Saturday, March 31, 2012

Kentucky off to title game, beats Louisville 69-61 - MiamiHerald.com

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Kentucky off to title game, beats Louisville 69-61 - MiamiHerald.com
Apr 1st 2012, 04:07

NEW ORLEANS -- Bragging rights in the Bluegrass State are mighty nice.

Kentucky has its sights set higher.

Much higher.

Anthony Davis and top-seeded Kentucky are right where they planned to be all along, playing for the national title after finally putting away pesky Louisville 69-61 in the Final Four on Saturday night.

"I have a team that's had teams come at them all year," coach John Calipari said, "and they responded again today."

It will be Kentucky's first appearance in the title game since winning a seventh NCAA crown back in 1998 and it gives Calipari another shot at the championship that has eluded him. The Wildcats (37-2) will face No. 2 seed Kansas, a 64-62 winner over Ohio State in the second semifinal.

As the final seconds ticked down, Davis pointed to the court and screamed twice, "This is my stage!"

Yes, yes, it is.

With a star-studded roster that includes at least three, maybe as many as five NBA lottery picks, Kentucky was the top seed in the tournament and the heavy favorite to cut down the nets when the whole tournament was done. And Calipari wouldn't let his young players consider anything else, saying repeatedly this was "just another game."

But playing in-state rival Louisville (30-10) is never just that, and the Cardinals made Kentucky work deep into the second half to grind this victory out.

Louisville outrebounded Kentucky 40-33, including a whopping 19-6 advantage on the offensive glass - the sole reason the Cardinals were able to make a game of this.

"To tell you the truth, I haven't always liked some of the Kentucky teams. I'm not going to lie to you," said Louisville coach Rick Pitino, who counts as something of an expert after spending eight years in Lexington and the last 11 with the Cardinals. "But I really like this team a lot because of their attitude and the way they play.

"I'll certainly be rooting for them hard to bring the trophy back to Kentucky. ... They're a great group of guys, doing a tremendous job."

So tremendous it led to a thawing, however briefly, in the frosty relationship between Calipari and Pitino. When the two shook hands after the game, Pitino congratulated Calipari and told him he'd be rooting for the Wildcats on Monday night.

"I think that's neat," Calipari said. "When I was at UMass, I can remember hugging him and telling him, 'I'm happy for you and I really want you to win the national title.' He did the same to me tonight, so I think it's kind of neat."

Calipari had taken another phenom-laden roster to the Final Four last year, only to see them come unglued against eventual national champion Connecticut. The Wildcats said all week they weren't going to let the same thing happen this time, and it showed in their workmanlike effort. No matter how close Louisville got, the Cardinals were never able to control the game. When they made a run, Kentucky found a way to stop it. When one of the Wildcats ran into foul trouble, the others picked him up.

Kentucky played so hard Davis went flying off the court twice, sailing all the way onto media row once.

"They made runs, and we made our runs. That's what coach always says," said Terrence Jones, who finished with six points and seven rebounds. "We never get rattled."

Bigger, bulkier and with Davis having a wider wingspan than some small airplanes, the Wildcats looked like playground bullies as they pushed Louisville around on their way to a 13-point lead early in the second half. But the Cardinals know a thing about rallies after coming from 11 points down to beat Florida in last weekend's West Regional final, and they sure made Kentucky sweat.

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Sharks pass Stars in playoff race - USA TODAY

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Sharks pass Stars in playoff race - USA TODAY
Apr 1st 2012, 06:23

  • San Jose's Marc-Edouard Vlasic, right, battles Dallas' Brenden Morrow diuring Saturday's gamee at HP Pavilion in San Jose.

    By Thearon W. Henderson, Getty Images

    San Jose's Marc-Edouard Vlasic, right, battles Dallas' Brenden Morrow diuring Saturday's gamee at HP Pavilion in San Jose.

By Thearon W. Henderson, Getty Images

San Jose's Marc-Edouard Vlasic, right, battles Dallas' Brenden Morrow diuring Saturday's gamee at HP Pavilion in San Jose.

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — The final week in the topsy-turvy Pacific Division will be like a game of musical chairs.

With a fast start against a tired Dallas team, the San Jose Sharks took temporary possession of one of those coveted playoff spots while leaving the Stars on the outside looking in for now.

Joe Pavelski scored two goals, Antti Niemi earned his sixth shutout of the season and the Sharks moved back into playoff position by beating Dallas 3-0 on Saturday night.

"They earned the right to enjoy it right now," Sharks coach Todd McLellan said about his players. "Tomorrow it's back to work, and let's keep our focus. I talked before about not letting your guard down, and we have in the past. Let's keep it up. We know we'll have a tougher game in Dallas than we had here tonight."

Jason Demers also scored for the Sharks, who rebounded from losses at Anaheim and Phoenix to close within one point of Pacific Division-leading Los Angeles and Phoenix with three games remaining, including a return trip to Dallas on Tuesday night.

"It was the biggest game of the year for us," said captain Joe Thornton, who had two assists. "We started well and I thought we competed hard all the way through. Good job by us tonight."

The Stars were thoroughly outplayed for a second straight night and have gone from leading the Pacific Division heading into Friday's 5-2 loss at Vancouver to being out of the playoff picture one night later. Dallas trails eighth-place San Jose by one point for the final postseason spot and is two points out of the division lead.

The Stars dropped to 1-11-2 in the back end of back-to-backs but can get back into playoff position when these teams meet in the rematch. To do it, they will have to play much better than they did in San Jose when they lost for the fourth time in five games to the Sharks this season.

"It's probably three wins or nothing for us now," captain Brenden Morrow said. "It is nice to get them again so soon. But if we do what we did tonight we're not going to get the result we want."

