loose with an 11-0 run. Two free throws from Tyshawn Taylor stopped the spurt, but Marquis Teague had a dunk and Doron Lamb hit consecutive 3s. Moments after an airball, Lamb drilled another 3 and Kentucky had a 54-37 with 10:05 to play.

The victory was Calipari's first in four games against Kansas, where he began his coaching career as a volunteer assistant in 1982.

Few people would have expected the Jayhawks to earn a rematch with Kentucky after the way they scuffled through the early part of the season. They were 7-3 midway through December and struggling to find an identity after losing Marcus and Markieff Morris, their leading scorers and rebounders, as well as 3-point specialist Brady Morningstar.

But a team meeting helped Kansas find its focus, and the Jayhawks simply refuse to lose. They've lost just two games since Feb. 7, and keep eking out wins in the NCAA tournament.

"It's pretty cool to having the winningest program of all time and the second-winningest program of all time hooking up on Monday night," Self said.

On Saturday night, the Jayhawks scored the first bucket but didn't lead again until Travis Releford made two free throws with 2:48 left. That lead lasted for all of 11 seconds, but the Jayhawks overcame another deficit and finally held on against the Buckeyes (31-8).

Taylor's two free throws with 8.3 seconds left gave Kansas a 64-61 lead, matching its biggest of the game. The Jayhawks intentionally fouled Aaron Craft with 2.9 seconds left. Craft made the first, then quickly clanked the second one off the front of the rim but was called for a lane violation.

Kansas dribbled out the clock, and the rematch was on.

"These guys have matured a lot and played a ton of minutes this year, so they're far more experienced than some would be just because of the situations they've been in," Jayhawks guard Elijah Johnson said. "We kind of played on borrowed time a little bit, but I think it gives the guys confidence that no matter what, we're OK."

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FOXNews.com: Smith, Whitney lead Coyotes' 4-0 rout of Anaheim

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Smith, Whitney lead Coyotes' 4-0 rout of Anaheim
Apr 1st 2012, 03:52

GLENDALE, Ariz. –  Mike Smith had 44 saves in his second straight shutout and Ray Whitney passed 1,000 career points with a goal and assist in the Phoenix Coyotes' 4-0 rout of the Anaheim Ducks on Saturday night.

Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Antoine Vermette and Radim Vrbata also scored for the Coyotes, who with three games to play are tied with Pacific Division-leading Los Angeles in points with 91 but the Kings own the tiebreaker.

Three of Phoenix's goals came on power plays, all in the second period, for a team that ranks last in the NHL in that category.

Whitney's assist on Vrbata's goal made him the 79th player in NHL history to reach 1,000 points. Forty seconds later, Whitney scored his 24th goal of the season.

Jeff Deslauriers, in his third start of the season for Anaheim, had 29 saves.

The Coyotes killed six penalties.

Smith, honored as the team's MVP before the game, earned his seventh shutout of the season, fourth-best in the NHL.

Smith, who had 15 first-period saves — 38 overall — in Phoenix's 2-0 win over San Jose two nights earlier, was even better against the Ducks, stopping 21 shots as Anaheim outshot the Coyotes 21-7 in the opening period.

But Phoenix led, thanks to Ekman-Larsson's timely exit from the penalty box. The Coyotes had just killed the penalty when, after a faceoff at the Phoenix end, Mikkel Boedker got the puck and passed it to Ekman-Larsson. The 20-year-old defenseman broke free and tapped a backhander past Deslauriers, giving the Coyotes a 1-0 lead with 13:50 left in the period.

The goal came 7 seconds after the first of Phoenix's two first-period penalty kills. The Coyotes killed another penalty in the second period, then scored on a power play to go up 2-0.

With Anaheim's Saku Koivu in the penalty box for tripping, Vermette deflected Derek Morris' slap shot into the net with 8:57 left in the period.

The Coyotes made it a rout after the Ducks' Corey Perry locked up with Gilbert Brule in a fight. Perry got an extra 2 minutes for instigating the fisticuffs. Anaheim had 21 seconds left in a penalty for having too many men on the ice, giving Phoenix a two-man advantage. Sixteen seconds later, Vrbata scored his team-high 33rd goal on an assist from Whitney to make it 3-0.

