Sunday, April 1, 2012

FOXNews.com: Saints appeal hearings expected this week

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Saints appeal hearings expected this week
Apr 1st 2012, 18:31

NEW ORLEANS –  The NFL expects to hold hearings this week on appeals filed in connection with the investigation of the Saints' bounty system, a league spokesman said.

Greg Aiello said Sunday in an email to The Associated Press that he could not confirm who has appealed, citing league policies. He also could not provide the particular days or times that hearings would be held, saying the league leaves announcements of such particulars to those who are filing the appeals.

Head coach Sean Payton is appealing his season-long suspension, a person familiar with the situation has told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because no one has announced his plans.

General manager Mickey Loomis is appealing his eight-game suspension, assistant head coach Joe Vitt is appealing his six-game suspension and the club is appealing its $500,000 fine and loss of second-round draft picks in 2012 and 2013.

The appeals will be heard by Commissioner Roger Goodell in New York.

ESPN reported Sunday Payton and Loomis would meet with the commissioner on Tuesday, but Saints spokesman Greg Bensel said he could not confirm that.

Payton, Loomis and Vitt were all suspended for their roles in New Orleans' bounty system, which offered improper cash bonuses for big hits that either knocked opponents out of games or left them needing help off of the field.

Former defensive coordinator Gregg Williams, who left the Saints after last season to join the St. Louis Rams, ran the bounty program and has been suspended indefinitely.

Payton's suspension was supposed to begin on Sunday, but the commissioner has said since the unprecedented penalties were announced that the Saints' coach would likely be allowed to continue working as his appeal was resolved. However, Goodell added that the challenge would be expedited, indicating that Payton would not likely be able to add on much work time should his appeal be upheld.

Goodell also said at the NFL owners meetings in Florida that Payton could have some contact with the team but did not go into detail, and Payton indicated that he was still a little unclear about that, as well.

With all the uncertainty, Payton is trying to compress as much planning for the 2012 season into whatever time he has left at Saints headquarters.

The results of the appeals could affect whether Bill Parcells, who turns 71 in August, comes out of retirement to take over as interim coach while his former offensive assistant and protege is suspended.

Parcells has said he would consider coaching the Saints if asked. Payton and Loomis played golf with the former NFL coach last week to talk to him about the team's predicament.

If Payton's suspension is reduced, however, the Saints could decide it makes more sense to promote an assistant from the current staff.

Vitt could be a candidate to step in as interim coach, as he did briefly last season when Payton broke his leg, if his own suspension is reduced.

There are also three strong candidates among Saints assistants to take over as interim coach: offensive coordinator Pete Carmichael, defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo and offensive line coach Aaron Kromer. Payton expressed confidence in the abilities of his own assistants to compensate for his absence, but also has voiced some misgivings about saddling those coaches with additional responsibilities.

Since his suspension was announced, Payton has been putting in long hours with his staff and that of Loomis as they try to lay out plans for the 2012 draft and season.

Loomis will be able to oversee the draft and handle other roster moves up until the season starts. Then, barring a successful appeal, he will serve his suspension for failing to put a stop to the bounty system in a timely way.

Payton said earlier this week that he had already laid out plans for the offseason training program and the beginning of training camp, up until the Saints play Arizona in the Hall of Fame game Aug. 5 in Canton, Ohio.

The NFL's investigation in New Orleans found that Payton initially lied to league investigators about the existence of a bounty program and instructed his defensive assistants to do the same. It also found that Loomis did not do enough to put a stop to the enterprise after he was informed that the league was looking into it.

Payton twice apologized for his role in the bounty program, saying he takes "full responsibility" for a system that operated for three years under his watch.

The NFL has said as many as 27 players also could be sanctioned for their role in the scandal, but it is not yet clear when that might happen, creating additional uncertainty for New Orleans and some teams that have signed former Saints defensive regulars as they tried to build their 2012 rosters.

DeMaurice Smith, executive director of the NFL Players Association, told the website Pro Player Insiders that the league hasn't turned over what the union would consider direct evidence of player involvement in a 'pay to injure' scheme.

"If there is direct evidence of a 'pay to injure' scheme implicating players or anybody involved," Smith said, "we are asking the league to turn over that information."