San Jose got a goal in the opening minute of the game, a second late in the first period and never looked back. Pavelski put the Sharks firmly in control when he tipped Marc-Edouard Vlasic's point shot past Kari Lehtonen midway through the second period to make it 3-0.

Niemi did the rest, making 22 saves for his 19th career shutout. The Sharks won all three home games against Dallas, outscoring the Stars 13-4 in the contests. They have won just five of 16 games against the rest of the division, a major reason why they are in danger of missing the playoffs for the first time since 2002-03.

San Jose has a home-and-home against Los Angeles after the trip to Dallas and might need to win two of those remaining three games to make it back to the postseason.

After being held to just one goal in the back-to-back losses at Anaheim and Phoenix, the Sharks got off to a fast start in front of a boisterous home crowd. Just 58 seconds into the game, Thornton found Pavelski coming down the slot with a perfect feed and Pavelski one-timed it past Lehtonen.

"The last few games we've had so many good looks. Not just decent scoring chances but it feels like open nets," Pavelski said. "Everyone knew the importance of the game and it was exciting to have the crowd into it like a playoff game because that's what it was."

Both teams had good chances for a second goal with Michael Ryder's attempt at an open net for Dallas deflecting off defenseman Justin Braun's stick and into the crowd, and Patrick Marleau hitting the post for San Jose.

But San Jose finally converted on its third power play of the period when Marty Havlat delivered a pinpoint pass to Demers, who came in from the point on the backside and knocked in his third goal of the season with 1:22 left in the first.

"They got the jump and set us back a little bit right away," Dallas coach Glen Gulutzan said. "We have a big game with these guys on Tuesday and our fate is in our hands. It's got to be the mindset of do or die."

Notes: San Jose F Logan Couture has matched a career-long drought by going 10 games without a goal. … Thornton has 11 points in five games against Dallas this season. … Sharks D Douglas Murray missed his second straight game with a lower-body injury. … Dallas D Mark Fistric returned after missing five games with an abdominal strain and C Toby Petersen played after being a healthy scratch for 15 straight games. C Tom Wandell sat out again with an illness.

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Inside the Sixers: Sixers' offensive deficiencies have been apparent - Philadelphia Inquirer

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Inside the Sixers: Sixers' offensive deficiencies have been apparent - Philadelphia Inquirer
Apr 1st 2012, 06:15

The last week and a half of the 76ers' season has been particularly disconcerting, especially when factoring in the high-stakes nature attached to every game until they close out the regular season at Detroit on April 26.

A home victory over Cleveland without Andre Iguodala in the lineup was pretty much to be expected. With Iguodala missing his second game because of tendinitis in his left knee, Jodie Meeks stepped in with a career-high 31 points and the Sixers, coming off a loss at San Antonio, cruised, 103-85.

Two games prior, also at the Wells Fargo Center against rival Boston, the Sixers fell behind by 10 points in the first quarter but responded with a dominant second half, scoring 37 points in the third quarter - the most points they have scored in a quarter since they put up 38 against the Knicks back on March 11 - and 56 in the second half in a win that gave the Sixers the all-important tiebreaker over the Celtics.

But losses to Washington, San Antonio, and New York were troubling in that, again, the Sixers' extreme offensive deficiencies were laid plain.

Losers of five in a row, Washington, which dismantled the Sixers, 97-76, on Friday, was ranked 27th in points allowed per game at 100.4 and 22d in opponents' field goal percentage (45.6) going into Saturday's games.

One night earlier, the Wizards had lost their fifth game in a row, on the road at Indiana.

On the same day that the Wizards lost at Indy, the Sixers were extolling the virtues of being able to get two days' rest in a season in which recovery of this length is rare. They told anyone within hearing range that there was no way they would overlook moribund Washington.

But instead of capitalizing against a team that has demonstrated its defensive incompetency all season long, the Sixers turned in a listless and disconnected performance. In a game in which the body language of the coach and the players was as bad as it has been at any point this season during and after the game, the Wizards held the Sixers to 36.6 percent shooting, made 48 percent of their own field goals, and followed the lead of a D-league player on a 10-day contract, Cartier Martin, to an inexcusably easy victory over a Sixers team that had won these teams' first three meetings by an average of more than 21 points.

The loss marked the second time in three games that the Sixers had scored just 76 points, and the third time in five games that they failed to break 80. That's an indication that the offense, which at one point went a stretch of 19 games unable to produce a 100-point game, is still very much broken.

This unmotivated, unresponsive performance in many ways resembled their March 25 loss to San Antonio. While there are no similarities between the seasons the Spurs and the Wizards are having, the coincidence is that both teams could have been easy victims for the Sixers - the Spurs were playing their third game in a row and Tim Duncan did not play - but both won going away.

The Sixers scored just 11 points in the fourth quarter and only 27 in the second half of a 93-76 Spurs rout. After scoring 20 points in the paint in the second quarter, the Sixers - their 27 second-quarter points equaled their entire second-half output - looked as if they had found a weakness that they could exploit against the undermanned Spurs.

But their offense never showed up in the second half, especially in the fourth quarter when, with the game still potentially winnable, the Sixers were just 4 for 21 from the field and scored just 11 points.

It was their lowest-scoring fourth quarter of the season. Unfortunately, it was just eight quarters removed from the 11 points they opened up with against New York - another season low - in an 82-79 loss. Unable to close against the Spurs, the Sixers missed their first 14 field goals against New York and set the tone for yet another night of offensive futility.

Unless there is a total collapse, the Sixers should continue to be among the best defensive teams in the league. Teams should continue to struggle to score against them, something that has been the case all year without the presence of a legitimate shot-blocker.

But it won't matter much if the Sixers continue to have the same problems putting up points that other teams have doing the exact same thing against them.