Whitney, a 39-year-old left wing in his 19th NHL season, drew a standing ovation from the crowd. When play resumed, with Phoenix's advantage down to one man, Whitney quickly scored and it was 4-0 with 3:06 left in the second period.

Phoenix has three games to play, beginning with their final regular-season home game Tuesday night against Columbus. They finish the season at St. Louis and Minnesota.

Notes: Whitney has 47 points in 45 career games against Anaheim. ... The Ducks had beaten Phoenix three times in a row entering Saturday night's game. ... Deslauriers was recalled from Syracuse of the AHL on Feb. 14. He won his two earlier starts for the Ducks this season. ... Phoenix, statistically the worst power-play team in the league, has scored on four in the past two games.

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FOXNews.com: Column: As Wildcats soar, Calipari sweats a river

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Column: As Wildcats soar, Calipari sweats a river
Apr 1st 2012, 03:47

NEW ORLEANS –  What looked like a tributary of the nearby Mississippi River snaked its way down the front of John Calipari's shirt.

A semifinal against a bitter state rival that Kentucky threatened to turn into a blow-out several times felt like it by the end of the night, despite the 69-61 final score. You just wouldn't know that seeing Calipari afterward, throwing off sweat like a sprinkler.

Louisville made its last stand with 7:34 left in the game, when two free throws by point guard Peyton Siva pulled the Cardinals back within two points, 53-51. Then the Wildcats much-superior talent woke up. They ran off seven straight points and then, as the floor opened because Louisville's defenders began taking bigger gambles, the Wildcats turned the final 2 1/2 minutes into an NBA-caliber dunk contest.

Even rapper Jay-Z, who gave Calipari a nod at the start and then spent much of the game looking at his phone, rose up out of his chair when Anthony Davis threw down an alley-oop pass from Michael Kidd-Gilchrist with enough force to suck the air out of the arena.

"It's great stuff," Calipari said. "I'm proud of this team; they're coming together. They've taken on shots and runs like Louisville's today and held their own."

Calipari will coach for his first national championship Monday night against Bill Self and Kansas, which denied coach Cal of a title in his last trip to the finals with Memphis four years ago.

Calipari's latest Wildcats in full flight are a fearsome sight. And Calipari can coach 'em up, despite lingering resentment about how he recruits and how several of those kids touch down on campus every year just long enough to memorize the route from their dorm room to the gym. He runs a pro-styled "dribble-drive" offense that allows his players room to freelance, but Calipari can be downright meticulous — read: stark-raving mad — when they take too much license.

So once again, on Saturday night, he used most of the time he wasn't screaming at the officials to climb up into his own players' grills. It's great preparation for the next stop in their basketball careers, yet it also makes it easy to see why Calipari failed dismally during his brief stint running the NBA's New Jersey Nets. At that level, the players have no qualms about screaming back, or worse. But in the college game, kids have little choice but to take it and more to the point, Calipari's lesson plans now include as many carrots as sticks.

With 3:41 left in the opening half, exactly four seconds after a turnover by Wildcats guard Doron Lamb led to an easy layup for Louisville, Calipari called a 30-second timeout. By the time Lamb reached the huddle, Calipari had somehow got both hands around the ball and was squeezing it like an overripe melon. Then he tore into Lamb. And then, coming out of the timeout, the Wildcats ran a perfectly executed play to set up a 3-pointer that Lamb coolly knocked down.

Most of Calipari's lectures centered on the Wildcats' inability to feed Davis, who still looks like a teenager until he gets the ball. Then he's a man among boys. Louisville coach Rick Pitino compared him to Celtic great Bill Russell, except Davis has real offensive skills and a handle you don't often see in a big man.

Here's why: He grew from 6-foot-2 to 6-10 over the course of 16 months in high school and still glides around the floor like a guard. Chasing a ball near the out-of-bounds line late in the first half, he got pushed and was forced into the tables where reporters were working. Davis not only caught his balance while picking his way through that crowd, he didn't even spill a drink. Even that little dance drew a round of applause from the Wildcat faithful.

