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Novices at point guard may key region final

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Times wires
Saturday, March 26, 2011

NEWARK, N.J. — Amid all the star power of Kentucky and North Carolina, a pair of freshmen point guards could tip the outcome in one team's favor today in the NCAA East Region final.

The Wildcats feature 6-foot-3 Brandon Knight, who has hit the winning shot in two of Kentucky's three NCAA victories. The Tar Heels point guard, 6-3 Kendall Marshall, hasn't drawn the publicity of Knight but has done a marvelous job since taking over the starting job 19 games ago.

"Brandon is a talented, special player," Marshall said. "He made a lot of big-time plays. I think he showed throughout his career what kind of player he is. He's the anchor of the team, the point guard, keeping them going. (He made) two big shots in the tournament to keep the season alive."

Kentucky coach John Calipari said he has been impressed with Marshall.

"They get the ball up the court in a hurry and he'll throw it ahead," he said. "He'll snake his way to the rim if you space out. On his drives, he can find people next to the goal. He can find 3-point shooters. So he makes the game easy for his teammates."

Knight averages a team-high 17.2 points and 4.2 assists. Marshall isn't nearly as focused on scoring, averaging 6.2 points, but he doles out 6.2 assists per game and led the ACC in assists during the regular season.

Marshall took over the starting job from Larry Drew II after a 20-point loss to Georgia Tech on Jan. 16, and North Carolina has taken off since. The Tar Heels have won 17 of 19 games and reached the region final for the 25th time.

With Marshall running the offense, North Carolina moves up the floor as quickly as any team in the country. Marshall also has shown an uncanny ability to deliver passes where players can turn them into points.

"He is such a bright young man and he understands how to play the game of basketball," UNC coach Roy Williams said. "It's been an easier transformation maybe than any point guard I coached."


Tampa Bay Storm roster has Tampa Bay area flavor

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By Brandon Wright, Times Correspondent
Saturday, March 26, 2011

TAMPA — Storm supporters might need a program to keep up with all the personnel changes from last year's ArenaBowl team. But more than a few names will ring a bell.

"It's definitely a little weird seeing all of these guys in the locker room again," former USF receiver Amarri Jackson said. "But it feels great because it's like home."

Six former Bulls will dot the active roster tonight when the Storm (1-1) takes on Cleveland (1-0) in its home opener. Nine players, including two currently injured, played high school football in the bay area.

"It's a huge bonus for us to have a program like USF right up the road from us," Storm coach Dave Ewart said. "They have a top-notch program, and we're expecting all those guys to be big contributors this season."

With the way the Storm's roster has taken shape this season, you half expect to see former USF coach Jim Leavitt stomping up and down the sideline or Rocky the Bull to come charging onto the field.

"It's pretty cool," said receiver Huey Whittaker, another former Bull and a Hernando High graduate. "It feels like family, and it's made it easier to develop a sense of team early on in the season."

Jackson, who has been in Buccaneers camp twice and played last season in the Canadian Football League, said he decided to give the Arena League a try after talking with some former Bulls who already had signed with the Storm.

"(Jarriet) Buie and (Richard) Clebert were already there, and after talking with them about it, I wanted to give it a shot," he said. "There's a bond that forms when you're a Bull, and that has carried over into our lives after (USF football)."

Whittaker said stocking the roster with USF talent also is a good move for the Storm in terms of raising the team's profile with local fans.

"I think bringing in (USF players) was a big part in the way ownership and management put things together," he said. "The talent is there, and so making a push for guys from the area helps attract fans."

The USF connection also has helped make players not from the bay area feel comfortable with their new surroundings.

"We've been able to show them around town and the places to go and not to go," Jackson said. "So that, too, has helped us all form a bond with them."

Transactions: As anticipated, fullback Terrance Royal, a standout at Wharton High and USF, signed Thursday. To make room for last season's starting fullback, quarterback B.J. Hall was released. He did not see action after signing with the team March 14. Tampa Bay also placed defensive lineman Cedrick Fisher on injured reserve.

Tampa Bay Lightning's Steve Downie knows he is marked man with officials

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By Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer
Saturday, March 26, 2011

RALEIGH, N.C. — Steve Downie got a reminder Friday that the referees are, as he said, "looking extra hard for me."

The Lightning right wing received a 10-minute misconduct in the third period against the Hurricanes for shooting a puck down the ice after a stoppage of play. That doesn't sound like much, but Downie apparently had been warned after doing it earlier in the game.

"It doesn't matter who's right or who's wrong," Downie said Saturday, "if I did something or didn't intentionally do it. It's hurting the team, and you can't have that."

What really bugged coach Guy Boucher is that he spoke to Downie before the game about putting himself in compromising situations.

Downie did just that in his last game, March 3 against the Bruins, skating almost the length of the ice to intervene and escalate a confrontation between teammate Pavel Kubina and Boston's Shawn Thornton.

Downie received a misconduct for that as well. He missed Tampa Bay's next nine games with ankle and knee injuries, returning Friday against Carolina.

"He looked quicker," Boucher said. "He worked hard. It's just he's hurting himself and hurting the team. We need him out there."

Downie, with a team-high 158 penalty minutes, needs to keep in mind he is marked to a certain degree by a past filled with suspensions and questionable hits.

"It's definitely taking a toll mentally," Downie said of the scrutiny. "But, I mean, it is what it is. I can't be doing stuff like that. I can sit here and say I had no intentions of (ticking) any refs off. It wasn't even on my mind to get a 10, and yet, there I am getting another one.

"I don't think it's going to change my competitiveness or will for the game. It's just I have to realize they're looking extra hard for me. I think (Friday) night they thought I was trying to do something to get them upset. But really I was just playing the game. They weren't even in my mind. But the bottom line is I'm hurting the team no matter if I'm right or wrong."

CONNOLLY HURT: Brett Connolly, drafted No. 6 overall in June, separated his shoulder Friday in the first period of a playoff game for Prince George of the junior Western league.

There was no word on the injury's severity. But Lightning GM Steve Yzerman said it is another red flag for a player with questions about his durability after he missed last season with hip injuries and has missed time this season with a knee injury.

"I'm concerned," Yzerman said. "He's got to be committed to getting physically stronger. He's a talented kid. He's got good size. He's got to add strength."

Connolly, 18, had 46 goals, 73 points and 26 penalty minutes in 59 games with Prince George.

ODDS AND ENDS: Tampa Bay reached 40 wins and 90 points (actually 91) for the first time since 2006-07, the last time it reached the playoffs. … The Hurricanes on Saturday snapped the Lightning's five-game streak of scoring first. … Eric Staal's first-period power-play goal broke Tampa Bay's streak of 28 straight road penalty kills. … Forwards Mattias Ritola and Blair Jones and D Matt Smaby were scratched.

Kansas gets another low-seeded opponent

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Times wires
Saturday, March 26, 2011

SAN ANTONIO, Texas — Kansas is the only No. 1 seed left in the tournament, essentially favored to win it all at this point.

Then again, the Jayhawks should still be around. All they have had to play so far are teams seeded 16th, ninth and 12th.

And they have to be called the team to beat considering what's ahead: the lowest seed left in the field, No. 11 Virginia Commonwealth, in the Southwest Region final today, and Butler, a No. 8 seed, awaiting in the Final Four.

With all due respect to the upset specialists still in Kansas' way, this roll call of fattened seeds is enough to make coach Bill Self wonder if he has a team of destiny that catches all the breaks — or if this is some sort of elaborate setup.

