On The Radio

Watch Larry Vaught and guests on his weekly sports radio show, every Thursday at 6:30 p.m., live from Eddie Montgomery's Steakhouse in Harrodsburg, KY!
Larry Vaught Twitters
  • Only TE Nick Melillo, safety Dakota Tyler and receiver Gene McCaskill will be out Saturday with injuries 3 days ago
  • Matt Smith, as expected, will start at center Saturday, but little surprised Murphy beat out Durham at tackle 3 days ago
  • UK-Louisville now a sellout. "Sellout includes a group of tickets which were returned from the Wildcats' visiting team allotment." 3 days ago
  • Have Bob Allen Pigskin Classic tonight. I am chairman of bowl, so lot to do. Will be back full time on UK Sunday 5 days ago
  • More updates...
Larry’s Photos
Get the Flash Player to see the slideshow.
Facebook Fans
Vaught's Views.com on Facebook

Patterson: “Wall is a pro player”

Editor’s note: It was painful to watch UK’s win at times Wednesday night, but let’s not forget this young team did win without a brilliant effort from Patterson and despite several late mistakes by DeMarcus Cousins. Will be interested to see what each of you thought of the win. Enjoy the Associated Press story from the late overtime finish — and pay particular attention to Patterson’s accurate description of Joun Wall.

CANCUN, Mexico (AP) — John Wall is five games into his college career and even his teammates think he’s ready for the next level.
The freshman sensation scored a season-best 23 points, including clutch shots in the final minute that sent the game to overtime, and No. 5 Kentucky closed with an eight-point run for a 73-65 victory over gritty Stanford on Wednesday night in the championship game of the Cancun Challenge at the Moon Palace Resort.
“NBA, that’s all I’ve got to say,” Wildcats forward Patrick Patterson said. “John Wall is a pro player and he wants the ball in crunch-time situations. Whenever we need a basket or something on the offensive end John is going to be the one to do it.”
Wall made a game-winning shot with 0.5 seconds left against Miami (Ohio) in his debut. This time, he hit a 12-foot fadeaway jumper from the right wing to tie the score at 61 with 30.6 seconds remaining in regulation, then two free throws with 2.4 seconds left to send the game to overtime.
Fellow freshman Eric Bledsoe drained an NBA-length 3-pointer with 33 seconds to go that gave Kentucky (6-0) a 69-65 lead it did not relinquish. Wall capped his big night in style with a slam dunk at the final horn, setting off a wild celebration by Kentucky players before a crowd of 1,425.
“I think we’ve got two guys when the game is on the line they are not afraid to make plays, which bodes well for us,” Kentucky coach John Calipari said. “You saw once again that late in the game I’m not calling a timeout. I don’t need to be a hero, let those guys be the hero.”
Wall, Bledsoe and the Wildcats held Stanford without a field goal in overtime.
“Those two guys have the killer (instinct),” Calipari said. “What you want is the guys with the killer to bleed onto the others. Just a will to win.”
It was an ending befitting a game that was close throughout and featured clutch plays by both teams down the stretch. There were five lead changes and five ties in the final 4 minutes of regulation and overtime.
Landry Fields, who finished with 23 points and 13 rebounds, was fouled by Ramon Harris during a scramble and hit both ends of a 1-and-1 to give Stanford (3-3) a 63-61 lead with 28.2 seconds on the clock.
The Wildcats opted not to call a timeout and went to freshman forward DeMarcus Cousins, who was fouled on the block. The 53.6 percent free throw shooter missed the first free throw and then the second on purpose, but fouled Stanford’s Jarrett Mann on the rebound.
Mann, a 53 percent free throw shooter, then missed both of his free-throw attempts, setting up a final flurry. Wall drew a blocking call on Andrew Zimmermann with 2.4 seconds left and calmly swished both free throws to tie it again.
Stanford’s full-court pass was batted off the backboard by Patterson and corralled by Wall to send the game to overtime.
“For such a young team, they showed a lot of poise down the stretch,” Stanford coach Johnny Dawkins said. “(Wall) is one of the fastest guards I’ve ever seen play on any level. He showed a lot of poise for his age. He’s a terrific player.”
The game was marked by several long stoppages in play. Officials spent several minutes reviewing a Stanford 3-pointer and intentional foul in the first half, then a shot clock malfunction had tournament organizers searching for a ladder with 11:31 left in regulation.
Fields put the Cardinal on his back late in the first half, scoring six straight points during a late run that gave Stanford a 38-32 lead at halftime. Aided by Jeremy Green’s four 3-pointers, the duo tallied 27 of Stanford’s 38 points and helped hold Kentucky’s up-tempo offense scoreless over the final 5:09.
On the other side, Wall was the only Kentucky player to get going before the break. The freshman guard had 15 points but could not do all the heavy lifting with preseason All-American forward Patterson going out of the game less than six minutes in with two fouls. Without Patterson’s inside presence the Wildcats struggled to get anything in the paint and shot just 35.5 percent from the field.
Patterson got going early in the second half on his way to his 25th career double-double, but he missed two point-blank opportunities on the same possession that would have given Kentucky its first lead since late in the first half with just over 10 minutes remaining.
He made up for it later, using a power post move to give Kentucky a 54-53 lead with 6:42 to play.
It was only the third meeting between the schools and first since the 1998 NCAA tournament semifinals. Kentucky won that showdown 86-85 in overtime on its way to its seventh — and most recent — national championship.