"We just go out here and play ball, our fans travel a long way," said Davis, who scored 18 points on 7-of-8 shooting, adding 14 rebounds and five blocks. "We want to go out there, give them a show and give them what they want, which is a national championship."

Calipari, now in his third Final Four with three different schools — Kentucky, Memphis and UMass — will be playing in his second national championship game come Monday night. The NCAA and more than a few of Calipari's rivals objected in the aftermath and both Memphis' appearance in the 2008 title game and UMass' 1996 Final Four run were vacated after shenanigans were uncovered at both programs during his tenure. Even the Kentucky media guide that lists those achievements does so with an asterisk dangling at the end.

Calipari's players care less about those than he does.

"It's not my rule that they can leave after one year, OK?" he said, answering that question for the millionth time.

"The choice," Calipari added a moment later, "is you recruit players that aren't as good as these players, or you try to convince him to stay and to come back. ... All I'm doing is what's right for these people, helping them reach their dreams. During the season, I tell them it's about our team. You can see that it is."

No doubt.

___(equals)

Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org and follow him at Twitter.com/JimLitke.

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FOXNews.com: Big comeback leads KU to 64-62 win over Ohio St

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Big comeback leads KU to 64-62 win over Ohio St
Apr 1st 2012, 03:47

NEW ORLEANS –  Same story, new night for Kansas. The team that's been teetering on the edge of the tournament since before it even began is now one of the last two left.

Tyshawn Taylor made two big free throws late, and Thomas Robinson finished with 19 points and eight rebounds Saturday night to lift the Jayhawks to a come-from-behind 64-62 win over Ohio State in the Final Four — a game Kansas led for a grand total of 3 minutes, 48 seconds.

After scoring the first bucket, Kansas didn't lead again until Travis Releford made two free throws with 2:48 left. That lasted for 11 seconds, but the Jayhawks (32-6), who trailed by as many as 13, overcame another deficit and finally held on against the Buckeyes (31-8).

Taylor's two free throws with 8.3 seconds left gave Kansas a 64-61 lead, matching its biggest of the game. The Jayhawks intentionally fouled Aaron Craft with 2.9 seconds left. Craft made the first, then quickly clanked the second one of the front of the rim but was called for a lane violation.

Kansas dribbled out the clock and celebrated a win that played out sort of the way the whole season has in Lawrence.

Early in the year, coach Bill Self wondered if this team was even tournament material. The Jayhawks trailed most of the night against Purdue in the regional semifinals and were no better than North Carolina for most of the next game.

One win. Then another. This latest one came on the biggest stage — in the Superdome. Next, a meeting Monday with Kentucky and a chance to bring the second title in five years back to Allen Fieldhouse.

This was a heartbreaker for the Buckeyes (31-8), who came in as co-Big Ten champions and a slight favorite in a game — a rematch of a 78-67 Kansas win back in December when Ohio State's star, Jared Sullinger, was not available.

Sullinger was there a-plenty Saturday night, but he struggled. He finished with 11 points on 5-for-19 shooting, no fewer than three of them blocked by Jeff Withey, the Kansas center who finished with seven swats. Sullinger also had 11 rebounds and a steal, but the sophomore who gave up NBA lottery money to return and win a championship will go without for at least another year.

When the buzzer sounded, he plopped at midcourt, clearly pooped — and maybe wondering how his team let this game slip away.

Ohio State-Kansas was billed as "The Other Game" — garnering much less ink than the Kentucky-Louisville blood feud that preceded it — and started off looking like every bit the undercard.

The Buckeyes built an early 13-point lead on the strength of the shooting of William Buford, who came out of a 13-for-44 tournament slump to lead the Buckeyes with 19 points on 6-for-10 from the floor. Kansas trailed 34-25 at the half and only a last-second steal and layup before the buzzer prevented the Jayhawks from a season-low.

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FOXNews.com: Pitino says he'll pull for UK in championship game

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Pitino says he'll pull for UK in championship game
Apr 1st 2012, 03:47

NEW ORLEANS –  Louisville coach Rick Pitino is taking a stance that will probably make some Cardinals fans cringe: He's backing Kentucky in the NCAA championship game against Kansas.

Shortly after fourth-seeded Louisville lost 69-61 to the top-seeded Wildcats in the Final Four on Saturday night, Pitino said he hopes coach John Calipari and the Wildcats "bring it home for the state."