No NCAA champion has had a path that, on paper, was as easy as this would be. In 1990, UNLV won the title by beating teams whose seeds added up to a record-high of 54. Kansas would be at 56 just by getting to the final.

"We're not going to overlook any team," said Markieff Morris, Kansas' top rebounder and second-leading scorer. "I think we respect them enough to execute and guard them like they're the Dukes and North Carolinas."

But there's a difference between pretending a team is a battle-tested, proven champion and actually believing it when you step on the court.

Maybe that's why history suggests Kansas could be in trouble, if not today then next weekend in Houston.

The Jayhawks are the fourth top seed to play a No. 11 with a Final Four spot on the line. Only two won.

They also would be the third team to reach the Final Four without facing anyone seeded higher than ninth. The others, North Carolina in 1991 and Michigan State in 2001, lost in the national semifinals.

"Every team is vulnerable this time of year, especially No. 1 seeds, because I think other teams like to gun for them," Kansas senior guard Tyrel Reed said.

"But you can't try to protect being the No. 1 seed. You've got to go out and take what's yours and just play the team that's in front of you."

Now that they're the only top seed left, Self joked the only excitement is simply that they're still playing. Last season, the Jayhawks were the No. 1 overall seed yet lost in the second round.

So it didn't take seeing Pittsburgh losing last weekend, Duke losing on Thursday or overall No. 1 Ohio State losing on Friday for the Jayhawks to understand having a top seed guarantees nothing.

"The No. 1 seeds that have exited the tournament so far, I think, is more of a statement to what can happen in college basketball than anything else," Self said.

"When you have this many good teams and good players, things like that do happen. But we're just worried about San Antonio, Texas, today playing VCU. And if we're fortunate enough to advance, we'll worry about whoever we're playing once we get there."

Pitcher, Homosassa native Hampton retires

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Times wires
Saturday, March 26, 2011

PHOENIX — Veteran left-hander Mike Hampton, a former Crystal River standout, retired Saturday, ending a 16-year big-league career after giving up on a bid to earn a roster spot with the Diamondbacks.

"I just knew it was time," Hampton, 38, said in a statement. "The fire is there and the passion will always be there, but physically it was just time to shut it down."

Hampton said his teenage sons seemed comfortable with his decision to spend more time with them. It was a little tougher to explain to his father, Mike Hampton Sr., who had seen his son escape obscurity in their hometown of Homosassa and enjoy a 16-year career.

"He was disappointed because he said, 'Man, I just thought you would play forever,' " Hampton said. "I wanted to. We just went back to a lot of the days of playing catch in the backyard and him coaching my Little League teams and high school teams and All-Star teams. There was a lot of effort that both of us put into it. So we just reminisced about that."

The oft-injured Hampton was 148-115 with a 4.06 ERA in 419 games, including 355 starts.

He began his career with the Mariners in 1993 and played for the Astros, Mets, Rockies, Braves and Diamondbacks. He led the National League with 22 wins in 1999 while with Houston.

But the two-time All-Star had just 10 wins in the past five seasons. He had elbow surgery in 2005 and 2007 and rotator cuff surgery in 2009.

BELTRAN TAKES FIELD: The Mets' Carlos Beltran played rightfield for five innings in a minor-league game, his first action in the field this spring as he overcomes tendinitis in his left knee. "I was able to go out for five innings and I didn't feel anything so I feel good about it," Beltran said.

In other Mets news, backup catcher Ronny Paulino was shut down because of concerns over the results of blood work done when he arrived at camp. General manager Sandy Alderson did not identify the concerns.

Also, leftfielder Jason Bay missed the game against the Braves with a stiff back.

ASTROS: Shortstop Clint Barmes has a broken left hand and is expected to miss four to six weeks.

BREWERS: Right-hander Zack Greinke played catch for the first time since being shut down with a fractured rib earlier this month. Manager Ron Roenicke told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that the ace felt no pain.

CUBS: Right-hander Carlos Silva was told he will not be on the team's 25-man roster when the season starts Friday. General manager Jim Hendry said right-hander Andrew Cashner will be the club's fifth starter.

GIANTS: Closer Brian Wilson still isn't sure whether he'll be ready for opening day. The right-hander, out for a week with a strained muscle on his left side, played catch and intends to have a long toss session today.

RANGERS: Left-hander C.J. Wilson left his start after two innings as a precaution because of tightness in his left hamstring.Wilson went to the back fields and completed his work in a bullpen session. … Centerfielder Julio Borbon was scratched from the lineup with tightness in his left elbow.

Former Lakewood High basketball standout Ed Nixon learning to adjust expectations at Virginia Commonwealth

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By John Romano, Times Sports Columnist
Saturday, March 26, 2011

SAN ANTONIO, Texas — He is a curious figure, the prep sports hero. His past is part myth, and his future is all projection. And for the ones who are not careful, it is easy to be caught in the netherworld in between.

To his credit, Ed Nixon has come to understand this. There is no doubt he was a big shot back in the day at Lakewood High. His shots fell, his team won and the honors rolled in.

Yet from the moment he stepped foot on campus at Virginia Commonwealth University, Nixon felt an imperceptible shift beneath his feet. All of his new teammates were high school hot shots. And all of them arrived with expectations and goals similar to his.

"That's everybody's dream, to be an NBA star. Everybody wants to be as successful as they can," Nixon said Saturday from the NCAA Southwest Region. "But that life is not for everybody. I'm not saying it's totally out of the picture for me, but it's like a one-in-a-million chance that you make it into the league. So I have to play my cards right."

This is what perspective sounds like. This is what humility has to offer.

His career at VCU has not been the stuff of legend, and yet Nixon has turned it into the experience of a lifetime.

He has gone from a perimeter player without much of a jump shot or defined role to one of the most trusted members of Shaka Smart's team that will play Kansas this afternoon with an invitation to the Final Four on the line.

What has happened is that Nixon has learned. He has adapted and adjusted. When it became clear he was not going to be the scoring threat he was in high school, Nixon embraced the concept of being VCU's top defender.

Along the way, he has put himself in position to graduate in the coming weeks with a degree in criminal justice. He has become part of the most successful senior class in VCU history. And he has outlasted those who either could not, or would not, adjust to the idea that life is never the same once you leave the halls of your high school.

"I know a lot of people who had the talent and they let outside distractions pull them down," Nixon said. "That's a sad thing to see at the end of the day."

For Crystal and Spencer Nixon, there is delight in hearing this. They encouraged the youngest of their four children to chase his dreams as far as they might take him, but they wanted him to understand that success can be measured in many ways.

"My direction for him was that he could do anything he wanted if he set his mind to it," his mother said. "But my ultimate goal was that he be an honorable man. No matter what his status or station was in life, he could be honorable and respectful and responsible.

"He may or may not continue playing basketball and land a job as a professional athlete, but it's reassuring to me that he is prepared for life no matter what he does."

The idea of playing in one of basketball's minor leagues or even in Europe is not farfetched, and Nixon said he will explore whatever options come his way.

But he is also considering the possibility of combining his education and his passion to become a basketball coach on either the high school or college level.

In the meantime, he still has at least one more college game to go. Which is more than what he anticipated at this time two weeks ago.

The Rams had ended the regular season in a bit of a funk, and their chances of making the NCAA Tournament field were shaky.

Nixon could not bear to sit through the NCAA selection show, and so he closed the door of his room and watched the Cartoon Network while roommate Joey Rodriguez watched in another room as the brackets were unveiled.