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FOXNews.com: Former Cosmos, Lazio star Giorgio Chinaglia dies

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Former Cosmos, Lazio star Giorgio Chinaglia dies
Apr 1st 2012, 18:37

ROME –  Former New York Cosmos star Giorgio Chinaglia has died of complications from a heart attack, his son said. The Italian soccer great was 65.

Chinaglia died Sunday at his home in Naples, Fla., his son, Anthony, said through family friend Charlie Stillatana, who was Chinaglia's co-host on a Sirius XM radio show.

Chinaglia was the all-time leading scorer in the North American Soccer League after starring with the Italian club Lazio.

Lazio also announced the death. Chinaglia lived in the U.S. since facing accusations in Rome of involvement in an organized crime group that allegedly tried to buy Lazio in 2006.

In 1976, he joined the Cosmos and played alongside Pele and Franz Beckenbauer. He played for Italy at the 1974 World Cup.

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FOXNews.com: Con canasta triple de Kobe Bryant, Lakers derrota 88-85 a Hornets

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Con canasta triple de Kobe Bryant, Lakers derrota 88-85 a Hornets
Apr 1st 2012, 08:20

LOS ANGELES –  Mientras haya tiempo en el reloj, Kobe Bryant tiene la capacidad de hacer maravillas aun si ha tenido un juego horrible.

Bryant hizo buena su fama como uno de los cerradores más grandiosos de la NBA: había fallado sus primeros 15 lanzamientos pero acertó una canasta triple a 20 segundos del final que significó la victoria que los Lakers de Los Angeles lograron el sábado en la noche por 88-85 sobre los Hornets de Nueva Orleáns.

"Siempre hay tiempo para que (Bryant) se reivindique", expresó Jarret Jack, de los Hornets, que figuran entre los equipos sotaneros.

"A nadie le interesaría hablar de su desempeño (de Bryant) en los tres primeros periodos. Solo se hablará del último lanzamiento que hizo para que su equipo se alzara con el triunfo (y el primer lugar de su división)", apuntó.

Esta anotación fue la tercera de campo en el partido para Bryant, que terminó con 11 puntos tras acertar tres de 21 lanzamientos, en tanto que los Lakers pusieron fin a una racha de dos reveses en casa.

"Kobe jamás se da por vencido", señaló Andrew Bynum.

El español Pau Gasol logró 21 puntos y 11 rebotes, Bynum aportó 19 unidades y 10 tableros, mientras que Ramon Sessions consiguió 10 tantos y 10 asistencias para los Lakers.

Bryant había fallado todos sus siete disparos de canasta triple hasta que hizo el bueno. Tenía cinco asistencias, tres rebotes y cuatro faltas en 39 minutos.

Esta noche, Bryant tuvo el peor juego en su carrera al comienzo de un partido. En su anterior coyuntura similar había fallado sus primeros 13 disparos de campo en el encuentro del 28 de diciembre de 2010 contra San Antonio.

"Soy obstinado. Hay que tener esta actitud, esta determinación u obstinación", señaló Bryant. "Con esto los equipos superan obstáculos y ganan muchos campeonatos", agregó. "Todos me habrían matado si hubiera fallado ese lanzamiento", apuntó.

Jack logró 18 puntos y 10 asistencias para los Hornets a pesar de que jugó con un esguince en el tobillo derecho, pero falló una canasta de rebote en el tablero a 4,9 segundos del final que habría sellado el triunfo de su equipo.

En otro partido, los Knicks de Nueva York derrotaron de locales 91-75 a los Cavaliers de Cleveland y divisan la postemporada, pero comienzan a perder cuadro por lesiones.

Los Knicks necesitan que otro jugador asuma el papel del segundo anotador detrás de Carmelo Anthony para que puedan alcanzar la siguiente fase de la competición debido a que Jeremy Lin va camino al quirófano por una rodilla y estará en la lista de lesionados con Amare Stoudemire.

JR Smith es el candidato más obvio. "JR tiene capacidad", señaló Anthony. "Necesitaremos que JR sea quien es todas las noches cuando salga de la banca", apuntó.

Smith anotó 20 puntos y Anthony, 19, en el partido.

Antes del encuentro, los Knicks anunciaron que Lin sería operado de un menisco desgarrado en la rodilla izquierda y podría estar marginado seis semanas. Esta situación, con Stoudemire lesionado, deja a Nueva York sin sus principales ofensivos, segundo y tercero, en su intento por alcanzar la postemporada.