5 Responses to “Patterson: “Wall is a pro player””

  • Jim Boyers:

    ON THE BAD SIDE: This was one of the ugliest wins I can ever remember. I base that, not only on the performance, but also on the fact that UK was far superior to this team in talent, speed and overall ability, but played like the lesser team. Stanford’s ability to get about 100 (I’m rounding) offensive rebounds was…well, OFFENSIVE. This game truly showed the difference between playing the projected best teams in the mid/low major conferences and the projected worst team in the PAC 10. On the plus side, Cal has them all to himself now and will be able to start turning this thing around and curing these inconsistencies.

    ON THE GOOD SIDE: What tremendous heart and guts by a young team. My heart was beating out of my chest when John shot those free throws to tie in regulation and again when Eric put up that 3 in overtime. What a bunch of WINNERS. I was so happy to have that victory. I’m sure that Cal is delighted with the fact that this team has already faced (and CONQUERED) most of the situations that he has wanted to see them perform in. Trailing by a large amount, overtime, last second shots, blowouts. We have had ALL of these and it is only 6 games into the season, 6!!!!! WOW!!! I love watching these kids, but I don’t know if my heart can take the rest of this season.

    Well, dinner is almost ready, so I wish everyone a HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!!! GO BIG BLUE!!!

  • Sarah:

    I was so thrilled to even see a game that I can’t complain about anything. I had to change my whole direct TV package to get these two games – so there was no such thing as a bad game. And, on the plus time, sloppy play meant overtime, and overtime meant more time to see my CATS. It increased the value of my DirectTV package so it’s all good. Have a Happy Thanksgiving – and, GO BIG BLUE.

  • Linda:

    Blowouts are boring, loses are heartbreaking and close games just about want to make me pull my hair out. I want to get on the floor with those guys and tell them what do do. However, I will take last nights game over almost any other game in the past 4-5 years. Is it not wonderful to see smiles on the boys faces? Is it not wonderful to see them hang in there and keep on playing. Is it not wonderful not to see them hang their hears? i know this is a bad thing to say, but I almost wish he had not turned out the way it had. I want to get that bad loss out of the way and not worry about are we or aren’t we ganna win. BUT, it sure was sweet last night seeing those free throws when they counted, see the 3 short from almost downtown when it was needed. It has been an exciting season so far, ups, downs, turnovers, lack of control and all the good things the guys are doing. Thnak you Coach Cal for bringing my spirit back to basketball. I never lost it, but it was trying to hide. I have not been this excited in years and I don’t know if an old woman is going to be able to survive this year! GO CATS! One more thing, if any serviceman over seas or on our shores is reading thing, I am very thankful to you for your sacrifice and may you stay safe and bless you.

  • Larry Vaught:

    Well put Linda. A loss may eventually help, but you have to like the way this team keeps finding ways to win and Cal gets to keep teaching lessons. The last two teams could not do this.

    John Wall is extraordinary. I have to admit I knew he was good, but not this good

  • TRUBLU69:

    WELL!!! I Agree WITH All of You, My thoughts exactly LOL…GO BIG BLUE!!!!

Leave a Reply

Follow Larry
Look Who’s Watching!
Categories

© 2010 Vaught's Views All Rights Reserved

Copy Protected by Chetan's WP-CopyProtect.