Inside the Sixers: Scoring Issues

It's hard to address offensive problems when your leading scorer barely cracks the top 50 in the league, and he doesn't start. But that's just one scoring problem the 76ers have as they try to overtake the Celtics and win the Atlantic Division. Here are some more sad scoring stories for the Sixers this season (statistics through Friday's games):

Lou Williams, the Sixers' leading scorer (15.5 points per game), was 44th in the NBA.

You want three-pointers? Only Jodie Meeks, at 21st in the league with 85, was in the top 40 in the league in three-pointers made.

The 76ers were 23d in the NBA in scoring (93.6), and that includes having surpassed 100 points in five of the last 12 games, plus 99 against Boston on March 23.

No help from the big men: Elton Brand's 10.6 scoring average rated 91st in the NBA. Keep in mind: There are just 30 teams. 

- Gary Potosky


Contact staff writer John N. Mitchell at jmitchell@philly.com. Follow him on Twitter @JmitchellInquirer

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Sneak some nutrition fun into your kids' Easter baskets - Detroit Free Press

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Sneak some nutrition fun into your kids' Easter baskets - Detroit Free Press
Apr 1st 2012, 06:02

Still have to fill those Easter baskets? Looking for Easter activities?

Why not sneak a bit of fun nutrition -- fun is the key here -- in there, too? Sure, offer up some traditional treats like jelly beans and chocolate eggs, lest your little ones revolt.

"One, they will not like you, and two, they will think it's not fair," said Grace Derocha, registered dietitian and certified health coach for Blue Cross Blue Shield Michigan.

But with some exotic fruits and a bit of creativity, you can also sneak a valuable lesson into the festivities, she said: "It teaches balance and moderation, even on the holidays."

• Golden Eggs: -- Along with the other ooey-gooey eggs, toss in some kumquats -- citrus fruit the size of a grape tomato. They can be popped into your mouth whole, peel and all. They're good naked or dipped in a bit of chocolate.

• Bunny Ears: -- With a slight "pearish-grapish" taste, a persimmon can be sliced to look like bunny ears and dipped in chocolate. Or use dried mango.

• Bunny poop: Combine dried raisins, cranberries and blueberries, then drizzle with chocolate. Eww for you, but fun for kids.

• Rice Krispie treat eggs: Shape marshmallow Rice Krispie treats (made with melted peeps) into egg-shaped balls, but slip in some Grape Nuts, dried fruit or peanuts, too. Dip into chocolate as an added treat.

• Peeps s'mores: Melt chocolate on Peeps, then squeeze between slices of apple or other fruit (rather than graham crackers). Alternatively, Peeps and fruit can be slipped on sticks like kabobs.

• Cottage cheese bunnies: For Easter breakfast, shape cottage cheese and a half of a canned pear into a bunny shape. Use fruit -- star fruit, mangos, peaches -- to make its face, and decorate it. Add a carrot for its food and even some bunny poop from above.

• Fruit Snacks, but: Dried fruit is better, but Fruit Snacks are an alternative to candy in a pinch. Just make sure they're made with 100% fruit juice to cut down the added sugars, Derocha said.

Contact Robin Erb: 313-222-2708 or rerb@freepress.com

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Kings: Late lead gets away in shootout loss vs. Wild - ESPN (blog)

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Kings: Late lead gets away in shootout loss vs. Wild - ESPN (blog)
Apr 1st 2012, 04:12

video Minnesota Wild 4, Kings 3 (SO)

Eight keys to the game:

THE FACTS: Considering the situation -- the second road game in two nights at the back end of a four-game road trip -- the Kings would normally be satisfied escaping with a point Saturday night in St. Paul, Minn. But they were in great position to steal another against the Wild, holding a 3-2 lead with just over nine minutes remaining at Xcel Energy Center before unraveling down the stretch.

THE STAT: After finishing 10-2 in shootouts a year ago, the Kings fell to 6-8 this season. Jonathan Bernier, who started in goal for just the 14th time this season, failed to stop a shot in the shootout, falling to 1-3 in his career in the tiebreaker. Minnesota goalie Niklas Backstrom, meanwhile, improved to 17-29. If the Kings don't make the playoffs, that's one stat that will haunt them during the offseason.

TURNING POINT: Just as it appeared the Kings were on the verge of wrapping up their final multi-game road trip with three straight wins, Justin Falk skated straight at Kings rookie defenseman Slava Voynov, cut into the middle and dumped the puck off to Jason Zucker. He took a shot toward the net and the puck glanced off the left skate of Erik Christensen, redirecting it past Bernier. Christensen appeared to make a slight kicking motion, but it was unclear if the skate of Kings defenseman Willie Mitchell had bumped into Christensen's and caused the motion. Regardless, the goal stood, tying the score, 3-3. The Kings killed off a four-minute power play in the final minutes of regulation, then failed to score on a power play of their own that extended into overtime. Later in the overtime, Minnesota forward Devin Setoguchi hit the post on a penalty shot, leaving the game to be decided in the shootout.

HOT: A healthy scratch in 12 of the previous 13 games before getting a chance to play Friday in Edmonton following the ankle injury to Jeff Carter, forward Brad Richardson scored two goals for the Kings, the last giving them a 3-2 lead 57 seconds into the second period. It appeared that might hold up as the game winner until Christensen's goal.

NOT: The Kings have been brutal in the opening minutes the last two games. They allowed the Oilers to tie the score in the second minute Friday night, then gave up a goal on the first shot against the Wild, just 42 seconds into the game. After the Kings tied the score about three minutes later on Richardson's first goal, the Wild needed just 17 seconds to take back the lead.