"I just said, 'John, I'll be pulling for you, bring the trophy back home to Kentucky,'" Pitino said. "Louisville will be rooting for Kentucky, which doesn't happen very often."

Pitino said he's well aware of the animosity fans of both teams have for one another and even made reference to a story about elderly dialysis patients who got into a fist fight over the rivalry back in Georgetown, Ky.

"Sometimes there's a lot of talk about these guys fighting, dialysis, there's also really a lot of people that get along," said Pitino, who also coached at Kentucky in the 1990s and led the Wildcats to a national title in 1996. "In every society there are people without brains. But for those that have brains, they get along, they root for each other."

There is a long history of mutual dislike among the two biggest basketball programs in the Bluegrass State.

Louisville faithful long resented Kentucky for refusing to play other teams from within the state under legendary head coach Adolph Rupp, and his successor, former assistant Joe B. Hall.

It took Gov. John Y. Brown stepping in following their matchup in the 1983 NCAA Mideast Regional finals — then the teams' first meeting since 1959 — to get the rival programs to start scheduling each other annually.

The two teams have combined for nine national titles, seven by Kentucky. The Wildcats have now also improved to 30-14 in head-to-head meetings with the Cardinals dating to 1913.

Pitino said he'd be lying if he said he liked every Kentucky team he has faced, but he had only good things to say about this season's squad that includes projected first-round NBA draft picks such as Anthony Davis, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist and Terrence Jones.

"I'm really impressed with them, not only as basketball players, the way they carry themselves, their attitude," Pitino said. "They're a great group of guys doing a tremendous job."

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FOXNews.com: Millwood strikes out 8 as Mariners beat Padres 6-1

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Millwood strikes out 8 as Mariners beat Padres 6-1
Apr 1st 2012, 03:59

PEORIA, Ariz. –  Kevin Millwood struck out eight in seven solid innings and the Seattle Mariners beat a San Diego Padres split-squad 6-1 on Saturday night.

The veteran right-hander allowed one run on Andy Parrino's homer and five hits.

The Mariners fielded a team of minor leaguers behind Millwood while their regulars took the day to recuperate from a trip to Japan for two regular-season games this past week.

The Padres had four projected starters in their lineup, with first baseman Yonder Alonso collecting a pair of hits off Millwood.

Padres left fielder Mark Kotsay left after the third inning with a calf injury, but manager Bud Black said it was a precaution.

Padres starter Joe Wieland, likely headed for Triple-A, allowed two runs and five hits in five innings.

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FOXNews.com: Playoff-hopeful Capitals beat Canadiens in SO

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Playoff-hopeful Capitals beat Canadiens in SO
Apr 1st 2012, 02:44

Washington, DC –  Matt Hendricks scored in the first round of the shootout as the Washington Capitals picked up a big 3-2 victory over the Montreal Canadiens.

The win moves Washington to 88 points on the season, two clear of Buffalo, which lost to Toronto on Saturday, for the eighth playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. Also, Washington is two points behind Ottawa for the seventh spot.

Mathieu Perrault and Jay Beagle each scored in regulation while Michal Neuvirth posted 38 saves for the Capitals, who have won three of their last four.

Tomas Plekanec and Erik Cole each lit the lamp for the Canadiens, who have lost seven of their last eight. Peter Budaj stopped 31 shots.

Hendricks scored on the first attempt of the shootout while Neuvirth made stops on David Desharnais and Max Pacioretty before Alexander Semin scored to seal the win.

Washington scored 4:16 into the first as Semin fired a shot on net from the left circle that was stopped. However, he gathered his rebound and centered it for a one-timer from Perreault.

It was a 2-0 game with 3:50 to play in the first as a 3-on-1 break saw Hendricks send a pass from the left circle to the front, where Beagle shoved it in.

Montreal got one back with just 21.5 seconds to play in the first when Pacioretty charged down the left wing before getting a shot on net from in front and Cole was there to stuff in the rebound.

The Habs tied the game with 5:29 to play in the second as Plekanec took a pass down the right wing and lifted a shot in high for his 16th of the season.