"We had watched the selection show when I was a freshman and ended up disappointed. So I didn't want to go through that again," Nixon said. "So I'm watching Johnny Test, enjoying myself, and all the sudden I hear Joey screaming.

"I open my door and I see him running out the front door, so I went out and chased him and I hear him yelling, 'We're in, we're in.' "

Two weeks later, VCU is 40 minutes away from becoming just the third No. 11 seed to reach the Final Four.

"We're an extremely blessed team. Everything that needed to happen has happened. The path is set, we just need to do what we have to do," Nixon said. "We're making history, man."

No, this isn't the exact path he expected coming out of St. Petersburg four years ago. But in ways that matter, it may even be better.

John Romano can be reached at romano@sptimes.com.

Tampa Bay Rays: Exhibition of the day; honorary coach of the day; prank of the day

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By Marc Topkin, Times Staff Writer
Saturday, March 26, 2011

Exhibition of the day

RHP Andy Sonnanstine, left, invited down some of his friends from the St. Petersburg Beach-based Sunrise Table Tennis League, where he played this winter, to stage a Saturday morning exhibition in the batting cages, with David Price, Elliot Johnson, Johnny Damon and manager Joe Maddon among those picking up a paddle. Of Sonnanstine, STTL member Phil Gehres said: "He's very good. He didn't tell anybody he was a Ray, and he just fit right in."

ON THE WEB: Watch video of the exhibition at tampabay.com/blogs/rays.

Honorary coach of the day

Former Cubs All-Star Glenn Beckert, far left, who lives near Port Charlotte, was in uniform as a guest of Maddon and Rays senior adviser Don Zimmer, right, and spoke briefly to the team. For prep, Maddon left a copy of the four-time All-Star's career stats on the chairs of 2B Sean Rodriguez and SS Reid Brignac.

Prank of the day

After minor-league INF Tyler Bortnick got a little too cocky in his Facebook comments about getting a hit off Red Sox closer Jonathan Papelbon in a minor-league game, he got hazed by the big-leaguers. The Rays summoned him to the outfield for the morning stretch, put him in a jersey with his screen nickname WHAMMYYY on the back and had Manny Ramirez ask him to sign a ball and Ray Olmedo shine his shoes and bring him water. "It was all in good fun," manager Joe Maddon said. "And he did a great job with how he reacted to the whole thing." Bortnick handled it so well, Maddon invited him to stay with the Rays for the game.

Awards of the day

Neil Allen, promoted to be the Triple-A pitching coach, was named the team's player development man of the year for his 2010 work at Class A Charlotte. Milt Hill, who covers Alabama, Georgia and parts of Florida and Tennessee, was named scout of the year.

Rays at Pirates

When/where: 1:05 today; McKechnie Field, 1611 9th St. W, Bradenton

Tickets: $10-20, available by calling (877) 293-2827, via pirates.com and at the stadium.

Rays information: Toll-free 1-888-326-7297 (FAN-RAYS)

Pitchers: Rays — David Price, Cesar Ramos, Adam Russell, Andy Sonnanstine; Pirates — Paul Maholm, TBA

Heads-up

Russell made some adjustments to his delivery and slider and worked in a minor-league game; the Rays will be eager to see how it looks today.

Who is this Ray?

He was not drafted out of high school, went to junior college then a four-year school. He studied criminology in college. He is one of six players in major-league history to get an at-bat in an All-Star Game and a World Series as a rookie. He apparently lost his cap.

On deck

Monday: at Yankees (Tampa), 7:05. Rays — James Shields; Yankees — TBA

Tuesday: at Red Sox (Fort Myers), 1:05. Rays — Wade Davis; Red Sox — TBA

Wednesday: Blue Jays, at Tropicana Field, 4:10. Rays — Jeff Niemann; Blue Jays — TBA

Thursday: Off

Regular season

Friday: vs. Orioles, 7:10. Rays — David Price; O's — Jeremy Guthrie

Saturday: vs. Orioles, 7:10. Rays — James Shields; O's — Brian Matusz

Sunday: vs. Orioles, 1:40. Rays — Wade Davis; O's — TBA

Who is this Ray answer: 3B Evan Longoria

Marc Topkin, Times staff writer

Labor strife creating dilemma for NBA hopefuls

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Times wires
Saturday, March 26, 2011

Several star players will soon have to make decisions on whether to return for another season or head to the NBA. Already, Ohio State's Jared Sullinger has announced he plans to return for his sophomore year.

Underclassmen have until April 24 to declare for the draft, and they can withdraw by May 8 to retain their eligibility as long as they do not hire an agent. But compounding the difficulty in that decision this year is the threat of an NBA lockout.

The league and the players' association have been working on a new collective bargaining agreement for one that expires June 30, though it's unclear how much progress has been made.

While the NBA draft will go on regardless of whether there's a lockout, teams wouldn't be able to sign or pay players until a new CBA is struck. That means a lot of uncertainty for the players, especially if negotiations were to drag into next season.

"Everybody tells me there is going to be a lockout, but I will also do one thing that I have always done: Here is the information, what do you want to do?" North Carolina coach Roy Williams said Saturday. "And then I'm going to support whatever that individual wants to do."

The Tar Heels' Harrison Barnes is one player who could test the NBA market, while Kentucky — the team they play today in the region finals — has a trio of talented freshmen in Brandon Knight, Terrence Jones and Doron Lamb, all of whom could consider turning pro.

"Right now, you know, I know all of us are student-athletes," Knight said. "We are focused on being student-athletes first, so we are just — I'm enjoying the time that I'm having here, and you know, loving the college experience."

QUICK ON THEIR FEET: It is helpful to be able to think fast in emergencies, but sometimes it is better to be fast.

After an alarm went off during a news conference at Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., Tar Heels coach Williams initially tried to continue answering questions. But soon, moderator Mike Fratto announced the building would have to be evacuated.

Before leaving, Williams joked, "We can get out of here a hell of a lot faster than most teams we play," a reference to the Tar Heels' speed and uptempo style.

Reporters filed out through a back door but were not even down the hallway before being told to return after an all-clear.

By that time, Carolina already had left the building and reached its bus. Williams and his players were summoned back to finish the interview session.

"We were sitting there and I didn't know what was going on," Tar Heels forward Tyler Zeller said. "I thought it was something like a forklift backing up or something. Then the guy started talking. I was lost, then Coach told us to go sit on the bus and I was sitting on the bus."

RATINGS BONANZA: The first time that every NCAA Tournament game has been available live on television has worked out well for everyone involved.

The average rating through the region semifinals, including the "First Four games," was 5.8, representing the percentage of homes with televisions tuned to a program. That equated to about 9 million viewers overall, an increase of 13 percent from a year ago.

FASHION STATEMENT: Josh Harrellson's nickname is "Jorts," which the Kentucky senior earned after a picture of him wearing a lengthy pair of jean shorts popped up on a popular website while he was being recruited by former coach Billy Gillispie.

It's a moniker Harrellson has embraced. He has about a dozen pairs of jean shorts stuffed inside a drawer in his bedroom in a wide array of colors and lengths.

"It's a fashion statement, they're easy to put on," he said. "I can wear my basketball shorts underneath them and wear them out to the courts, they're easy to slip off."