Tyson Chandler logró 14 puntos y 12 rebotes para los Knicks, que están en octavo lugar y que venían de una derrota el viernes en Atlanta. El triunfo del sábado, fue el noveno de Nueva York en 11 encuentros. Nueva York ha ganado siete partidos consecutivos de local y se puso dos y medio juegos arriba de Milwaukee, que perdió ante Memphis.

"Así es, los equipos buenos ganan, sin importar quiénes jueguen o no", señaló Chandler.

En los demás resultados de la jornada, Detroit 110, Charlotte 107, en tiempo extra; Filadelfia 95, Atlanta 90; San Antonio 112, Indiana 103; Memphis 99, Milwaukee 95; Nueva Jersey 111, Sacramento 99, y L.A. Clippers 105, Utah 96.

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FOXNews.com: Kentucky's Davis wins Wooden Award

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Kentucky's Davis wins Wooden Award
Apr 1st 2012, 05:50

New Orleans, LA –  Kentucky freshman Anthony Davis, set to play for the national title, has added yet another top personal award to his collection Saturday.

Davis became just the second freshman ever to take home the John R. Wooden Award, named after the legendary UCLA coach and presented to the top player in college basketball.

The 6-foot-10 forward was the first Kentucky player to win the award, and the first from the SEC. He joined Kevin Durant (Texas, 2007) as the only freshman to capture it.

Davis had 18 points and 14 rebounds to lead top-seeded Kentucky to a win over Louisville on Saturday and a berth in the NCAA title game Monday.

Among his other achievements in a star-making freshman season, Davis was the SEC Player of the Year. He will be honored at the 36th Annual Wooden Award Gala next Friday at the Los Angeles Athletic Club.

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FOXNews.com: Moreland's homer helps Rangers beat Indians 7-4

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Moreland's homer helps Rangers beat Indians 7-4
Apr 1st 2012, 06:08

GOODYEAR, Ariz. –  Neftali Feliz is healthy and ready to make his first start for the Texas Rangers.

The former closer pitched five innings and Mitch Moreland hit a two-run homer to help Texas beat the Cleveland Indians 7-4 Saturday night.

Rangers reliever Neal Cotts, in the mix for the final bullpen spot, strained a muscle on the left side of his chest and will be evaluated.

"There's never a good time to get an injury," Texas general manager Jon Daniels said. "It may be a seven-to-10-day thing. Hopefully, that's all. I think we'll see him back out there for us."

Texas was without center fielder Josh Hamilton. He left Friday's game with a tight left groin and is day-to-day.

Michael Brantley and Jason Kipnis hit solo homers for Cleveland, which has averaged 2.8 runs during a 10-game Cactus League losing streak.

"I guess it is our turn this year to say spring training doesn't count," said manager Manny Acta, adding that he remains confident the Indians can score runs.

Feliz, now Texas' No. 5 starter, allowed three runs and five hits in his first "A'' game start since leaving a March 20 outing with right shoulder soreness.

"I'm ready to start," Feliz said. "If I am healthy, I will be ready. I had no (physical) problems. I am healthy."

The right-hander struggled to command his overpowering fastball. He walked three, including Lou Marson with the bases loaded.

"I'm learning to follow the rhythm of the game," said Feliz, a starter in the minors who has pitched 154 times for the Rangers, all in relief. His 72 saves the past two years helped Texas to consecutive World Series appearances.

"I thought he did well," Rangers manager Ron Washington said. "He had trouble finding the zone in the second, but minimized the damage and then did well the next three innings. He had a good changeup, breaking ball and let go a few fastballs."

Cleveland starter Justin Masterson gave up seven hits and six runs over 3 2-3 innings in his final tuneup for his first opening-day start Thursday in Cleveland against Toronto.

"He was a little flat with his pitches," Acta said. "But he threw 90 pitches, got stretched out and is ready for the season."

Acta said he will announce his opening-day roster on Sunday. It is expected to include Jose Lopez as a utility infielder and Shelley Duncan as the starter in left field. After hitting five homers early, Duncan has seen his spring average dip to .167.

Either veteran Jeremy Accardo or newcomer Jairo Asencio could get Cleveland's final bullpen spot. Asencio, acquired from Atlanta, gave up two hits over two scoreless innings in his Indians debut.