Budaj stopped 11 shots while Neuvirth made 13 saves in the third and four in overtime to force the shootout.

Game Notes

Washington center Nicklas Backstrom returned to play for the first time since January 3. He had been out after taking an elbow to the head against then- Calgary forward Rene Bourque. He was minus-one in close to 20 minutes of ice time...Washington plays in Tampa on Monday...Montreal hosts the Lightning on Wednesday...Washington swept the season series with Montreal and has won nine of the last 11 meetings.

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FOXNews.com: Stamkos breaks record, but Tampa OT win is bittersweet

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Stamkos breaks record, but Tampa OT win is bittersweet
Apr 1st 2012, 02:25

Tampa, FL –  Steven Stamkos' record-setting goal 45 seconds into overtime lifted the Tampa Bay Lightning over the Winnipeg Jets, 3-2, at Tampa Bay Times Forum.

The tally was the fifth overtime goal of the season for Stamkos, breaking the previous record held by Patrik Elias (2003-04), Olli Jokinen (2005-06), Ilya Kovalchuk (2010-11), Markus Naslund (2003-04), Scott Niedermayer (2001-02), Daniel Sedin (2006-07) and Mats Sundin (1999-00).

However, the win means little now for the Lightning as they, along with Winnipeg, were eliminated from playoff contention on Saturday after Washington defeated Montreal in a shootout.

Ryan Malone scored twice in regulation while Sebastien Caron stopped 26-of-28 shots for the Lightning, who snapped a two-game slide.

Antti Miettinen and Kyle Wellwood lit the lamp for Winnipeg, which lost for the sixth time in eight games.

Ondrej Pavelec made 36 saves in a losing effort.

Tampa Bay entered the third period trailing 2-1 and took advantage of three consecutive penalties on Winnipeg to knot the game at two. After failing to convert on a pair of brief two-man advantages, the Lightning netted the equalizer when Teddy Purcell's shot from the left circle was stopped by Pavelec, but Malone was there to clean up the rebound at the 7:25 mark.

Neither team would be able to score again in regulation, but on Tampa Bay's first offensive possession in overtime, Brian Lee sent a cross-ice pass to Stamkos in the left circle and he ripped a one-timer into the open net for the game-deciding goal.

The Lightning scored the lone goal of the first period after Malone grabbed the puck near his own blue line and flipped it over the head of Jets defenseman Grant Clitsome. Malone then raced around Clitsome and grabbed his own pass for a breakaway, beating Pavelec with a wrister to the stick side with 4:23 left in the opening frame.

But Winnipeg tied the game 6:20 into the second period when Evander Kane grabbed the puck behind the Tampa Bay net and fed a pass to Miettinen in the slot, where he lifted a quick wrister into the top-right corner.

The Jets then took the lead at the 9:28 mark of the middle stanza with Wellwood's tally on a rebound attempt off a Dustin Byfuglien slap shot from the right point.

Game Notes

Tampa Bay went 1-for-8 on the power play...Winnipeg went 0-for-3 on the man advantage...Stamkos' goal was his league-leading 56th of the year.

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FOXNews.com: Capitals' Backstrom returns to the ice

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Capitals' Backstrom returns to the ice
Apr 1st 2012, 02:30

Washington, DC –  Washington Capitals center Nicklas Backstrom played for the first time in over three months on Saturday against Montreal.

The 24-year-old Swede hadn't played since January 3, when he was the recipient of an elbow to the head from then-Calgary Flames forward Rene Bourque. Bourque served a five-game suspension for the hit and has since been dealt to Montreal.

Prior to the setback, the 24-year-old Swede totaled 13 goals and 42 points in 38 contests.

He was minus-one in close to 20 minutes of ice time in Saturday's contest against the Canadiens.

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FOXNews.com: Sixers bounce back with win over Hawks

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Sixers bounce back with win over Hawks
Apr 1st 2012, 02:31

Philadelphia, PA –  Elton Brand scored 13 of his season-high 25 points in the fourth quarter, and the Philadelphia 76ers defeated the Atlanta Hawks, 95-90, on Saturday.

Brand also pulled down 10 rebounds, dished out five assists and blocked three shots for Philadelphia, which swept the season series against Atlanta for the first time since the 2000-01 season. Andre Iguodala added 18 points, eight rebounds and four assists.