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NCAA Tournament Round of 16

Region semifinals and finalsSemifinalsChampionshipSemifinalsRegion semifinals and finals
EAST: Newark, N.J.1. Ohio State 601. Kansas 77SOUTHWEST: San Antonio, Texas
4. KentuckyFINAL FOUR:

RELIANT STADIUM,

HOUSTON

1. Kansas
4. Kentucky 6212. Richmond 57
5:05 today, Ch. 102:20 today, Ch. 10
11. Marquette 6311. VCU 72 (overtime)
2. North Carolina11. VCU
2. North Carolina 81April 2, Ch. 1010. Florida State 71
April 4, Ch. 10April 2, Ch. 10
WEST: Anaheim, Calif.1. Duke 778. Butler 61SOUTHEAST: New Orleans
5. Arizona 638. Butler 74
5. Arizona 934. Wisconsin 54
3. Connecticut8. Butler
3. Connecticut 743. BYU 74
3. Connecticut 652. Florida 71 (OT)
2. San Diego State 672. Florida 83 (overtime)

Sports in brief

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Orlando Sentinel, Times wires
Saturday, March 26, 2011

Tennis

Ailing Roddick loses at key biscayne

KEY BISCAYNE — A weakened Andy Roddick lost his opening match at the Sony Ericsson Open on Saturday 6-4, 7-6 (7-4) to Pablo Cuevas.

Roddick, the defending champion, had trouble breathing because of chest congestion and received three visits from a trainer during changeovers in the second set. He came down with a bronchial infection last month but didn't say if it was related. Roddick also was limping at the end of the match. He said he had an injury but declined to elaborate.

"I have to get some stuff looked at," Roddick said. "I didn't feel very optimistic throughout the day."

Roger Federer needed only about an hour to beat Radek Stepanek 6-3, 6-3 in his opener. The win was Federer's 762nd, tying Pete Sampras for seventh in the Open era (beginning in 1968). Jimmy Connors is first at 1,241.

"It's nice tying Pete, but he could have played for many more years," Federer said. "He could still win some matches on tour now if he wanted to."

College football

Family allowed to seek damages against UCF

The family of ex-UCF receiver Ereck Plancher can seek punitive damages in a wrongful death lawsuit against the university, Orange County Circuit Judge Robert Evans ruled Friday.

Plancher, 19, died March 18, 2008, after an offseason workout supervised by coach George O'Leary and his staff. An autopsy found the stress of the workout triggered his sickle cell trait.

Evans said a jury must find neither water nor athletic trainers were present for the final portion of the workout in order to award punitive damages. WR Anthony Davis has said O'Leary ordered athletic trainers and all water to leave the indoor practice facility.

The case is scheduled to go to trial June 13.

Horses

Japanese horse wins $10 million Derby prep

Japan's Victoire Pisa won the World Cup, at $10 million the world's richest horse race and a Kentucky Derby prep. Transcend led for much of the way during the race in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, before Victoire Pisa caught him down the stretch and won by a half-length.

More Derby preps: Animal Kingdom beat Decisive Moment by 2¾ lengths to win the $500,000 Spiral Stakes in Florence, Ky. The $285,000 prize gives it enough graded stakes earnings to run in the Derby. … Pants On Fire won the $1 million Louisiana Derby by a neck over Nehro in New Orleans.

Et cetera

College hockey: Mike Connolly had a shorthanded goal and three assists as visiting Minnesota-Duluth beat top-seeded Yale 5-3 to earn a Frozen Four berth. … Lee Moffie had a goal and an assist as Michigan beat Colorado College 2-1 in St. Louis to earn a Frozen Four berth. … Kevin Goumas scored twice as host New Hampshire beat No. 4 Miami (Ohio) 3-1. Today, it faces Notre Dame, which got a goal from Anders Lee in overtime to beat Merrimack 4-3, for a Frozen Four berth. … Brad Malone scored twice to lead No. 2 North Dakota over Rensselaer 6-0 in Green Bay, Wis. Today, it faces Denver, which got a goal from Jason Zucker in double overtime to beat Western Michigan 3-2, for a Frozen Four berth.

College swimming: Cal edged Texas to win the NCAA men's title in Minneapolis. Florida was fifth.

Greyhounds: Bow Timeless, Kelsos Ace High, Kiowa Sky Selma and Mohican Mink Mae won opening-round races of the $80,000 Distance Classic at Derby Lane in St. Petersburg. Qualifying resumes Wednesday.

Don Jensen, Times correspondent; Orlando Sentinel; Times wires

Grand Prix of St. Petersburg facts

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Times staff
Saturday, March 26, 2011

What: IndyCar season opener plus races in other series (Indy Lights, USF2000 and World Challenge)

When/where: Today; downtown streets of St. Petersburg

TV/radio: 12:30 p.m. Ch. 28; 1250-AM

Tickets

Reserved: Upper rows $80 for adults, $55 for 12 and younger; lower rows $60 for adults, $35 for 12 and younger

General admission: $40 for adults, $15 for 12 and younger

Paddock passes: $30 for adults, $25 for 12 and younger

Go to gpstpete.com or call (727) 898-4639, ext. 225, for details or to buy.

What you can't bring

• Food or alcoholic beverages

• Glass bottles and cans

• Coolers

• Stadium seats

• Firearms and weapons

• Fireworks

• Commercial signs/banners

• Signs and banners that impair spectator vision or safety

• Lawn furniture, folding chairs (except in RV park)

• Pets (except certified service animals)

• Scaffolding, ladders, step stools or other structures

• Noisemakers, horns, helium balloons, beach balls

• Bicycles and scooters

• Skates, skateboards, inline skates

• Motorcycles, off-road vehicles

• Handbills and pamphlets

What you should bring

• Earplugs

• Walking shoes

• Notepad for autographs

• Binoculars

• Rain poncho

• Camera or videocamera

• Sunscreen

• Sunglasses, hat/visor

• Money for concessions and souvenirs

About hearing protection

Permanent hearing loss occurs from prolonged sound exposure to sound levels higher than 85 dB (it is about 115 dB about 10 feet from a race car). Earplugs are available at the track or you can wear sound-blocking earmuffs, available at hardware or sporting good stores.

Concessions and souvenirs

• Adult T-shirt $25

• Youth T-shirt $18

• Baseball cap $25

• Hat pin $8

• Can cooler $5

The cars: What you'll see

IndyCar series

The drivers who run in the Indianapolis 500 take over the downtown streets of St. Petersburg. These cars have normally aspirated, 3.5-liter V-8 engines, and speeds can top more than 180 mph on the frontstretch. It will be loud and fast.

Indy Lights

Prospects race in slightly less-powerful versions of IndyCars. They run V8s but produce about 450 horsepower to 650 for IndyCars.

Other series

USF2000, a first step for open-wheel aspirants. And the SCCA World Challenge sportscars, plus drifting cars.

Times staff

Busch wins third straight in Fontana

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Times wires
Saturday, March 26, 2011

FONTANA, Calif. — Kyle Busch had resigned himself to finishing behind Carl Edwards and Kevin Harvick, figuring his car didn't have enough to keep up.

Then his crew chief called for a gamble on the final pit stop: take two tires, not four.

Busch was all for it and ended up with another win in California.

Heeding crew chief Jason Ratcliff's advice, Busch came out of the pits in the lead after taking two tires on a late stop, then he held off Edwards and Harvick to win his third straight Nationwide race at Auto Club Speedway on Saturday.

"I thought four tires was just going to be a consistent call, just give us a third-place run," Busch said after his 46th career Nationwide win, two behind Mark Martin's all-time mark. "But Jason surprised us all and pulled one out of the hat."

Edwards and Harvick had the dominant cars most of the day, leading a combined 112 laps around the wide 2-mile oval.

