March 28, 2015
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Video: Willie Cauley-Stein, Tyler Ulis
Video: Dakari Johnson and Trey Lyles
Transcript: Kentucky Postgame Press Conference
MODERATOR: We’ll let Coach Calipari open with a statement.
COACH CALIPARI: I’m really proud of the guys. All we did, we were just scratching to stay in the game. I don’t know if our breakdowns, until I watch the tape, were us or Notre Dame being that good offensively. And I’ll tell you the thing on the side pick and roll and the empty side pick and roll, that’s on me as a coach. We never figured it out, we tried doing some different things and they just kept scoring on that, and Mike did what he should have, just kept going back at it. It was nice to see Aaron do what Aaron does, just a huge 3. It was great to see Andrew play an okay game, but make the plays down the stretch. It was great to see in the second half, us able to throw at Karl Towns, and they either were scoring or you got to leave somebody. And then Tyler makes that 3 in the corner. But we were just fighting to stay in the game, to be honest with you, and it was nice to see how it finished for these kids.
Q. Karl, could you just talk a little bit about what changed in the second half? You were 2 for 5 in the field the first half, I don’t think you missed a shot the second half. What changedoffensively there?
Karl-Anthony Towns: I just did a better job of getting better position. Also I jumped a lot more, used my legs. I was liking that in the first half. And in the second half, I just trusted what the coaching staff told me, and I guess theresults speak for themselves.
Q. For Andrew and Aaron, how does this win compare to last year’s win?
Andrew Harrison: It’s pretty similar. Michigan last year had a great offense as well. Two great teams, came out a winner. We didn’t play our bestgame but Notre Dame is a great team.
Aaron Harrison: Yeah, I think we played a lot better last year actually. We didn’t play that well, but we just figured out ways to win last year and this year, and that’s what we’ve been doing allyear.
Q. Andrew, if you could just talk about the last play offensively and also the defense on the last play on their shot, too? Just kind of walk us through both of those things.
Andrew Harrison: I mean, I think, Coach told me to go at 9 and I think I went a little bit before that. It was so wide open that I just tried to take it, and I got fouled and got to make two free throws. Second, that was all Willie, I was yelling his name, you know how great Willie is on defense, he was running right with him.
Q. For any of the players, in the second half you didn’t have three consecutive stops the whole half until the end when you needed to have those three consecutive stops. What was the differencein those three possessions?
Andrew Harrison: I don’t know. Desperation, probably. We had no choice or we were going to lose.
Aaron Harrison: Exactly what he said. Just I mean, I think we just focused, when our back’sagainst the wall, do what we have to do to win the game.
Devin Booker: Basically just what they said. We’ve been in that position a few times this year. Each time we try to start with stops, and we know that will lead to offense and that’s what we’ve been doing.
Karl-Anthony Towns: Desperation.
Q. Aaron, is it almost good to have a game like this, that you guys know that you can dig deep and come back and pull it out like this?
Aaron Harrison: I don’t know about that. I mean, I would rather play well and win by a lot than play a close game like that. But yeah, I mean, we know our will to win. And it just showed us we never give up, and we fight to the end just like any other team.
Q. Karl, did it get to the point in the second half you just felt like if you got the ball you were goingto score, they just couldn’t stop you? Did you have that feeling?
Karl-Anthony Towns: It did. I mean, I felt very confident in myself and just made confident moves. Like I said, I listened to the coaching staffand I was just making shots.
Q. For Aaron and Andrew, just a quick thought, you’re going back to the Final Four. What does thatmean to you to get back there again? I know that’s one of the reasons you said you came back.
Andrew Harrison: It means it’s a blessing. Go down there and try to focus and try to win two games.
Aaron Harrison: Exactly what he said. We’re definitely not finished. We still can get better with two more games left in the season. We have places to improve, and we will improve this weekend and go down there a different team.
MODERATOR: Gentlemen, thank you for your time. We’ll continue with questions for Coach Calipari.
Q. Could you talk about that last sequence with Andrew, because it didn’t seem like one of his better games and he made the two free throws for you. He was running down there with Willie, too, on that defense. Is that kind of what you expect from him?
COACH CALIPARI: They didn’t have a timeout, and I wasn’t going to call one. You guys know how I am. I wasn’t to call one and let Mike design something crazy, so we weren’t going to call a timeout. What we did on the last play was, with eight to nine seconds to go, he was to take it and we had some stuff working on the back side. I said, if you don’t have it, you’ve got stuff behind. We had something for Willie over the top. But he drove in and he got it, he got fouled. And it was a foul, I looked at it, he moved. It was close, but he moved. Andrew tried to avoid him, which made him move instead of just jumping, which is something we do work on a lot but he’s been great at.