GOOD MOVE: The Kings came back to tie the score for a second time in the opening period, 2-2, on their second power-play goal in two games. Mike Richards sent a blast at Backstrom, who left a juicy rebound for Dustin Brown to shoot into the net with 4:29 left in the opening period. Anze Kopitar picked up one of his three assists on the play, and Brown also finished with a three-point night.

BAD MOVE: Under normal circumstances, coach Darryl Sutter's decision to start Bernier would have made perfect sense. The Wild passed up the Kings as the lowest-scoring team in the NHL this month, Bernier shut out Minnesota, 4-0, on Feb. 28 at Xcel Energy Center, and the Kings had played the night before in Edmonton. But with just four games remaining in the regular season and the Kings in a mad scramble for one of the final three playoff spots, the safest move would've been to start Jonathan Quick, who had allowed just two goals in his last three starts, all on the current road trip. At least Quick should be fresh for Monday's huge game against the visiting Oilers.

NOTABLE: The Wild have now won six times when trailing heading into the final period, tied for fourth-most in the NHL. The Kings have won just once this season when trailing after two periods, tied for last in the league.

UP NEXT: Monday vs. the Edmonton Oilers at Staples Center, 7:30 p.m.

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Easter fun and yum: Chocolate eggs need crunchy, gooey nests - Press of Atlantic City

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Easter fun and yum: Chocolate eggs need crunchy, gooey nests - Press of Atlantic City
Apr 1st 2012, 04:26

You'll have no trouble enticing the kids to get involved in this easy and tasty part of Easter dinner prep.

Combine a blend of crunchy cereals and noodles with a deliciously sticky blend of chocolate, marshmallow and peanut butter to create edible "nests" in which the little ones can store their chocolate eggs and jelly beans.

Note: This is a messy project. So you might want to do it before the kids get into their Easter best. Also, to make it a little less messy, lightly coat little hands with cooking spray.

The finished nests can be stored in plastic bags at room temperature for up to a week.

Chocolate Bunny Nests

Ingredients:

•3 tablespoons unsalted butter

•10-ounce pack mini marshmallows

•1/2 cup crunchy peanut butter

•6 ounces semisweet chocolate bits

•2 cups thin chow mein noodles

•1 1/2 cups square corn cereal

•2 cups crispy rice cereal

Directions:

Line a baking sheet with wax paper.

In a large saucepan over medium-low heat, melt the butter. Add the marshmallows, peanut butter and chocolate bits. Stir continuously until completely melted and blended.

Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the chow mein noodles, corn cereal and rice cereal. Allow the mixture to cool until safe to handle.

For small nests, scoop by the tablespoonful onto the prepared baking sheet. For larger nests, use about 1/2 cup. Use your thumb or the back of a spoon (coated with cooking spray) to create an indentation at the center of each mound to form a "nest." Allow to finish cooling until firm.

Makes: 20 small nests

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Nicklas Backstrom: 'It was a fun game to play' - Washington Post (blog)

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Nicklas Backstrom: 'It was a fun game to play' - Washington Post (blog)
Apr 1st 2012, 04:32

It wasn't pretty, but the Capitals came away with a 3-2 shootout win over Montreal on Saturday night and tightened their grip on a playoff spot with two more points combined with Buffalo's loss to Toronto.

You can read more about the overall contest, including the Capitals' displeasure with coughing up a two-goal lead and Michal Neuvirth's night, in my story for the hard-copy edition.

The highlight of the night, however, was Nicklas Backstrom's highly anticipated return to the Washington lineup after missing 40 games with a concussion.

The 24-year-old Swede received a rousing ovation and players tapped their sticks on the ice from the sellout crowd as he worked through his warmup routine. Then, before the team headed out for the start of the game, his teammates started some good-natured chirping.

"It was pretty cool, actually," Brooks Laich said. "You guys weren't in here to see it, but before we went on the ice before warmup and then especially before the game, there was a lot, a lot of chatter building up about 30, 40 seconds before we were going on the ice. Everyone kind of left with a smile on their face, and it translated into a good first period."

Said Dennis Wideman: "I think it was a big lift for us. I thought getting Nicky back, everybody loves having him around, loves having him in the room. He's a great team guy. It gave us a lift for the first little bit and then we lost it."

Backstrom finished with 19 minutes 40 seconds of ice time along with two shots on goal, skating as a member of the first line. He also won 12 of 18 faceoffs and finished as with minus-1 rating.

Although he looked at ease in the first period, Backstrom admitted that he began to tire as the contest progressed. But all in all, it was a successful first game back for the center.

"It's a lot of pressure on yourself," Backstrom said. "Just trying to focus on playing simple in the beginning and it was a fun game to play. Lot of energy right from the get-go. That's good."

More significant than the stats for Backstrom, was that he absorbed a big hit from Montreal's Mike Blunden in the second period without any negative effects.

"It's a relief, actually," Backstrom said of being hit again by an opponent. "I've been thinking a lot about this game and if I'm ready or not. Couldn't really sleep before the game. So it's a little back and forth. But I tell you right now I made the right decision. I was happy to be back and I felt pretty good – even if I was a little rusty."

More on the NHL:

Caps pull out needed win in shootout

Summary: Capitals 3, Canadiens 2 (SO)

Sabres fall short in Toronto

NHL power rankings

NHL standings

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Tiny lures bring big fun to fishing for panfish - Fort Worth Star Telegram

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Tiny lures bring big fun to fishing for panfish - Fort Worth Star Telegram
Apr 1st 2012, 05:17

[unable to retrieve full-text content]


Tiny lures bring big fun to fishing for panfish
Fort Worth Star Telegram
But for a lot of anglers with a passion to battle bluegills, channel catfish, crappie and other down-sized freshwater fish, a box like that rates at the top of the list for fun and good ol' mouth-watering fried fish at the table.