Busch figured he had no better than a fourth- or fifth-place car, not able to pass the leaders.

But then came his turn down pit road with 13 laps left.

"I still can't believe it actually worked out," Ratcliff said.

Busch has won five of his past six starts at Auto Club Speedway and three of the five Nationwide races this season after completing the Nationwide-Sprint Cup sweep at Bristol last week.

Edwards started on the pole and had a strong car all day, leading 48 laps. He passed Harvick to finish second but walked away scratching his head after Busch's two-tire gamble worked.

"I didn't think about taking two tires until the left side of the car was going up," Edwards said. "I wondered if someone might just take two."

Harvick finished third, and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. was fourth.

Formula One: Defending series champion Sebastian Vettel earned the pole for today's season-opening Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne. The Red Bull driver clocked 1 minute, 23.529 seconds, more than three-quarters of a second quicker than Lewis Hamilton of McLaren.

Summitt erupts, and Tennessee responds

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Saturday, March 26, 2011

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DAYTON, Ohio — There are halftime chats and then there are coach's rants. Pat Summitt hasn't won 1,071 games by not knowing when to let her team have it.

Summitt lit into her Tennessee Vols at the break, and their region semifinal game Saturday tilted soon after. With Shekinna Stricklen scoring 14 of her 20 in the second half and touching off a critical 11-3 second-half run, Summitt and the Vols moved into their accustomed spot in the Elite Eight with an 85-75 win over Ohio State.

"It was about an 8½," she said, rating her halftime speech on a scale where 10 is when the paint peels off the walls. "I wasn't real happy. But that's what you have to do at times. You go into the locker room and get a feel. One thing about this team, they do respond. Sometimes I think they kind of like to hear the coaches going off."

The Vols (34-2) won their 25th consecutive game but only took control with their charge in the final minutes.

Meighan Simmons added 18 points and Kelley Cain — inserted into the starting lineup to offset Ohio State's height advantage — had 16 for Tennessee, which is pursuing a ninth NCAA title. The Vols meet Notre Dame in the region championship game on Monday night, with a trip to the Final Four in Indianapolis on the line.

"Coach kind of lit a fire under our butts in the second half," Cain said. "We played better. We were getting up in their grilles, making them play at a different level than they were used to."

Simmons grinned as she said, "Coach went off on us in the locker room."

None of the Vols were surprised. They had not been aggressive on defense, leading to Ohio State (24-10) shooting 67 percent in the first half. The Buckeyes led by as many as six before settling for a 42-40 lead at the break.

"We played on our heels a little more in the first half," said Angie Bjorklund, who didn't score but had seven assists.

With the game hanging in the balance and UT on top 58-57, Stricklen twice made big plays to provide some breathing room. First, she hit a deep 3 as the shot clock was draining away. After an Ohio State miss, she took the ball from the right wing and bulled along the baseline to power in a layup for a 63-57 lead.

After Brittany Johnson hit one of her four 3s for Ohio State, the Vols ran off six points in a row for their largest lead of the game. Simmons stopped and hit a shot from 15 feet, Taber Spani made a follow then Spani sank a long jumper to make it 69-60.

Ohio State got as close as eight in the last minute, but Stricklen scored seven in a row for the Vols to hold the Buckeyes at bay.

NOTRE DAME 78, OKLA. 53: Hands with green fingernail polish — Notre Dame's NCAA Tournament tradition — seemed to swipe at every dribble and reach for every pass.

Brittany Mallory had a season-high 20 points, and the Irish's defensive pressure forced 24 turnovers and quickly took its toll on the Sooners in Dayton, sending Notre Dame (29-7) into the region final.

Those green-painted fingers were everywhere.

"Maybe they don't get enough credit for their defense because their offense is so salty," Oklahoma coach Sherri Coale said.

Nicole Griffin scored 18 for Oklahoma (23-12), which reached the Final Four the past two years. Notre Dame's go-for-the-ball pressure crumpled the Sooners' guard-driven offense, which had eight field goals and 14 turnovers in the decisive first half.

"They were really prepared, really physical," Oklahoma guard Whitney Hand said. "I thought we got scatterbrained and tight."

It was the third time in the past four years that the Sooners and Fighting Irish met in the NCAA Tournament. The first two games dripped with drama and went to overtime. Notre Dame won the first, 79-75 in the second round in 2008. Oklahoma got the rematch, 77-72 last year in a region semifinal in Kansas City.

Spokane Region

GONZAGA 76, LOUISVILLE 69: The Bulldogs' postseason journey, led by their spunky point guard, has at least one more chapter to go, and this one with a trip to the Final Four on the line.

Courtney Vandersloot did a little of everything with 29 points, seven assists and seven steals, and 11th-seeded Gonzaga (31-4) advanced to the Elite Eight for the first time in school history.

Playing less than two miles from their campus, the Bulldogs sent the blood pressure rising for the 10,000 or so hometown fans in attendance after nearly squandering all of a 20-point second half lead. But the Bulldogs made just enough plays in the final four minutes to hold off a furious late charge by the seventh-seeded Cardinals (22-13).

NCAA Women's Tournament Round of 16

Region semifinals and finalsSemifinalChampionshipSemifinalRegion semifinals and finals
PHILADELPHIA Region1. Connecticut1. StanfordSPOKANE, Wash., Region
noon today, ESPNFINAL FOUR: CONSECO FIELDHOUSE, INDIANAPOLISlate
5. Georgetown5. North Carolina
7 Tues., ESPN9 Mon., ESPN
3. DePaul11. Gonzaga 76
2:30 today, ESPN2Gonzaga
2. DukeApril 37. Louisville 69
April 5, ESPNApril 3
DAYTON, Ohio, Region1. Tennessee 851. BaylorDALLAS Region
Tennessee7 today, ESPN2
4. Ohio State 755. Wis.-Green Bay
7 Mon., ESPN9 Tue., ESPN
6. Oklahoma 536. Georgia
Notre Dame4:30 today, ESPN2
2. Notre Dame 782. Texas A&M

Par save is Laird's 'lucky' lead-saver

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Saturday, March 26, 2011

ORLANDO — Martin Laird already had lost a four-shot lead Saturday at Bay Hill, and as his 6-iron on the par-3 17th began to fade weakly toward the pond, he wondered if a two-shot lead would disappear even quicker.

He was happy to see his ball land in a bunker, some 80 feet from the flag. Then came a long blast from the sand to 6 feet and a par save that felt like a birdie. It was like that all day at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. Only one thing didn't change.

Laird never surrendered the lead. He made it through an up-and-down day with 2-under 70 for a three-day total of 11-under 205 and a two-shot lead over Spencer Levin.

"That was a big one," Laird said of his par save on the 17th, one hole after a two-shot swing gave him a cushion. "I was lucky."

With wind in the forecast for today, six players are separated by five shots. That includes two players who appear to be getting closer to their first PGA Tour win, Steve Marino (71) and Rickie Fowler (70).

That group doesn't include Tiger Woods. The six-time Bay Hill winner had another Saturday swoon, trading an eagle and birdies with bogeys and a double bogey that sent him to 2-over 74 and left him 10 shots out of the lead.

"I made a few mistakes out there," Woods said. "There was a point in the round I had to get more aggressive on 13 and paid the price for it. I figured I needed to shoot 3 or 4 under, and it backfired on me a little bit.

"Hopefully the wind blows (today) and I can post a good one. And I can get a little momentum going into Augusta."

This is Woods' last tournament before next month's Masters.