Q. Obviously they’re a really good offensive team, but what was it about them defensively that gaveyou problems early on?
COACH CALIPARI: Well, we knew we were going to throw to the post every chance we could, and we just missed — they were physical enough to cause us to miss 10 one footers in the first half. You know, that was an issue for us because now they didn’t have to leave off the wings. They had to leave Tyler Ulis and give him that three to guard Karl. That’s how you’re trying to play but if you can’t make the one footer, they don’t have to do anything. The other thing is they’re physical. Shots went up, they fought. We out-rebounded them by one, but that was lucky, we only get 10 offensive rebounds. So they’re a better defensive team than you give them credit for and they’re also a tougher team, physically a tougher team. Their guards bothered us, especially earlyin the game, they got up in us.
Q. Coach, Aaron or Andrew said that they’re going to get better this week, because of this close game. And Willie in the dressing room said he’s glad that you have the week to prepare forWisconsin. Because of this close win, assuming that you always have their attention, do you think you’ll have their attention even a little bit more?
COACH CALIPARI: Yeah. Trey didn’t play particularly well. I thought Dakari did some good stuff. I didn’t give Marcus enough time, but the game didn’t dictate that I should because of how it played. I’m glad that Devin Booker’s making shots, but we’ve got to get a little bit better in this pick and roll defense. I think, again, I don’t remember a whole lot about Wisconsin. I mean, I’ll watch this game tape tonight and then probably start on Wisconsin tomorrow at some point in the day. I know Bo Ryan, and he’s a great friend, and how good he coaches. And I’ve said all along I thought the three best teams were us, Wisconsin and Arizona — and Duke. And other teams are right there, but those four seem to be a little bit better than the others. And those two, I feel bad for Arizona because they had to play in that regional final because they are a Final Four team but that’s how this stuff goes sometimes.
Q. You won a lot of close games last year in the tournament but you were a No. 8 seed last year. This year you’re an undefeated favorite and you were behind most of the second half, behind by six, six minutes to go. Pressure’s all on you. Did you feel that then, do you think your team felt that or do you think your team just played the way it would play if this were January in RuppArena?
COACH CALIPARI: My mind is never on we may lose. My whole mindset all the time is how are we going to win, how do we win this game. That’s all I keep saying to myself, how do we win the game. I want them to know we’re not playing not to lose; we play to win. That means be aggressive offensively. And so I’m telling you, I was trying every combination I could just to keep us in the game. And then we had to have the 3 by Aaron. We had to have the 3 by Tyler. We had to have and-1 by Karl, think about this, to stay in the game. So they had to make the plays, but we were breaking down defensively. I couldn’t keep Trey in the game. Tyler jumped on the guy’s side. It was an and-1. We were breaking down defensively ourselves. And again, that side pick and roll stuff is not my team, that’s on me. But they did enough, and they wanted to win, they do have a will to win, and I know that. I know that, I’ve coached them, I know they’ll make plays. It’s just a matter of youhave to keep the game close enough so they can.
Q. You guys, I think, made your last nine baskets and you got three stops at the end of the game. A lot has been made about how young your team is, and maybe they wouldn’t be able to execute likethat down the stretch. What does that tell you about your guys?
COACH CALIPARI: Well, when you have Willie, Aaron and Andrew in there most of that time, but I had Tyler in there a lot of the time, and Karl. And then we had to switch Karl in and out because of the foul trouble, I wanted him off the floor. Not only foul trouble, he was defensively hurting us. But I’ve just seen these kids make plays. I trust them. I trust to put them in, instead of running a play, put them in a position to make a play, which iswhat I try to do.
Q. Because of the number of wins that you’ve had and some of the easier games or not close games inthe tournament, do you think your guys get enough credit for their determination and will?
COACH CALIPARI: I don’t know. They do from me. I think that’s all they care about right now. I mean, again, we’re — we know we’re not perfect. We’re undefeated, but we’re not perfect. I mean, we showed that tonight. We’re really young and showed it tonight a ton. We had some turnovers that were like, “What did you just do? You just threw them the ball.” We did some things that we work on every day not to drive baseline. We drove baseline, stepped out of bounds. There were things that we did that showed our youth. But that being said, you still have a will to win. I’ll tell you, if people don’t realize it, Andrew and Aaron still drive this team. Willie does his thing, Karl was tremendous today, but those other two kids drive this team. Tyler comes in, Devin comes in. Those other two, they drove us last year to the final game, and they’re doing the same thingthis year.