The Sixers, who lost the Atlantic Division lead following a loss to Washington on Friday, is a now a half-game behind the idle Celtics for first place.

Josh Smith led all scorers with 34 points for Atlanta, which has lost three of its last four games.

Brand netted seven points during a 12-3 Sixers for a 77-73 lead midway through the final frame.

Smith's pull-up jumper pulled the Hawks within three, and after Holiday's putback layup, Marvin Williams nailed a straightaway three to pull Atlanta within 88-86 with 1:47 left.

But the Sixers used a 6-1 spurt to put the game away.

After Brand knocked down a jumper, Smith made 1-of-2 from the charity stripe. Turner nailed a jumper at the other end, making it 92-87 with 1:00 showing on the clock.

Following Williams' missed trey, Iguodala was called for traveling, but Joe Johnson was unable to hit his triple and Meeks made a pair from the line to seal the win with 10.2 seconds to go.

Philadelphia turned the ball over six times and the Hawks scored the last 10 points of the first quarter for a 23-17 lead.

The Sixers closed the opening half on a 9-2 spurt. Iguodala's turnaround jumper capped the flurry, giving Philadelphia a 43-41 advantage heading into the break.

Iguodala and Brand both netted 12 first-half points to pace the Sixers.

Johnson's jumper with 1.8 seconds remaining in the third gave the Hawks a 66-62 advantage heading into the fourth. Smith scored 13 points in the third frame.

Game Notes

After turning the ball over six times in the opening period, Philadelphia gave it away just five more times...Atlanta was 4-of-14 from beyond the arc while Philadelphia finished 6-of-12 on three-pointers...The Sixers outrebounded the Hawks 41-35.

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FOXNews.com: Knicks' Lin to undergo knee surgery, season may be over

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Knicks' Lin to undergo knee surgery, season may be over
Apr 1st 2012, 03:02

NEW YORK –  Linsanity may be over for this season.

Jeremy Lin will undergo arthroscopic surgery to repair a chronic torn meniscus in his left knee and will be out six weeks, the Knicks announced prior to Saturday night's game at the Garden against Cavaliers.

Lin, who became a cultural phenomenon when he led the Knicks to seven straight wins earlier in the season, said he knew he had the tear after undergoing an MRI following the Pistons game last Saturday but wanted to give himself one week of rehab before making a decision.

At best, he would be back for the second round of the playoffs, if the Knicks make it that far, the New York Post reported.

Knicks coach Mike Woodson had said Friday that Lin may not return this season because of the injury, which had forced him to miss the past three games.

Woodson said ailing Baron Davis, suffering from a hamstring pull, would continue as the team's starting point guard but they are not deep at the position. Woodson said Toney Douglas would be dusted off, while the Knicks could add a point guard from the D-League.

Lin will have surgery early this week in New York.

"It sucks, but when I come back I'll be stronger than I'll ever be," Lin said.

According to a person familiar with the situation, Lin made his final decision at 5:45pm ET Saturday after meeting with the Knicks medical director Lisa Callahan.

Lin tested his knee out Saturday morning and saw his mobility was not good. He said he was unable to cut, and decided he would not be able to play through it.

But he added that he hopes to be back before the six-week timetable because he has been a fast healer in the past.

Lin, 23, is a free agent so it is possible he's played his last game as a Knick. But he is not ruling out playing again this spring.

"It's a six-week rehab process," Lin said. "I can heal fast. I can come back as soon as possible and contribute this season, hopefully."

On Friday in Atlanta, Lin avoided reporters on several occasions following Woodson's ominous remark when the Knicks interim coach lumped Lin and Amar'e Stoudemire in the same boat, saying "if" they return this season. Stoudemire's season is also in doubt because of a bulging disk.

"It's disappointing for me," Lin said. "It's hard to watch the games. I want to be out there more than anything right now to help the team."

"It's a big blow for us," Woodson said.

Lin, in his second season after going undrafted out of Harvard, came out of nowhere in early February to seize the Knicks' point guard spot. He has averaged 14.6 points, 6.1 assists and 3.0 rebounds per game.

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