Nothing short of a victory would send Levin to the Masters.

"That's in the back of my mind, for sure," he said. "That's a nice thing to be thinking about — hopefully try not to think about it, though. You have to think about what you're doing here."

LPGA: Jiyai Shin shot 3-under 70 to maintain the lead at the Kia Classic at Industry, Calif. At 15-under 204, she was one shot ahead of Sandra Gal (70) after three rounds of the tournament, which got back on schedule after a rain delay Friday left 72 players having to complete the second round in the morning. Na Yeon Choi was in third at 9 under after the third round's lowest score, 65. Seminole's Brittany Lincicome was 1 over after finishing her second round (74) and shooting 73 in the third.

Softball: Durant outscores field 44-1 to win Mini Spring Fling

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By Steve Lee, Times Correspondent
Saturday, March 26, 2011

RIVERVIEW — What a difference a week made for Durant, which capped a 4-0 run Saturday to win the three-day Mini Spring Fling softball tournament at Riverview.

The Cougars, who went 1-3 last weekend at a tournament in Bartow, beat host Riverview 16-0 and Alonso 13-0 Saturday. That followed Friday's 11-0 win over Gaither and 4-1 win over Brandon.

So for the weekend, Durant (14-4) posted three shutouts by the 10-run rule and outscored the opposition by a 44-1 margin.

"I think that's phenomenal," coach Matt Carter said. "We've been struggling. I'm glad that things started to turn around."

Pitchers Paige Davis and workhorse Lauren Wolfe each got their second win of the series Saturday. Davis, a sophomore, tossed a two-hitter against Riverview.

"Paige did a great job," Carter said. "She's been biding her time."

Durant broke it open by scoring 14 runs combined in the third and fourth innings against the Sharks, who went 2-2. Olivia Cuellar led the offense with two hits and three RBIs. Jordan Lafave and Davis added two-run doubles.

Against Alonso, which went 3-1, the Cougars scored six runs in the first, highlighted by LaFave's two-run single. Durant added five runs in the third on Shannon Bell's two-run homer and Brooke Freeman's three-run double.

Brandon went 1-3 and Gaither was 0-4.

Other tournaments: Plant beat River Ridge 8-5 to take third at the Lady Canes Invitational in Clearwater. East Lake no-hit Palm Harbor U. 4-0 for the title. … Tampa Catholic beat Northside Christian 8-3 for third in the Mustang Invitational in St. Petersburg. Pinellas Park held off Cocoa Beach 5-4 for that title.

Baseball

BUCCANEERS ROLL: Kenny Barrett and Zack Sutton hit two-out, two-run homers in the fourth as host Berkeley Prep (8-7), which gave up five in the first, rallied for a 15-5 victory in six innings over Brooks-DeBartolo (6-8).

Softball: East Lake's Alyssa Bache no-hits Palm Harbor University 4-0 to win Lady Canes Invitational title

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By Andy Villamarzo, Times Correspondent
Saturday, March 26, 2011

CLEARWATER — East Lake pitcher Alyssa Bache had been a seemingly unstoppable force on the mound for the unbeaten Eagles through the first 21 games of this season.

Win No. 22 for East Lake had a little bit of a twist on Saturday, though: a rematch of last year's Lady Canes Invitational final against rival and host Palm Harbor University.

Bache made sure to finish the season series strong against the Hurricanes, striking out 13 batters en route to a 4-0 no-hitter at the Eddie C. Moore Complex.

"A no-hitter vs. (Palm Harbor University) was absolutely an amazing way to end playing against them and moving on," Bache said.

"Started off right, you got to close right. You have to give that extra umph at the end of the game. Either way, you start off strong, you got to end off strong."

Early on, the game looked like it was going to be a pitcher's duel between the University of Florida-bound Bache and Palm Harbor University's Taylor Sabol.

But in the top of the third inning, East Lake (22-0) finally broke through, when Sarah Schutz launched a double to the leftfield fence to score both Alyssa Weaver and Marisa Palumbo.

The Eagles added another run in the third inning, and that's all the run support Bache needed, as she shut down the Hurricanes (16-4) lineup other than two walks.

"With the field of teams here, we really wanted to come out here and do well," East Lake coach Mike Estes said.

"I just had a feeling when we looked at the brackets it would either come down to Palm Harbor, Chamberlain or River Ridge in the championship game if we got that far. What can you say about Alyssa (Bache)? She don't want you to take the ball from her. She's a gamer."

Plant beat River Ridge 8-5 in the third-place game.


Softball: Pinellas Park beats Cocoa Beach 5-4 for Mustang Invitational title

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By Anthony Salveggi, Times Correspondent
Saturday, March 26, 2011

ST. PETERSBURG — Pinellas Park held off a last-inning rally by Cocoa Beach to win the Northside Christian Mustang Invitational 5-4 Saturday night.

The Minutemen jumped to a 2-0 lead in the first. Patriots pitcher Serena Mitchell nearly escaped a bases-loaded jam when she struck out the next two batters. But a bloop single by Briana Crowder drove in two runs.

The Patriots scored five runs in the bottom of the second inning, keyed by Tatum McDowell's triple to left. Jordan Bennett had a two-run double as well.

Down three runs in the top of the seventh, Cocoa Beach brought the tying run to the plate after two consecutive singles. Jennifer Conrad hit to the shortstop, who got the lead runner at third. After Mitchell plunked Crowder to load the bases, Kristin McPeak doubled to score two, but Crowder was called out at third. A wild pitch by Mitchell put the tying run at third, but she got pinch hitter Kiera Hastings to ground out to first, giving the Patriots the win.

The game was Mitchell's first full outing in nearly two months, after an early season injury. She pitched five consecutive scoreless innings and struck out eight.

Patriots coach Shane DeMartino said he was more inclined to remove Mitchell in the first inning, when she walked two of the first three batters, than in the final tense half inning. Even with the bases loaded in the seventh, DeMartino said he ultimately decided: "It's hers, let her finish it out. She trusted her defense."

In the third-place game, Tampa Catholic beat Northside Christian 8-3.

NCAA Tournament: Florida Gators seniors disappointed careers end short of Final Four

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By Antonya English, Times Staff Writer
Saturday, March 26, 2011

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NEW ORLEANS — For Florida seniors Chandler Parsons, Vernon Macklin and Alex Tyus, Saturday's 74-71 overtime loss to Butler was a bitter ending to what could be called a Cinderella season for players who spent their first two years in the NIT, then lost in the NCAA first round last season.

In their hearts, they said after the game, they believed they were headed to the Final Four. The loss was made even tougher for Parsons because of his play: the SEC player of the year didn't attempt a shot in overtime or nearly the last four minutes of regulation. His last shot was a missed 3 with 3:52 remaining in regulation.

"It hurts right now, so right now I have a terrible feeling, and I almost feel sick to my stomach," Parsons said as he sat solemnly in the locker room. "But you know, my career is not over. I plan on playing basketball for a long time. So I can't dwell on it my whole life, but it's definitely a disappointing time and a sad time for me because I wanted to keep playing with these guys."

For Macklin, who spent two years at Georgetown before sitting out a year after transferring, he ended with a career game and great memories.

"It's been a great run," he said. "I love my teammates, I love my coaching staff. I'm sad to see it all end right now. But it's been a great time at Florida."

Donovan said his heart was broken for his seniors, but he believes they'll look back on this experience fondly.