Acta has tried numerous players as he seeks some offense, particularly in the outfield where Grady Sizemore is out after back surgery. Acta acknowledged that camp invitees have not done well enough to claim a job.

"They haven't got it done," Acta said. "But we have a better offense than last year."

General manager Chris Antonetti has not commented on reports that Cleveland was close to acquiring veteran outfielder Bobby Abreu from the Los Angeles Angels. Antonetti said Saturday that talks had not slowed down, adding that they "could not intensify."

NOTES: Texas sent five players to Triple-A Round Rock, including LHP Michael Kirkman. ... Cleveland optioned RHP Kevin Slowey to Triple-A Columbus and tabbed RHP Jeanmar Gomez as its fifth starter. Acta said Gomez, who strained his right hip Friday, should be ready for his first start of the season, likely April 11.

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FOXNews.com: Kentucky off to title game, beats Louisville 69-61

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Kentucky off to title game, beats Louisville 69-61
Apr 1st 2012, 06:42

NEW ORLEANS –  Bragging rights in the Bluegrass State are mighty nice.

Kentucky has its sights set higher.

Much higher.

Anthony Davis and top-seeded Kentucky are right where they planned to be all along, playing for the national title after finally putting away pesky Louisville 69-61 in the Final Four on Saturday night.

"I have a team that's had teams come at them all year," coach John Calipari said, "and they responded again today."

It will be Kentucky's first appearance in the title game since winning a seventh NCAA crown back in 1998 and it gives Calipari another shot at the championship that has eluded him. The Wildcats (37-2) will face No. 2 seed Kansas, a 64-62 winner over Ohio State in the second semifinal.

After the game, thousands of fans swarmed into the streets near the University of Kentucky campus, overturning cars and lighting couches ablaze. Riot police used pepper spray and 150 officers deployed on the streets at one point to quell what Lexington police spokeswoman Sherelle Roberts called "a very dangerous situation with the fires and the violence" that dragged on for hours.

Lexington City spokeswoman Susan Straub said police made fewer than 10 arrests, and a few injuries were reported.

As the final seconds ticked down in New Orleans, Davis pointed to the court and screamed twice, "This is my stage!"

Yes, yes, it is.

With a star-studded roster that includes at least three, maybe as many as five NBA lottery picks, Kentucky was the top seed in the tournament and the heavy favorite to cut down the nets when the whole tournament was done. And Calipari wouldn't let his young players consider anything else, saying repeatedly this was "just another game."

But playing in-state rival Louisville (30-10) is never just that, and the Cardinals made Kentucky work deep into the second half to grind this victory out.

Louisville outrebounded Kentucky 40-33, including a whopping 19-6 advantage on the offensive glass — the sole reason the Cardinals were able to make a game of this.

"To tell you the truth, I haven't always liked some of the Kentucky teams. I'm not going to lie to you," said Louisville coach Rick Pitino, who counts as something of an expert after spending eight years in Lexington and the last 11 with the Cardinals. "But I really like this team a lot because of their attitude and the way they play.

"I'll certainly be rooting for them hard to bring the trophy back to Kentucky. ... They're a great group of guys, doing a tremendous job."

So tremendous it led to a thawing, however briefly, in the frosty relationship between Calipari and Pitino. When the two shook hands after the game, Pitino congratulated Calipari and told him he'd be rooting for the Wildcats on Monday night.

"I think that's neat," Calipari said. "When I was at UMass, I can remember hugging him and telling him, 'I'm happy for you and I really want you to win the national title.' He did the same to me tonight, so I think it's kind of neat."

Calipari had taken another phenom-laden roster to the Final Four last year, only to see them come unglued against eventual national champion Connecticut. The Wildcats said all week they weren't going to let the same thing happen this time, and it showed in their workmanlike effort. No matter how close Louisville got, the Cardinals were never able to control the game. When they made a run, Kentucky found a way to stop it. When one of the Wildcats ran into foul trouble, the others picked him up.

Kentucky played so hard Davis went flying off the court twice, sailing all the way onto media row once.

"They made runs, and we made our runs. That's what coach always says," said Terrence Jones, who finished with six points and seven rebounds. "We never get rattled."