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A day off before final week for Florida Panthers - MiamiHerald.com

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A day off before final week for Florida Panthers - MiamiHerald.com
Apr 1st 2012, 03:50

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Forget, forget, forget. That's the Panthers' mantra these days after losing five of their past six games. Of course, that's much easier to do in theory than in reality.

Coach Kevin Dineen gave his battered players Saturday off after a brutal two-game stretch in which Florida held a 2-1 lead in Minnesota before losing it with 30 seconds left and falling in overtime. On Friday, the Panthers got blown out by the worst team in hockey playing a 22-year-old goalie making just his third NHL start as Columbus rolled to a 4-1 win.

With losses to five teams booking summer cabins in its past six games, things don't get easier for Florida as it visits league power Detroit on Sunday. Then comes the final three games against a scrappy Winnipeg team, a Washington squad trying to overtake the Panthers for its fifth consecutive Southeast Division title and a season finale Saturday against Carolina.

Yes, the final week of the season is upon us. The Panthers hope this isn't their last week of said season.

"This road trip is all about getting as many points as we can," Scottie Upshall said. "Sunday's game, right now, is our biggest game of the season. This is where our attention has to be."

Dineen has preached "amnesia" is the best remedy for stretches like this, although before hitting this recent rough patch, the Panthers won five in a row for the first time in four years. So although the Panthers should forget about what's happened lately, they also should remember what it felt like not too long ago.

"We are .500 on this road trip so a win Sunday makes it a good road trip," said Brian Campbell, whose team has gone 1-1-1 in the first three games of the trip. "Anything is possible."

Scoring some goals sure would cure what ails the Panthers. In the past six games, Florida has scored a total of nine goals. Florida scored a grand total of three in losses to the Wild and Blue Jackets — two teams that cashed in their playoff hopes long ago.

Detroit is not one of those teams. The Red Wings are fighting for the top seed in the Western Conference. That might actually be a good thing for the Panthers. Instead of playing a loose team with nothing to lose, Florida and Detroit will both be focused on winning the game.

"Detroit is a fun place to play and a great challenge," Campbell said.

elsewhere

• According to sportsclubstats.com, the Panthers went into Saturday with a 95 percent chance of winning the Southeast Division just by going 2-2 in their final four games; by going 1-0-3, the Panthers would clinch the division for the first time in franchise history.

According to Elias Sports Bureau, only one team led its division with five games left and didn't make the playoffs — and the Panthers had a hand in that. In 2007-08, Carolina had led the Southeast from the start of the season until the final day when it was overtaken by Washington.

The Hurricanes could have clinched the division in their season finale on April 4, 2008, yet lost at home to the Panthers. Carolina then needed Florida to beat the Capitals the following day. The Panthers lost 3-1 and Washington claimed what became the first of its four consecutive division titles. Carolina dropped from the third seed in the Eastern Conference to ninth and missed the playoffs by three points.

•  Kris Versteeg is obviously still dealing with the hip injury that shut him down for nine games as he hasn't scored since Feb. 12. He got an assist on Tomas Kopecky's goal against the Blue Jackets — his first point in nine games.

Versteeg is still second on the team with 22 goals and fourth with 50 points.

"I liked his game in Montreal, thought he had some bounce to his step," Dineen said. "He was moving his feet, creating some chances. He's a valuable piece, plays on both sides of the special teams. He's a valuable part of our team. There will come a time when his skill will pop open. It's coming. We have plenty of confidence in him. He has his work boots on right now."

• The Red Wings will likely be watching Stephen Weiss very closely Sunday as the Florida center has three goals and four assists in eight games against Detroit.

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Capitals blow 2-goal lead for 2nd game in row, beat Canadiens 3-2 in shootout - Washington Post

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Capitals blow 2-goal lead for 2nd game in row, beat Canadiens 3-2 in shootout - Washington Post
Apr 1st 2012, 02:09

Welcome back, Backstrom, just in time for the crucial games that will determine if the Capitals make the playoffs.

Washington's best player over the first half of the season returned Saturday night after 40 games away due to a concussion, and he won 12 of his 18 faceoffs and provided an immeasurable psychological boost in a 3-2 shootout win over the Montreal Canadiens.

"He's one of those guys that lightens the room up," Washington forward Troy Brouwer said. "He's very well-liked by everybody on the team and you always have a good time when you're with him, so whenever you get to see him back — plus the smile on his face, how he's been feeling and acting around the room the last couple days, knowing he was going to play tonight — it's a big pick-up."

The win, coupled with Buffalo's 4-3 loss to Toronto, moved the eighth-place Capitals two points clear of the ninth-place Sabres with three games to play in the regular season.

Washington also moved within two points of Southeast Division leader Florida.

But if there's a worrying trend for the Capitals, it comes from the fact that they essentially put on a repeat performance from Thursday, when they also lost a 2-0 lead at Boston before getting a 3-2 shootout win.

"Two leads the last two games," Washington defenseman Dennis Wideman said. "We have to find a way to keep pushing and keep pressing and not letting teams back in the game."

Michal Neuvirth, making a bid to be the postseason starter, had 39 saves for the Capitals, including one that hit him in the mask and left him flat on his back late in the second period. He also kept his net clean in the shootout, stopping David Desharnais' attempt and standing his ground as Max Pacioretty missed wide.

Matt Hendricks and Alexander Semin scored in the shootout for the Capitals, and Mathieu Perreault and Jay Beagle scored first-period goals.

But the main attraction was Backstrom.

The top-line center received a roaring reception when he was the last player introduced in the starting lineups, and even the singer of the Canadian and American national anthems wore a Backstrom No. 19 jersey.

The 24-year-old forward, who is fifth on the team with 42 points despite all the games he missed, then took the faceoff that began the game.