" … There will be a time when they'll look back on where they were after the Jacksonville (loss at home) or after the Central Florida (loss) in December, and then they'll see a better picture of how far they came," he said. "And you know, you never want it to end. You want it to keep on going. But … I think that's the price when you try to really become and make a commitment, like they did as a team, to try to get better and improve. For those three guys, it probably hurts more than any loss they've had because it's the last loss of their career."

MISSING IN ACTION: If you're wondering why Macklin, who dominated inside much of the game, wasn't on the floor much of the second half and overtime, it's because he's a liability at the free-throw line: 44.3 percent entering the game. "I would have liked to have utilized Vernon a lot more in the second half, but it was hard because he was in foul trouble," Donovan said. "And then really once we got into overtime at the end of regulation, because of his free-throw situation we had to play (freshman) Patric (Young)."

Macklin didn't disagree: "I'm not that great of a free-throw shooter, so I didn't want to jeopardize my teammates. I think Coach Donovan made a great decision."

ALL TOURNAMENT: Macklin and G Kenny Boynton were named to the All-Tournament team, but Macklin didn't actually get his due. When the team was announced, the public address announcer called him Vernon Maxwell, the controversial Gator standout in the late '80s.

Et cetera: The region final wasn't a huge draw in New Orleans. The announced crowd was 12,139. The arena holds about 19,000. … It was Florida's first loss in five region finals. It advanced to the Final Four in 1994, 2000, 2006 and 2007 … It was Butler's first win in overtime in four tries this season. … UF started the game 12-of-12 from the free-throw line but hit just six of its last 10.

The top sporting events the Tampa Bay region has shown off

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By Tom Jones, Times Staff Writer
Saturday, March 26, 2011

Sports fans are used to turning on the television and seeing other cities around the country and world hosting a premier sporting event — New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and so forth. But how cool is it when the country is watching us because the Tampa Bay area is hosting a premier event? Last weekend we had the PGA Tour and March Madness. Today it's the Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. We've also had Super Bowls, a Stanley Cup final and the World Series. Here's a look back at our list, in order, of the most significant sporting events hosted by the Tampa Bay area.

1. Game 7 of 2004 Stanley Cup final (June 7, 2004): Super Bowl Sunday is practically a national holiday, so listing anything ahead of the Big Game seems illogical. But we're going to show a little hometown bias. The Lightning's 2-1 victory against the Flames to win the Cup is the greatest moment in local sports history that took place locally. Plus, look at it this way: There have been 45 Super Bowls but only 15 Game 7s in the Stanley Cup final.

2. Super Bowl XXV (Jan. 27, 1991): This was a closely contested game that featured one of the most famous plays in Super Bowl history: Bills kicker Scott Norwood missed a 47-yard field goal as time expired to give the Giants and Bill Parcells a 20-19 victory. But the game was about more than football. The United States was embroiled in the first Gulf War, and Whitney Houston, right, backed by the Florida Orchestra, produced goose bumps and tears with a powerful rendition of the Star-Spangled Banner. It is one of the great Super Bowl moments.

3. Game 1 of 2008 World Series (Oct. 22, 2008): The Super Bowl has become the premier event in this country, but the World Series still holds a magical place in the pyramid of American sports. It's still hard to believe that in 2008 the country tuned in to see Tropicana Field. It hardly matters that the Rays lost that game to the Phillies 3-2, or that they went on to lose the Series in five games. The World Series was here.

4. Super Bowl XLIII (Feb. 1, 2009): The best Super Bowl ever? The Steelers beat the Cardinals 27-23 with a gutsy two-minute drive that ended with MVP Santonio Holmes making a tip-toe catch in the corner of the end zone with 35 seconds left. Throw in a halftime show by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band and you have one of the best sporting events of all time.

5. NCAA Tournament (March 21, 2008): It's always a big deal when the NCAA Tournament comes to town, as it did last week. But we didn't know how special the 2008 tournament games at the St. Pete Times Forum were until the end of perhaps the wildest day in tournament history. Two No. 13 seeds upset No. 4 seeds: San Diego beat UConn, and Sienna knocked off Vanderbilt. And two No. 12 seeds shocked No. 5 seeds: Western Kentucky beat Drake, and Villanova upset Clemson. No site had seen such a day before, and no one has since.

6. 1979 NFC Championship Game (Jan. 6, 1980): Conference championship games are for true football fans. The Bucs have hosted seven playoff games but only one NFC Championship Game. In this one, the Bucs, two years removed from their 0-26 start, hosted the Rams. They lost 9-0, but that remains one of the fondest memories for Bucs fans who have been here from the beginning.

7. Game 7 of 2008 American League Championship Series (Oct. 19, 2008): Almost as good as playing in the World Series is the moment you realize you're going to the World Series. Baseball fans across the nation had to be stunned when the little old Rays held on in Game 7 of the 2008 ALCS to beat the mighty Red Sox and get to the Fall Classic.

8. 1999 NCAA Tournament final (March 29, 1999): Tropicana Field hosted the 1999 Final Four, in which UConn took on Mike Krzyzewski's Duke in the title game. The Huskies and coach Jim Calhoun won their first national title with a 77-74 victory. Connecticut was a 9 ½-point underdog, making this one of the biggest upsets in NCAA title-game history.

9. Super Bowl XVIII (Jan. 22, 1984): The Raiders dusted the Redskins 38-9 in a game marked by two sensational plays. The first was Jack Squirek's interception return to give the Raiders a 21-3 lead just before halftime. The second was Marcus Allen's scintillating change-of-direction 74-yard TD run that secured the MVP award for him. It was not a particularly interesting game, but it always will hold a special spot in the history of Tampa Bay area sports because it was our first Super Bowl.

10. 2011 Outback Bowl (Jan. 1, 2011): Tampa has hosted the Outback Bowl (formerly the Hall of Fame Bowl) since 1986. And for a game generally played on New Year's Day amid all the other Jan. 1 bowl games, it's usually one of the better matchups. Last bowl season, the Outback was the most intriguing game aside from the BCS Championship because it featured legendary Penn State coach Joe Paterno taking on Urban Meyer in his final game (we think) at Florida. The Gators won 37-24.

11. Super Bowl XXXV (Jan. 28, 2001): This is the worst of the four Super Bowls that have been played in the Tampa Bay area. The Ravens crushed the Giants 34-7. The only interesting part locally was that former Bucs quarterback Trent Dilfer was the winning QB, but he didn't have a spectacular day. Linebacker Ray Lewis was the MVP in a game that had no memorable moments for those outside of Ravens fans. Still, it's a Super Bowl.

12. 2008 NCAA women's Final Four (April 6, 2008): Held at the St. Pete Times Forum, this Final Four featured three of the most storied programs in women's basketball: Tennessee, UConn and Stanford. In the semifinals, Stanford knocked off UConn, a loss that turned out to be UConn's last until Dec. 30, 2010, as Geno Auriemma's team set a Division I record with 90 consecutive victories. Pat Summitt's Vols went on to beat Stanford in the final for her eighth national title.

13. 2003 Chrysler Championship (Nov. 2, 2003): This is the tournament now known as the Transitions Championship, played at Innisbrook in Palm Harbor, and it's considered one of the best on the PGA Tour. That reputation has been built partly by the 2003 tournament, when Retief Goosen shot a final-day 1-under 70 to hold off Vijay Singh, the tour's leading money winner that season, by three shots. That seemed to be the first time folks noticed Innisbrook's Copperhead course is among the most challenging on the tour.