Bigger, bulkier and with Davis having a wider wingspan than some small airplanes, the Wildcats looked like playground bullies as they pushed Louisville around on their way to a 13-point lead early in the second half. But the Cardinals know a thing about rallies after coming from 11 points down to beat Florida in last weekend's West Regional final, and they sure made Kentucky sweat.

Russ Smith made back-to-back buckets to start a 15-3 run, and Peyton Siva capped it with a 3-pointer from NBA range that tied the game at 49 with 9:11 to play. But Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, who played just 23 minutes because of foul trouble, made back-to-back buckets to give the Wildcats some breathing room.

After Siva made a pair of free throws, Jones scored on a jumper and Darius Miller drilled a 3 — only Kentucky's second of the game — to give the Wildcats control for good.

"They were the better team today," Siva said.

Just to make sure Louisville didn't get any wild notions about another late comeback, Kidd-Gilchrist threw down a monstrous dunk with 1:05 to play that had Kentucky fans on their feet and assistant coaches from Kansas and Ohio State scrambling to try and find a way to stop this juggernaut.

Kentucky shot a dazzling 57 percent — yes, that's right — with Davis leading the way. He missed just one of his eight shots and finished with 18 points and 14 rebounds, and let his play speak for itself, not showing any emotion until those closing seconds of the game.

"Anthony Davis is just the No.1 player in the draft," Pitino said of the 19-year-old freshman, who has won just about every player of the year award there is. "When you're playing against Bill Russell on the pro level, you realize why the Celtics won 11 world championships."

Miller added 13 points, and Doron Lamb had 10. Kidd-Gilchrist had nine, all in the second half.

Siva led the Cardinals with 11 points, and Gorgui Dieng had 12 rebounds.

"I told the guys, 'Look, I'm going to Miami tomorrow and celebrating a season where we worked around the clock, around injuries and everything else. If you guys don't celebrate and have good, clean fun, you're fools,'" Pitino said.

The Kentucky-Louisville rivalry causes tempers to flare even in December when, in the grand scheme of things, games really don't mean much. Heck, it took government intervention just to get the two schools to play on a regular basis back in the 1980s.

With the NCAA title game on the line, the latest skirmish in basketball's version of the civil war so divided the small hoop-crazed state that senior citizens actually came to fisticuffs. But boy, did it make for a great show. The game was such a big deal that No. 1 Kentucky fan Ashley Judd wasn't even the biggest celeb in the house, with Jay-Z taking a prime seat behind the Kentucky bench.

"It's our fans; our fans are great to us," Davis said. "Our fans travel a long way. We want to go out here and give them a show and give them what they want, which is a national championship."

The ultimate bragging rights sure are a nice way to start.

Kentucky is 19-11 since the teams resumed playing in 1983-84, with the Wildcats winning four straight, including a 69-62 victory at Rupp Arena on Dec. 31 — almost the exact score as Saturday night's win.

The Wildcats know they're talented — there are three, maybe as many as five NBA lottery picks on the Kentucky roster — but they play without ego or cockiness, choosing instead to let their superior play overwhelm their opponents.

The Cardinals had skidded into the Big East tournament with four losses in their last six games, including back-to-back defeats to end the regular season. Pitino told his players they could either go home after the first week of the tournament or they could do something special — their choice.

The Cardinals chose the latter, ripping off four wins in four days to win the Big East tournament and ousting No. 1 seed Michigan State in the West Regional semifinals. Then came that comeback against rough-and-tumble Florida.

Those games hardened the Cardinals, and they promised they weren't simply happy to reach the Final Four. But they sure looked it early on, getting off to a slow, sloppy start. It didn't help that Dieng looked petrified of Davis and Siva was playing at hyperspeed, a pace Pitino has been trying to get him to tone down all year.

When they tried to go inside, Davis was less forgiving than a bouncer at a Hollywood club. When the Cardinals went outside, the Wildcats swarmed and forced them to take off-balance shots. Meanwhile, on the other end, Kentucky scored at will, repeatedly picking on Siva and Dieng.

But there's a reason Pitino has taken three teams to the Final Four. He pulled out every trick he had, switching strategies, begging the refs for calls and finding a way — finally — to calm his team down.

"Any time you don't know whether a team is better offensively or defensively, you know you've got a great basketball team," Pitino said. "And Anthony Davis is incredible."

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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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