Sunday, April 1, 2012

Kansas ohio state

  • NEW ORLEANS -- Saturdays first Final Four game had all the hype, but the second game stole the night. Ohio State and Kansas was billed as the second-fiddle showdown of second-seeded schools in the second game of the NCAA tournaments double-header.
  • (Los Angeles Times)
  • NEW ORLEANS — Kansas won the "other game" Saturday, the second N.C.A.A. tournament national semifinal, a contest most notable on the surface for what it lacked: even one team from the Bluegrass State.
  • (New York Times)
  • NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Same story, new night for Kansas. The team thats been teetering on the edge of the tournament since before it even began is now one of the last two left.
  • (Associated Press)
  • NEW ORLEANS – Kansas is back to try to ruin another John Calipari coronation. The Jayhawks played almost all of their national semifinal game against Ohio State from behind.
  • (New York Daily News)
  • Thomas has been that stretcher, pulling big guys out from the rim or crashing the offensive glass when teams focused on Sullinger. In the previous nine games, since the Buckeyes season-changing loss to Wisconsin on Feb.
  • (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • Holding a 64-61 lead in the final seconds, Kansas elected to foul Ohio State rather than allow the Buckeyes to shoot a game-tying three-point shot.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • Trailing by 13 points late in the first half and nine at intermission, Kansas (32-6) held OSU to eight second-half field goals on 33 attempts. The Jayhawks also dominated the Buckeyes on the backboards, outrebounding them for the night 42-30.
  • (USA Today)
  • NEW ORLEANS — Saturday's first Final Four game had all the hype but the second game stole the night.
  • (Chicago Tribune)
  • A phantom traveling call, a putback dunk, an inbounds steal, a foul-shot lane violation on an intentional miss -- the Kansas-Ohio State game had a little bit of everything. And that was just the last 27.4 seconds.
  • (The News & Observer)
  • NEW ORLEANS • Same story, new night for Kansas. The team thats been teetering on the edge of the tournament since before it even began is now one of the last two left.
  • (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)

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