Q. Coach, they said the word desperation a couple times. Is that a word that floats around the program? Has it floated around this year, and how do you handle it. You reacted a bit when theysaid it?
COACH CALIPARI: I don’t think we ever talk about it. They must have felt like it’s time. Now, they were in every huddle saying, “let’s go, it’s time.” They were saying it to each other in every huddle. My thing is in these games, we can’t help the other team. We can’t. We helped Notre Dame a lot today. But until I watch the tape, I think they’re a great offensive team and they did some stuff and got us in some different positions and situations that were not good. But again, I don’t ever use it. My thing is just keep playing,man, keep playing. We’ll figure it out.
Q. How good did you think Karl was the second half?
COACH CALIPARI: He was unbelievable, and my staff was telling me, take him out, he’s not guarding him. I was like he’s the only guy scoring, I’ve got to leave him in. So I was trying to leave him — then he started taking himself out on defense, he was like, “take me out.” But, again, offensively, by the time this season winds down, I want people to look and say, wow, a big man, can make free throws, can score around the basket, can play pick and roll defense, not today but he can. Blocked shots, makes his free throws. That’s what you want, and I’ll tell you, he’s thegreatest kid, he’s a great kid, really is.
Q. John, Willie at times it seemed like he struggled a little bit defensively or whatever but hemade the plays at the end, he got his finger on Grant’s 3 and then chased Grant on that final play?
COACH CALIPARI: Let me just say at halftime, I’m walking in and they’re looking, we’re not playing loose enough, we’re not playing loose enough. I said you’re playing too cool. It’s hard to be loose when the other team is playing harder than you. And I felt their guards were playing more aggressive on our guards on both offense and defense. I thought our bigs were standing straight up and down, and acting like, wow, we can get these guys. I said, you can’t play loose unless you’re competing at a high level, then you can let it go offensively. Be loose and aggressive. We weren’t because it’s hard to be loose when a guy’s up in you and you’re just trying to make a pass. And I think Willie and Andrew, they all fell into that in the first half. And give Notre Dame credit, they came right after us, they were not afraid, they were confident. We made some plays down the stretch. We don’t make them, they’regoing to Indy, and we’re going home.
Q. One of your former players will be playing tomorrow, in Wiltjer. What have you thought of whathe’s accomplished this year?
COACH CALIPARI: I’m so proud of Kyle, I can’t begin to tell you. My wife and I watch his games and I text him, we text back and forth. What he’s done, I knew he could do. You know, when kids make decisions to stay or leave, I don’t always agree. And I’m talking NBA or choose to go to another program, but at the end of the day, I am for Kyle Wilshire, that’s who I’m for. Unless we’re playing him, then I hope he misses every shot. Other than that, I can’t begin to tell you — and Mark is such a great coach, getting him to defend, elevating his game, not letting him settle for just being an offensive player, but being a guy that can score next to the basket, can pass, can shoot. Mark is making him a well-rounded player, something obviously I didn’t do as good a job of. But I’m proud of him and really happyfor him.
MODERATOR: We want to thank Coach Calipari for his time.
Kentucky Postgame Locker Room Quotes
Willie Cauley-Stein – Jr., F
Talk about the ending – the foul shots and the defense.
“Drew drove to the basket hard. We knew Grant was going to take the last shot so we put four guys on him running back. It’s crazy though. He still almost had a chance to make it.”
Coach talked early in the season about being tested. Was this a test tonight?
“Absolutely. They had a good offensive scheme and it worked for them tonight. We were fortunate enough to come out with a win.”
Were you surprised they drove to the basket tonight? They really were not afraid to go inside the lane.
“The way their offense is set up, they can do that. They put a shooter in the corner where I’m guarding the shooter, so you can’t leave the shooter and go block the shot. So it’s really one-on-one. If you get past the guy, you really don’t have a shot-blocker to beat. That’s their system. That’s the way they played it.”
How would you describe Karl’s performance tonight?
“Great. Could have been a little better on defense, but offensively he was a monster. They couldn’t stop him. When he’s playing like that, you give him the ball and get out of his way. Let him go to work.”
Grant said that he thought that step-back three was the best move he made all night, and he couldn’t believe you got back there to block it. Did you think you were going to get there in time?
“I had no idea that I was even that close to him to even block it. I barely tipped it. It was a crazy step-back. He’s probably one of the fastest step-backs that I’ve guarded. He’s good at it. He knows how to set you up. “
Are you glad you have a few days off to prepare for the next one?