Backstrom had been out since Jan. 3, when he was elbowed in a game against Calgary by Rene Bourque, who now plays with the Canadiens. Backstrom played nearly 20 minutes Saturday night.

"I've got to play the same way that I usually play," Backstrom said. "I can't be worried about getting hit again, and that's what I did from the start and it felt all right, but I can be a little bit better. My lungs were a little tired there after a while."

Erik Cole and Tomas Plekanec scored for the Canadiens, who have lost four straight. Peter Budaj made 31 saves.

The Canadiens are the worst team in the East, and they looked like it early. They gave the Capitals three power plays in the first 14 minutes, including one after Budaj was whistled for playing the puck outside the trapezoid behind the net.

The Capitals didn't convert any of those man-advantage chances, but they scored with a pair of easy odd-man rushes. On a two-on-one, Semin had his shot saved but corralled the rebound and passed to trailer Perreault for the goal. Beagle made it 2-0 with his third goal of the season, skating in unmarked to tap in a pass from Hendricks.

But Washington again found a way to lose the lead. Montreal cut it to one in the final minute of the period when Cole poked in a rebound, and the Canadiens' assertive play in the second period was rewarded when Plekanec skated around defenseman Roman Hamrlik to put a shot over Neuvirth's glove.

"The guys worked hard tonight and they deserved maybe a better fate," Montreal coach Randy Cunneyworth said. "We certainly crawled out of the deficit we had and the first goal (by Cole) was a big one, obviously turning the game around for us and getting us going in the right direction. ... I liked the effort overall."

Notes: Canadiens C Petteri Nokelainen left the game in the second period with an upper body injury. ... The Capitals placed D John Erskine on injured reserve with a lower body injury. He hasn't played since Feb. 12. ... The Capitals have won six straight over Montreal.

___

Joseph White can be reached at http://twitter.com/JGWhiteAP

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Kansas comes back, beats Ohio State to reach title game - USA TODAY

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Kansas comes back, beats Ohio State to reach title game - USA TODAY
Apr 1st 2012, 03:43

By Jack Carey, USA TODAY

Updated

NEW ORLEANS – Trailing by 13 points late in the first half, Kansas put on a spirited rally Saturday night and moved into the national championship game with a 64-62 victory against Ohio State.

  • Kansas guard Elijah Johnson shoots during the Jayhawks' national semifinal game against Ohio State on Saturday.

    By Robert Deutsch, USA TODAY

    Kansas guard Elijah Johnson shoots during the Jayhawks' national semifinal game against Ohio State on Saturday.

By Robert Deutsch, USA TODAY

Kansas guard Elijah Johnson shoots during the Jayhawks' national semifinal game against Ohio State on Saturday.

The riveting back-and-forth battle put the Jayhawks (32-6) into Monday's final against No. 1 Kentucky, which beat Louisville 69-61 in the other semifinal. The Wildcats beat the Jayhawks 75-65 in a meeting in New York on Nov. 15.

Elijah Johnson's layup with 1:10 remaining put the Jayhawks ahead 62-59, but after a steal by KU's Thomas Robinson, Jeff Withey was called for traveling on a layup that would have put KU ahead by five.

OSU then drew within one on a follow-up dunk by William Buford with 9.6 seconds left.

KU's Tyshawn Taylor made two free throws with 8.3 seconds left for a three-point lead, but then after stealing a pass in the backcourt, threw the ball away with 3.6 seconds to go.

OSU's Aaron Craft was fouled with 2.9 seconds to go, preventing the Bucks from getting off a tying three-pointer. But after making the first free throw, he intentionally missed the second but was called for a lane violation when going after the offensive rebound. KU inbounded and ran out the clock.

All-American Robinson had 19 points and eight rebounds for the Jayhawks (32-6) and Travis Releford scored 15. William Buford led OSU (31-8) with 19, and All-American Jared Sulinger had 13 points and 11 boards.

After trailing by 13 points late in the first half and by nine at halftime, Kansas opened the second half by scoring 13 of the first 17 points and tied the score at 38 on a drive by Johnson with 14:06 remaining. OSU's high-scoring forward Thomas had gone to the bench with his third personal foul at the 17:36 mark.

OSU gained a 43-38 lead on a three-pointer by Craft and a tip-in by Sullinger. But then with the Buckeyes ahead 43-40, Thomas, who had scored 89 points in Ohio State's first four tournament games, committed his fourth foul and went to the bench again.

Three-pointers by Lenzelle Smith Jr. and William Buford put OSU ahead 49-43, but KU again rallied as Conner Teahan hit a three and Releford chased down a loose ball in the corner and went in for a layup to bring the Jayhawks within one.

Teahan came in the game when Johnson went to the bench with four personals.

With OSU up 49-48, Sullinger scored inside and then made two foul shots sandwiched around a dunk by Buford as OSU went ahead 55-49.

But Robinson then scored on a hook, and Johnson returned and drove in for a score to bring KU within two. Robinson made one free throw with 3:51 to play, and when Releford was fouled by Sullinger with 2:48 to go he made both free thrown to put KU ahead 56-55.

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Kentucky off to Title Game, Beats Louisville 69-61 - ABC News

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Kentucky off to Title Game, Beats Louisville 69-61 - ABC News
Apr 1st 2012, 03:59

Bragging rights in the Bluegrass State are mighty nice.

Kentucky has its sights set higher.

Much higher.

Anthony Davis and top-seeded Kentucky are right where they planned to be all along, playing for the national title after finally putting away pesky Louisville 69-61 in the Final Four on Saturday night.

"I have a team that's had teams come at them all year," coach John Calipari said, "and they responded again today."

It will be Kentucky's first appearance in the title game since winning a seventh NCAA crown back in 1998 and it gives Calipari another shot at the championship that has eluded him. The Wildcats (37-2) will face No. 2 seed Kansas, a 64-62 winner over Ohio State in the second semifinal.

