Butler did it! Bulldogs get spot in title game; await winner of WV-Duke
By Dave Skretta, APSaturday, April 3, 2010
Butler wins, West Virginia-Duke is up next
The drama isn’t over in Indianapolis, even though a good portion of the crowd at Lucas Oil Stadium couldn’t care less who wins the nightcap: The hometown Bulldogs are already in the national championship game.
Nevertheless, fans in Morgantown and Durham are turning up the volume on their TV sets.
West Virginia and Duke have taken the court for warmups, with the winner advancing to the marquee game Monday night. It’s a matchup between the blue-collared and the blueblood, between a coach who has never won a national title and another who has three of them.
West Virginia coach Bob Huggins promised when he took over his alma mater that he’d raise banners back in Morgantown, and he’ll have a chance after guiding the Mountaineers to their first Final Four since 1959. It’s also the first trip for Huggins since 1992, when he led Cincinnati to within two games of a title.
Compare that to Mike Krzyzewski, who has guided the Blue Devils to 11 Final Fours and won national championships in 1991, ‘92 and 2001. Duke already has 33 wins this season, its most since the last title team won 35 games.
Tipoff is just a few minutes away.
Forget about “Hoosiers,” folks. Butler is putting together its own incredible story.
The Bulldogs will be playing for a national championship Monday night.
Baby-faced forward Gordon Hayward scored 19 points and the fifth-seeded Horizon League champions knocked off Big Ten heavyweight Michigan State 52-50 in the Final Four.
Shelvin Mack battled through muscle spasms to add 14 points for the Bulldogs, the team that practices in the same building — Hinkle Fieldhouse — where they filmed the movie “Hoosiers” about the upstart high school team that proved they could beat anybody.
Just like the Bulldogs.
The scrappy team coached by a 33-year-old former marketing employee for Eli Lilly will play West Virginia or Duke for the national title. And just imagine what the atmosphere will be like at Lucas Oil Stadium, a 10-minute drive from the Butler campus.
“I’ll be honest, there’s so many people here I just wanted to focus on the court,” coach Brad Stevens said moments after the game, basking in the adulation that comes with a victory on the game’s biggest stage.
“Both sides really battled,” he said. “We were lucky to be up two at the end, and I think the difference was we held them to 3-0 the last 30 minutes, and we needed to.”
Butler will carry a 25-game winning streak into the championship game, the longest since Duke won 32 straight entering the 1992 national title game.
“Just really excited right now,” Hayward said.
Butler shot just 30 percent from the field and hit 5 of 21 from 3-point range, but the Bulldogs made up for it by going 17 of 24 from the foul line — including two by Ronald Nored, a 61-percent free-throw shooter, with 6.1 seconds remaining.
The Bulldogs fouled on purpose when Michigan State crossed midcourt, and Korie Lucious made the first free throw before missing the second on purpose. But the Spartans couldn’t track down the offensive rebound to put up a tying shot.
Lucious finished with 12 points and Durrell Summers had 14 points and 10 rebounds for the Spartans, who were trying to advance to the title game on the 10th anniversary of their second national championship.
Michigan State was hampered by missing star guard Kalin Lucas, who ruptured his Achilles’ tendon against Maryland in the second round. The Spartans wound up with 16 turnovers, and Butler turned them into a 20-2 advantage in points off turnovers.
And a trip to the national championship game.
Tags: 2010 Ncaa Men's Division I Basketball Championship, College Basketball, College Sports, Duke, Events, Men's Basketball, Michigan, Michigan state, Morgantown, North America, United States, West Virginia