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Chalmers and Kansas played big
Photo by
Ronald Martinez - Getty
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....like their Coach
Bill Self
Photo by Streeter Lecka - Getty |
Memphis Coach John
Calipari had pooh-poohed foul shots all week long. He intimated
that it wouldn't come down to the foul line. His team was too
good, too athletic, too composed. He referenced 16 points that made a
championship team and said his team had them all, that his was a "dream
team".
We did get to see Bill Self's locker-room pre-game address to his
players. Coach Self stressed to his team that they had already
won more games than any other team in Kansas history, that that in and
of itself was a tremendous accomplishment. He reminded them that they
would remember this game for their entire lives, but that this Kansas
team could play loose, it could be itself, it had nothing to
lose. It could only gain.
Bill Self gave his team a good feeling about itself, let them know that
they were already the best team Kansas had ever seen...that if they
just did everything they had done all season, they had a good chance to
win this game. But he instilled an image in his team's collective
consciousness, that of winning a Championship. It was the kind of
speech you'd wish for your son to receive before the biggest game of
his life.
Someone in the booth had stressed the importance of the first three
minutes of a basketball game. And the Jayhawks came out strong,
making some nice passes inside for some easy buckets. They played
a strong defense, especially on #23, the super-frosh
All-Everything Derrick Rose. They grabbed most of the
rebounds. They looked loose. And they held a lead for much
of that first half. Although the Jayhawks were down by five at
the half, it seemed that Kansas was playing the best it could play.
But just as he had done
for most of the season and certainly in this tournament, Derrick Rose
came alive in that second half. He took the game over. From
the 12:21 to 7:52 marks of the second half, Rose made two driving
layups, made a three, and then still another jumper. Although he
missed a couple of jumpers after that, his layup and free throw at the
5:10 mark gave Memphis a 54-47 lead. At 4:04, another 3-pointer
made it 56-49 Memphis and it seemed that nothing would stop the
Tigers..
Down the stretch in
regulation though, the game and momentum seemed to slowly turn.
At 3:12 Rose missed a three. But at 1:23 of regulation, in maybe
the defining moment of the game, the muscular Joey Dorsey fouled out of
the game. Mario Chalmers hit 2 free throws to make it 62-58
Memphis. Chris Douglas-Roberts (CDR) was then fouled and missed a
FT while the Jayhawks Darrell Arthur made a nice turnaround jumper to
pull the Jayhawks to within two, 62-60.
At the thirty second
mark, CDR missed a layup, then with just 16 seconds left, CDR missed
both his free throw opportunities to keep the Memphis lead at 2.
At the 10-second mark, Derrick Rose missed his first attempt, then made
the second to stretch the lead to just 3, keeping it a one-possesssion
game at 63-60.
The rest is history
really, and will be history for the rest of time. The ball went
to Mario Chalmers at the top of the key and, with Rose just a step
behind and hand fully-extended, Chalmers jumped high in the air,
letting that ball go at the top of his jump. Then, two
closely-matched teams, a national television audience and Mario
Chalmers watched that orange sphere sail cleanly through the net.
Overtime.
It
seemed there was never any doubt as to the outcome in OT. With Dorsey out of the game and an exhausted
Rose
by then limping around, the Tigers fate was sealed. Kansas
would win their National Championship. And
Memphis
would lose theirs.
Just
as the Dallas Cowboys had been anointed winners in their playoff game
against
the New York Giants this past January, so were these Memphis Tigers
pre-anointed winners of a game that had yet to be played. Just as the Cowboys had thought their ten
All-Pro players would surely roll over those moribund Giants, these
Tigers
swaggered into last night’s game and all the way into that deep fourth
quarter.
And
they just needed to make a couple of foul shots. What
must have gone through CDR’s mind as he
stepped to the line? Surely it occurred
to him that they were supposed to be leading by more than just a few
points. Coach had counted on them
dominating this
game. What had the coach said about free
throws? Anyone…anyone..?
This
is not to say that Calipari necessarily did a bad job with this team
all year. Giving him his due, he had
recruited them and he
had brought them this far spouting the same bravado he had displayed
all year and
throughout this tournament. His team, and
most certainly his star player, were young men who seemed to thrive on
playing
loose and letting their athleticism and sheer talent overwhelm their
opponents.
I’m
sure Calipari felt that it wouldn’t do much good to over-emphasize a
weakness to
a bunch of young men who didn’t need doubt sown into their collective
psyche. And there is surely some wisdom in
that point
of view. But I do think Calipari overdid
it in the days leading up to the Championship Game. He
broke out that Kool-Aid he’d been feeding
his players and started pouring it down his own throat.
Calipari
had prepared his team for a game they would dominate.
Perhaps playing in a weak conference had
pre-conditioned him for that kind of attitude, orr
maybe it was their comparatively easy run
in the tournament itself.
One
thing is sure. The only scenario for which success at the line is not
important
is a close game. The Tigers weren’t
prepared for that one.