As the final seconds ticked down, Davis pointed to the court and screamed twice, "This is my stage!"

Yes, yes, it is.

With a star-studded roster that includes at least three, maybe as many as five NBA lottery picks, Kentucky was the top seed in the tournament and the heavy favorite to cut down the nets when the whole tournament was done. And Calipari wouldn't let his young players consider anything else, saying repeatedly this was "just another game."

But playing in-state rival Louisville (30-10) is never just that, and the Cardinals made Kentucky work deep into the second half to grind this victory out.

Louisville outrebounded Kentucky 40-33, including a whopping 19-6 advantage on the offensive glass — the sole reason the Cardinals were able to make a game of this.

"To tell you the truth, I haven't always liked some of the Kentucky teams. I'm not going to lie to you," said Louisville coach Rick Pitino, who counts as something of an expert after spending eight years in Lexington and the last 11 with the Cardinals. "But I really like this team a lot because of their attitude and the way they play.

"I'll certainly be rooting for them hard to bring the trophy back to Kentucky. ... They're a great group of guys, doing a tremendous job."

So tremendous it led to a thawing, however briefly, in the frosty relationship between Calipari and Pitino. When the two shook hands after the game, Pitino congratulated Calipari and told him he'd be rooting for the Wildcats on Monday night.

"I think that's neat," Calipari said. "When I was at UMass, I can remember hugging him and telling him, 'I'm happy for you and I really want you to win the national title.' He did the same to me tonight, so I think it's kind of neat."

Calipari had taken another phenom-laden roster to the Final Four last year, only to see them come unglued against eventual national champion Connecticut. The Wildcats said all week they weren't going to let the same thing happen this time, and it showed in their workmanlike effort. No matter how close Louisville got, the Cardinals were never able to control the game. When they made a run, Kentucky found a way to stop it. When one of the Wildcats ran into foul trouble, the others picked him up.

Kentucky played so hard Davis went flying off the court twice, sailing all the way onto media row once.

"They made runs, and we made our runs. That's what coach always says," said Terrence Jones, who finished with six points and seven rebounds. "We never get rattled."

Bigger, bulkier and with Davis having a wider wingspan than some small airplanes, the Wildcats looked like playground bullies as they pushed Louisville around on their way to a 13-point lead early in the second half. But the Cardinals know a thing about rallies after coming from 11 points down to beat Florida in last weekend's West Regional final, and they sure made Kentucky sweat.

Russ Smith made back-to-back buckets to start a 15-3 run, and Peyton Siva capped it with a 3-pointer from NBA range that tied the game at 49 with 9:11 to play. But Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, who played just 23 minutes because of foul trouble, made back-to-back buckets to give the Wildcats some breathing room.

After Siva made a pair of free throws, Jones scored on a jumper and Darius Miller drilled a 3 — only Kentucky's second of the game — to give the Wildcats control for good.

"They were the better team today," Siva said.

Just to make sure Louisville didn't get any wild notions about another late comeback, Kidd-Gilchrist threw down a monstrous dunk with 1:05 to play that had Kentucky fans on their feet and assistant coaches from Kansas and Ohio State scrambling to try and find a way to stop this juggernaut.

Kentucky shot a dazzling 57 percent — yes, that's right — with Davis leading the way. He missed just one of his eight shots and finished with 18 points and 14 rebounds, and let his play speak for itself, not showing any emotion until those closing seconds of the game.

"Anthony Davis is just the No.1 player in the draft," Pitino said of the 19-year-old freshman, who has won just about every player of the year award there is. "When you're playing against Bill Russell on the pro level, you realize why the Celtics won 11 world championships."

Miller added 13 points, and Doron Lamb had 10. Kidd-Gilchrist had nine, all in the second half.

Siva led the Cardinals with 11 points, and Gorgui Dieng had 12 rebounds.

"I told the guys, 'Look, I'm going to Miami tomorrow and celebrating a season where we worked around the clock, around injuries and everything else. If you guys don't celebrate and have good, clean fun, you're fools,'" Pitino said.

The Kentucky-Louisville rivalry causes tempers to flare even in December when, in the grand scheme of things, games really don't mean much. Heck, it took government intervention just to get the two schools to play on a regular basis back in the 1980s.

With the NCAA title game on the line, the latest skirmish in basketball's version of the civil war so divided the small hoop-crazed state that senior citizens actually came to fisticuffs. But boy, did it make for a great show. The game was such a big deal that No. 1 Kentucky fan Ashley Judd wasn't even the biggest celeb in the house, with Jay-Z taking a prime seat behind the Kentucky bench.

"It's our fans; our fans are great to us," Davis said. "Our fans travel a long way. We want to go out here and give them a show and give them what they want, which is a national championship."

The ultimate bragging rights sure are a nice way to start.

Kentucky is 19-11 since the teams resumed playing in 1983-84, with the Wildcats winning four straight, including a 69-62 victory at Rupp Arena on Dec. 31 — almost the exact score as Saturday night's win.

The Wildcats know they're talented — there are three, maybe as many as five NBA lottery picks on the Kentucky roster — but they play without ego or cockiness, choosing instead to let their superior play overwhelm their opponents.

The Cardinals had skidded into the Big East tournament with four losses in their last six games, including back-to-back defeats to end the regular season. Pitino told his players they could either go home after the first week of the tournament or they could do something special — their choice.

The Cardinals chose the latter, ripping off four wins in four days to win the Big East tournament and ousting No. 1 seed Michigan State in the West Regional semifinals. Then came that comeback against rough-and-tumble Florida.