“Especially since we’re playing Wisconsin. I’m glad we’ve got a week to prepare for them. Great team. The way they play together is the best in the country. I’m glad we don’t have one day to prepare for them. One day to prepare for a team like Notre Dame – that’s why we couldn’t stop them.”
Tyler Ulis – Fr., G
That three you made from the corner – that was a big shot.
“The whole bench was yelling at me, `shoot the ball, shoot the ball!’ when Karl had it. He kicked it out, and I just had to knock it down.”
How about that blocked shot Willie had on Grant. Is there any other player in the country that could do that?
“No other player in the country. He’s 7-foot. The Grant kid is a great player. He was beating us off the dribble a lot. He hit him with a move – step-back. Willie read it perfectly and blocked the shot. The biggest play of the game, actually.”
What did you see the final play where Willie guarded Grant the entire way up the floor and made him shoot a bad shot?
“Oh, that was great. That just tells you how good he is defensively because he’s 7 feet, two inches but plays like a guard. He can get down like me when he wants to.”
Trey Lyles, Fr., F
They say what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger. What can you guys learn from this game?
“Everybody can learn from this. We have faith in each other at the end of the games, and that’s all that matters. We came out a little sluggish again today, but we’re going to try and come back from that next weekend.”
Your defense wasn’t where you wanted it to be tonight but it still pulled through at the end. What does that say to you?
“In the crucial parts of the game we locked down defensively.”
What did you think of how Notre Dame played?
“They played very well. They’re a great team. They knocked down shots, played their offense well and their guys played their roles to a `T’.”
What does it say to you guys that you closed the game with nine straight made baskets?
“It shows that we can finish a game. We’re a physical team and we execute. A lot of guys have ice in their veins when it comes to those moments.”
Marcus Lee – So., F
“What’s your emotion after this game?”
“Did you guys just watch that game? That’s belief. I feel really relieved and I feel proud of my team that we got here.”
How special was it to win a close game where you guys didn’t play your best?
“We’re still learning. We learned that we can’t let up on anybody. We can’t have the game we just had. We have to fix it.”
What was your feeling as Notre Dame started to build a lead?
“My emotions were `Oh my God, pick it up, we’re going to punch you in the face.’ And that’s just how we are. We try to rev each other up to get things done. Notre Dame played a great game.”
You guys didn’t cut down the net last time. Why did you cut them down this time?
“We just forgot last time! Ya’ll keep bringing that up. We were just excited.”
Back-to-back final fours. What does it feel like?
“I’m just ecstatic. This is a dream for every basketball player.”
Dakari Johnson – So., C
What does it mean to you to advance to the next round?
“We’ve been through a long season. Just to make it to another Final Four is great. Hopefully we come back with a different outcome this time.”
How important has family been to your group?
“Most definitely – they’ve been there supporting me through my ups and downs. Sharing that moment at the end after growing up watching the tournament as a kid, and then you actually experience this. It’s a crazy experience.”
What do you do with the net?
“Ah, I don’t know. I’m not sure. I give all this stuff to my mom, and she keeps it somewhere stashed away. I don’t know where she keeps it.” (Laughs)
Transcript: Notre Dame Postgame Press Conference
MODERATOR: Welcome Coach Brey, let him open with an opening statement and then we’ll take questions.
COACH BREY: What a great college game. It was thrilling to be part of it. It lived up to the hype. We’re extremely disappointed. We really thought we had a great chance of beating them, and I thought we displayed that, but I think you’ve got to give them credit, they made some big plays, they made some timely 3- point shots at key times. And we got a little stagnant offensively, but it’s easy to get stagnant against that length. It takes its toll on you at times but I’m proud of our group, man. We emptied the tank tonight, and that’s all I asked them to do before the game.
Q. Zach, in those final couple of minutes was it a question of their defense or were you guys looking to milk the clock, or what was the mentality in those last couple minutes?
ZACH AUGUSTE: We just wanted to execute and we just want to win the game. We had them where we wanted, but in the end we didn’t execute to get the win.
Q. What will you remember most about what you were able to accomplish this season?
STEVE VASTURIA: Yeah, it was a special season. Real special group of guys, we won a lot of big games, we put ourself in position to win today. So just remember the memories of the teammates and big wins and playing with really tough kids, especially our leaders, Jerian and Pat.
ZACH AUGUSTE: One thing I definitely remember is being on the court with all 12 of my brothers. It was a great experience. It started in Italy. We had a great trip and we built something that was really special that this program hasn’t scene in a long time. It means so much to us and we’re happy to come right back here next year.