14. 2005 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg (April 3, 2005): No sporting event shows off how beautiful St. Petersburg is more than the Grand Prix. The course winds through downtown St. Petersburg, and viewers around the world can see the backdrop of palm trees and the bay. When the weather is right, the race looks like a Chamber of Commerce video. We pick the 2005 race to highlight because it was won by St. Petersburg resident Dan Wheldon, but every Grand Prix is a good one for showing off the Tampa Bay area.

15. 1986 Eckerd Open (Sept. 21, 1986): The Tampa Bay area hosted a stop on the WTA tour from 1971 to 1990. The tournament was decent and attracted big names. Its champions included Chris Evert, Martina Navratilova and Monica Seles. But the 1986 final at Bardmoor Country Club in Largo was noteworthy because it featured a rare-at-the-time matchup between two black women. With temperatures on the court soaring to nearly 100 degrees, Lori McNeil wore out close friend Zina Garrison 2-6, 7-5, 6-2.

Tireless Huskies now Final Four-bound

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Saturday, March 26, 2011

ANAHEIM, Calif. — With nine pressure-packed victories in 19 days, Connecticut has been on an exhausting sprint through the postseason.

Turns out Kemba Walker and his Huskies aren't slowing down until they get to Houston.

Walker had 20 points, freshman Jeremy Lamb added 19 and Connecticut earned its second Final Four berth in three years, beating Arizona 65-63 Saturday to win the West Region.

Derrick Williams and Jamelle Horne missed 3-pointers in the final seconds for Arizona, allowing the third-seeded Huskies (30-9) to hang on after Lamb scored six key points down the stretch.

After missing the NCAA Tournament entirely last year, coach Jim Calhoun's team is headed to its fourth Final Four, punctuated by an ebullient celebration in a building packed with Arizona fans.

"This is no time to be tired," Walker said. "We're trying to get as far as possible. We want to win this whole thing."

Williams had 20 points while battling foul trouble for the fifth-seeded Wildcats (30-8), who led with six minutes left. After Lamb pushed the Huskies ahead and Walker hit a jumper with 1:13 left, Lamont Jones and Horne hit late 3-pointers for Arizona, but the Wildcats failed to convert two good looks in the final seconds.

"The second one, I thought it was definitely going in," Lamb said. "When he missed it, I looked at the clock and saw zero-zero, and I just went, 'Whooooo.' It's the best feeling I've ever had."

UConn also made the Final Four in 1999, 2004 and 2009, all three times out of the West. The Huskies will face the winner of the East Region final between North Carolina and Kentucky next Saturday.

The Huskies are the last team standing from the Big East's 11 NCAA entrants. After going 9-9 in regular-season conference play, they've done more than even Calhoun might have expected just three weeks ago.

After the Wildcats missed their final two shots, Walker and Calhoun wrapped each other in a bear hug at center court after the buzzer as Emeka Okafor, Jake Voskuhl and other UConn alums celebrated on the court.

The two-time national champion coach has referred to his players as "an old-fashioned team," a praise of their work ethic and resilience. But they also showed remarkable poise down the stretch in a building firmly in favor of the Wildcats.

"I definitely expected to play in the NCAA Tournament and have a chance at the Final Four when I chose UConn," Lamb said. "I just didn't know it would happen this fast."

Gary Shelton: Florida Gators feel pain now, will feel pride later

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By Gary Shelton, Times Sports Columnist
Saturday, March 26, 2011

NEW ORLEANS — The lasting image will be of a ball bouncing, harmlessly and repeatedly, like the seconds ticking away from a basketball season.

Thirty seconds to go, and Erving Walker crouched at midcourt, dribbling the ball, taking his time, as nonchalant as a shopper comparing peaches. The score was tied at 60, and the clock was winding down, and Walker … well, Walker bounced the ball.

Twenty seconds to go. It was turn-out-the-lights time. It was which-way-to-the-Final-Four time. And still, Walker bounced the ball.

Ten seconds to go, and still nothing. Eight. Seven. By now, you might figure that the Florida Gators would begin their final assault. Surely, Walker would drive the lane, wouldn't he? That way, he could hit a shot, or he could draw a foul, or he could feed a teammate, or he could kick out to another shooter.

Instead, Walker bounced the ball, claiming the final half minute as his own. Walker kept dribbling, turning his teammates into spectators, turning the New Orleans Arena into clock watchers. The goal was to avoid giving Butler a shot of its own, of course, but there is also such a thing as waiting too long.

Five seconds to go, and by now, this was not just a matter of taking the last shot. This was a matter of there being no other options than a 3-pointer by a guard who missed six of his seven shots from beyond the arc during the game. Had Walker been a couple of seconds quicker, perhaps he could have driven to the basket and drawn a foul or found a teammate. Instead, he could only slide to his right, where the screen he expected did not await. He threw up the final shot, and it missed badly.

Five minutes of overtime later and a season was over.

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Eventually, this Gators team will be remembered fondly. After all, it was the team that brought expectations back to Florida basketball, a team that hadn't won a game that mattered in four years.

They were an overachieving bunch, these Gators. They were athletic, and they were unselfish, and somehow or another, they reached the Elite Eight. Eventually, people will think of it that way. They will talk about how well Walker played against UCLA and how well Kenny Boynton and Alex Tyus played against BYU and how well Vernon Macklin played against Butler.

But not now.

Today, there is only disappointment.

Today, the final act of the Gators was out of character, out of synch and, yes, out of the tournament.

The Gators went down hard Saturday afternoon, losing a 74-71 overtime game to Butler. Suddenly, you would not have recognized this team. The shooters could not score, and the muscle could not rebound. An 11-point lead with 9:26 to play was not enough.

There were a dozen ways the Gators lost this game. To some, the running-down-of-the-clock will be the final frustration. For others, it will be the way they were embarrassed (16-8) on the offensive boards. You could debate the way the Gators shot 3-pointers (1-for-10 in regulation), or the way they abandoned their inside game, or the lack of impact of SEC player of the year Chandler Parsons, or the missed jumper by Boynton with 13.9 seconds to go in overtime when even coach Billy Donovan thought he should have driven to the basket.

For whatever reason, there at crunch time, the Gators no longer looked cohesive, and they no longer seemed ferocious, and they no longer seemed efficient. They abandoned what was working, and for the first time since December, they looked less like a team and more like a collection of parts.

"Offensively, I wish he would have played a little more to our character," Donovan said. "But it wasn't that kind of game."

Still, there will be great debate whether it was Butler that stopped Florida's inside game or if it was Florida that stopped itself. With 15:50 to go in regulation, for instance, Macklin had 21 points on 10-for-12 shooting. The rest of the way, more than 21 minutes when you include overtime, he got only two more shots. Part of the reason was that Macklin was in and out of the game with foul trouble. Part of it, a frustrated Tyus said, was the guards stopped getting the ball inside.

This is what losing a chance at the Final Four feels like for a team. It is a no-man's land between accomplishment and disappointment. It is a painful time to take a loss, but it's only possible for the teams good enough to get here. This soon afterward, it is hard for a player to balance the feelings.

"There will be a time when they look back on where they were after the Jacksonville game or after the Central Florida game," Donovan said. "Then they'll see a better picture of how far they came. You never want it to end. But that's the price."

Eventually, Florida fans will love this team again. It probably overcame more flaws, and worse moments, than any Gator team that got this far. Yet, the Gators lasted longer than Pitt, longer than Duke, longer than Ohio State. All in all, it wasn't a bad journey.

For today, however, it's easy to wonder if they should have been able to make one more step.

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