Those games hardened the Cardinals, and they promised they weren't simply happy to reach the Final Four. But they sure looked it early on, getting off to a slow, sloppy start. It didn't help that Dieng looked petrified of Davis and Siva was playing at hyperspeed, a pace Pitino has been trying to get him to tone down all year.

When they tried to go inside, Davis was less forgiving than a bouncer at a Hollywood club. When the Cardinals went outside, the Wildcats swarmed and forced them to take off-balance shots. Meanwhile, on the other end, Kentucky scored at will, repeatedly picking on Siva and Dieng.

But there's a reason Pitino has taken three teams to the Final Four. He pulled out every trick he had, switching strategies, begging the refs for calls and finding a way — finally — to calm his team down.

"Any time you don't know whether a team is better offensively or defensively, you know you've got a great basketball team," Pitino said. "And Anthony Davis is incredible."

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Baylor's Brittney Griner has fun while dominating - San Francisco Chronicle

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Baylor's Brittney Griner has fun while dominating - San Francisco Chronicle
Apr 1st 2012, 04:13

Denver --

Walking down a hall in the Pepsi Center on Saturday, Brittney Griner was asked how much longboarding has helped her balance and agility on the basketball court.

"A lot," she said. "I love it. I've been doing it a while. I started looking for empty swimming pools, like in that movie 'Lords of Dogtown.' It's my favorite movie."

Griner may be the scourge of women's college basketball - the 6-foot-8 Baylor junior is being called the greatest player of all time, and Saturday won the Associated Press player of the year - but she often acts like a wide-eyed girl who happens to have the body of an NBA player.

"She is such a kid; she reminds me of a 12-year-old," Baylor forward Destiny Williams said. "She is fun to hang around. She can make you laugh. But she'll get on you when she needs to. She plays video games. I beat her, so she's not that good."

In basketball, suffice it to say, there's no one else like her. She'll lead the No. 1 Lady Bears (38-0) against No. 2 Stanford (35-1) at 6 p.m. Sunday in the NCAA national semifinals. The other semifinal matches Connecticut (33-4) and Notre Dame (34-3) at 3:30. The winners play for the championship at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Thanks to Griner, the Bears are shooting for the first ever 40-0 season. But they'll have to get past the Ogwumike sisters, Nneka and Ogwumike, in what should be the most appealing matchup in the women's game in many years.

"I'm looking forward to it a lot," said Griner, who like the sisters comes from Houston. "I haven't seen Nneka or Chiney since high school, since summer ball. They play remarkable together - that sister instinct for each other on the floor at high-low."

In the past couple of years, Griner has built a game that's far more than just the shot-blocking skills of somebody with a 7-foot-4-inch wingspan, longer than LeBron James', who's 6-8. Heck, it's even longer than Andrew Bynum's, and he's a 7-footer.

Having sharpened her offensive moves, she averages 23.4 points, to go with her 9.4 rebounds a game and 199 blocks. She has more assists (64) than turnovers (62), impressive for a post player. She has improved her free throw shooting from 68.4 percent as a freshman to 80.4 this year.

Oh, yes, and she also has seven dunks in her career, two in this NCAA Tournament, tying Tennessee's Candace Parker, who did it twice in the 2006 Big Dance.

Baylor's other superstar, Heisman Trophy winner Robert Griffin III, has challenged her to a dunking contest, although coach Kim Mulkey has ruled it out until her eligibility is done. "I told him I'm gonna dunk on him," Griner said. "No problem."

Some have wondered if she would leave school before her eligibility is up. She turns 22 in October, so she could enter the WNBA this year. But she emphasized Saturday, "I'm staying."

"Could you say that a little louder?" said Mulkey, who won AP coach of the year Saturday.

"I'm not going anywhere."

She'll be going to the Olympics with the U.S. team, of course. Earlier this year, Tennessee coach Pat Summitt said the only player she had encountered who was similar to Griner was Uljana Semjonova, a 7-foot Russian who dominated the international game in the 1970s and '80s. "She didn't have the speed Griner has," Summitt said.

Griner has a hidden skill: She knows her way around car engines. "My dad was always under a car, and I was right there with him," she said. "I can do a tune-up, change the oil, change the brakes, take the rotors off."

She has put a turbocharge into women's basketball. Now she'd like to turn its biggest stage into her own garage.

Briefly: Nneka and Chiney Ogwumike were named to the Women's Basketball Coaches Association's All-America team, joining Griner and Baylor guard Odyssey Sims.

Final Four capsules

Here are the other teams in the Final Four with Stanford:

Notre Dame (34-3): Counting a win in last year's national semifinals, the Irish beat UConn three straight times before losing to the Huskies in this year's Big East tournament finals. Skylar Diggins, who averages 16.7 points and 5.8 assists, leads four returning starters from the team that lost to Texas A&M in last year's national final. The other main player to watch is guard Natalie Novosel (15.3).

Connecticut (33-4): Like Stanford, the Huskies are in their fifth straight Final Four. The difference is that they won titles in two of them (2009, '10). They start four guards, just as the Irish do, but lack the superstar they had previously in Maya Moore. Led by Big East Player of the Year Bria Hartley (13.9 points per game), Tiffany Hayes and freshman reserve Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis, they have bounced back from February losses to St. John's and Notre Dame.

Baylor (38-0): In the past two seasons, Brittney Griner has led the Lady Bears to a 72-3 record with her towering, shot-blocking presence. But this is not a one-woman show. All-America point guard Odyssey Sims is a terrific defensive player besides scoring 14.8 points per game. Destiny Williams, a 6-foot-1 post player, grabs 9.2 rebounds a game, just a tick behind Griner's 9.4. Baylor shoots more accurately than Stanford (49.0 percent to 46.0) and connects more often on threes (33.7 percent to 31.6).

- Tom FitzGerald

Tom FitzGerald is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Tfitzgerald@sfchronicle.com

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