Patterson leads No. 2 Kentucky past Gamecocks 82-61, avenging lone loss

By Jeffrey Mcmurray, AP
Thursday, February 25, 2010

No. 2 Kentucky avenges loss to Gamecocks, 82-61

LEXINGTON, Ky. — Patrick Patterson had 23 points and No. 2 Kentucky avenged its only loss this season with an 82-61 victory over South Carolina on Thursday night.

The Wildcats (27-1, 12-1) need just one more victory or a Vanderbilt loss to clinch at least a share of their 44th Southeastern Conference championship. Vanderbilt beat Georgia 96-94 in overtime Thursday, delaying the Kentucky celebration for at least another game.

Like its last meeting with Kentucky a month ago, South Carolina (14-13, 5-8) proved a pesky opponent until near the end. However, Kentucky had too much offensive firepower, and its defense gave up 26 points to the SEC’s leading scorer, Devan Downey, but little else.

South Carolina never led, and every time it started to chip away, the Wildcats had an answer and usually it was from Patterson. He scored the first points of the game on a 3-pointer and didn’t slow down.

Kentucky had a 15-point lead early in the second half, but twice Patterson responded when the Gamecocks cut it to six — first with a dunk, then a three-point play. South Carolina got no closer.

The veteran forward has often been overshadowed this year by star freshmen John Wall, DeMarcus Cousins and Eric Bledsoe, but this was Patterson’s night to be clutch.

Behind Patterson and eyeing payback, Kentucky was psyched in this one from the opening tip.

Sam Muldrow’s dunk midway through the first half cut the early Kentucky lead to 23-21, but the Gamecocks would score just five more points before halftime. Three came on a long heave from Downey at the buzzer, making it 37-26.

Other than that, Kentucky closed the half on a 14-2 run, punctuated by a putback from DeAndre Liggins off a miss by Wall and a bank shot by Bledsoe.

Downey, who scored 30 points in the previous meeting in Columbia, shot for an even higher percentage in this one, going 9 of 25, but the team made fewer than 40 percent of its shots and only four of 20 3-point attempts.

Although South Carolina kept the game close early, that was when the Wildcats turned in some of their most acrobatic plays.

Cousins followed Patterson’s opening 3 with a driving layup, drawing a foul in the process. He missed the free throw but got his own rebound and scored again. Cousins had 19 points and 11 rebounds to increase his UK freshman record for double-doubles to 17.

Then came Kentucky’s nightly showstopper, Wall, who grabbed a steal and sprinted the other way, finishing with a reverse layup, not even looking at the basket in the process.

Those plays gave Kentucky an early 11-2 lead. South Carolina cut it to 16-15 after consecutive baskets by Downey and a reverse layup by Lakeem Jackson, but Kentucky got some cushion in a hurry thanks to Cousins.

First, he used two hands on a thundering dunk, then just needed one the next time down court, slamming home an alley-oop pass from Wall.

In the last game against South Carolina, Kentucky had just claimed the No. 1 spot in the polls and even got a pregame pep talk from President Barack Obama, who called to thanks the Wildcats for a fundraising effort to benefit earthquake victims in Haiti.

There was no such hoopla around this one, although Hall of Famer Magic Johnson was among those in attendance and got roars from the Rupp Arena crowd when he was introduced.

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