Off the cuff: Luke Maye is deservedly getting most of the attention following UNC's dramatic win over Kentucky. But, if it weren't for Joel Berry playing through pain, the Heels would be done. Early in the game, Berry rolled his left ankle after Kentucky's De'Aaron Fox slapped his leg as he was driving - something that wasn't called a foul. He went to the bench and then the lockerroom to be attended to by the trainer. He was already hampered by a right ankle sprain that he re-injured in practice - something that was new information following the win. While missing all five of his three attempts - UNC coach Roy Williams said he was having trouble pushing off his foot - Berry scored 11 points, mostly due to driving to the basket. He also had three assists and two steals while leading the Tar Heels during his 33 minutes on the court. It was truly a team effort as Kennedy Meeks hauled in a career-high 17 points. Theo Pinson, who had a rough patch where he turned the ball over three times in a short period of time, came through with six points down the stretch, including four straight free throws. Justin Jackson led the team with 19 points but he missed four of his five three-point attempts and missed the front end of a one-and-one that allowed Kentucky to tie it before Maye's heroics. During Berry's injury time, senior Stilman White came in for five minutes and he drove to the hoop for a basket that gave Carolina a five-point cushion in the first half. Carolina led by as many as nine (in the first half) and trailed by as many as five (in the second half). With seven minutes left in the game, the Tar Heels had led all but 18 seconds of game action. Kentucky's Isaac Humphries, who had never scored in double figures, scored eight points in three minutes - finishing with 12 - to help the Wildcats to that 64-59 lead. UNC coach Roy Williams said he reminded the team of what they had done by coming back to beat Arkansas earlier in the tournament. He said, "You've shown you can do this." The Tar Heels responded with a 12-0 run, just like they had done against the Razorbacks. Still, it took the big shot by Maye at the end. "It's a great feeling that my teammates and my coach put me in that situation," he said. Every once in a while I like to mention forgotten plays earlier in games - particularly bad calls by officials - that could make a difference. Yes, there are bad calls both ways, and yes, the calls usual even out. Kentucky fans - and the coach - felt the Wildcats got the short end of the stick from officials. Coach John Calipari made a crack in his post-game press conference that it was amazing his team had a chance at the end after they'd just about fouled out his team. There were touch fouls both ways. But those are opinion calls. There was a goal tend against Kentucky that was controversial. While the ball wasn't going to go in, it still was partially within the rim. Technically, I suppose it was a correct call but most officials, seeing that it was going to fall off the rim, probably would not have called it. There were several calls that were just wrong. With 8:38 left in the first half, and neither TV nor radio mentioned this but you can go back on your DVR to see, Berry knocked the ball off Edrice Adebayo's leg out of bounds but the official gave it back to the Wildcats. Frustratingly, just 14 seconds later, Kennedy Meeks blocked a shot and it seemed to go out of bounds off Adebayo but the same official once again gave it back to the Wildcats. (By the way, Adebayo was born in Washington, NC and is a native of Pinetown, NC.) In the last minute of the game, the official called a five-second inbounds violation on Meeks who was running the baseline trying to get it in. Use your stopwatch, it was four seconds. Still, you have timeouts to burn so Meeks should have called a timeout before relying on an official to wave his hand in time correctly. If the Tar Heels play with poise, cut down on the turnovers and hit a better percentage of free throws, they won't have to worry about officials' calls in the Final Four. |
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