Q. Zach, could you talk about the play of Karl Towns and what it was like trying to stop him. Steve, you guys scored on eight straight possessions and the last three possessions you didn’t score, was that due to their defense or something you didn’t do on offense, do you think?
ZACH AUGUSTE: You know, you’ve got to give them the credit, he was a great post player. I had some great looks but I’m just focused on us right now. We didn’t do what we had to do to get the win, that’s all.
STEVE VASTURIA: Yeah, I think it was a combination of both. We were trying to spread the floor like we’ve been doing all game and I think we got some good looks, we just didn’t knock them down like we had in the previous possessions. Like Coach and Zach said, you have to give them credit. They did a good job contesting and getting out on shooters and making it tough for us to score on those possessions.
Q. Zach, did you expect to be as productive as you were inside considering their size? I’m sure you expect to get something, but 20 points and nine rebounds was a big night for you.
ZACH AUGUSTE: I just wanted to go out there and be aggressive and impact the game any way my teammates needed me. But it’s not just about me, we had a great team basketball. Everybody had a part of this game, everybody did something good from 1 to 13. So we just focused on being together and enjoying this as a team.
Q. Steve, what did you feel like you guys could do to attack Kentucky and in what ways did you feel you were successful?
STEVE VASTURIA: Yeah, you know with our guards and the way we play, I think we did a good job spreading the floor. When we attack the rim like we have been doing all season, Jerian and Demetrius got in the lane and when they didn’t finish, Zach was right there to clean it up. I think we were able to spread the floor, we just didn’t do it enough to come out with the win.
MODERATOR: Any further questions for our student- athletes? Gentlemen, why don’t you get back to the locker room, thank you for your time. We’ll continue now with questions for Coach Brey.
Q. Mike, you lost the game, and I’m sure it’s still pretty raw, but how much do you think this game is testimony to the idea that there are no sure things? I think a lot of people didn’t see this kind of game coming.
COACH BREY: Yeah, I mean, we really thought we had a great chance as the game was going on, you know, I thought we just felt we could win the game. We were very confident. The first half gave us even more confidence. We played such a great schedule and played so many hard games and good teams, I think we’re really battle tested to absorb their punches. I’m really proud of our group. We were a little tired at the end. I used a couple timeouts just to rest us. We were fatigued a little bit because our guys play a lot. Their length at times shrinks the court and it just makes it a little difficult, and it did there a couple possessions at the end of the game.
Q. Mike, I know the last play didn’t have any timeouts, what was the plan, what was discussed?
COACH BREY: I told Jerian to try to get — can you get to the bucket, maybe you can just get to the bucket. They did such a great job kind of doubling him. He went for the win, I don’t fault him for that. He tried to get something off but I don’t think he could turn the corner. Even some of the shots he took in those possessions that were a little empty, you can say get to the basket, it’s a little harder to get to the basket against these guys, there’s not a lot of room in there. And I thought they doubled him out of bounds and they did a great job kind of riding him all the way to the end. You know, when we couldn’t get the key stop to get it to overtime, that’s where you lose the game really. You’ve got to get that stop. And it was Harrison, I think, right, that made the drive? Demetrius tried to get the charge. You don’t get a stop there, you know, you’re starting to doubt a little.
Q. Can you talk about the defensive game plan. And aside from Karl, it seemed like Kentucky’s bigs really struggled to get anything going down low?
COACH BREY: We just didn’t want to give up too many clean looks. We felt we could absorb two point shots from their bigs. Towns was fabulous. Our two big guys, God bless them, they were on their own most of the night. The one time I go zone, Booker hits a 3, and the one time we tell to help a little bit, Ulis hits a 3. So now you’re like, the rest of the game, fellas, you’re on your own, we’ve got to hug these guys because I think we can absorb 2s. I love how we battled on the board against their size. But we have played big teams and we’ve held our own on the backboard and we did that again tonight to give ourselves a chance to win.
Q. So how do you balance the emotion then of playing as well as you did, taking down to the last possession and knowing that this is the end and you lost the way you did?
COACH BREY: Yeah, I don’t know if it will sink in. I think I was in denial because walking down the hall, I had Auguste and Vasturia and I was talking about next season, that was my way of thinking ahead a little bit. The one thing I did tell them, I said, when we walk out of here, man, we’re champions now, we’re going to get championship rings, this group won a championship and hopefully it’s something to build on and I spent some time with Pat and Jerian, and just thanked them for what they’ve done for our program. I think it will still be a little raw here until tomorrow, but I’ve been in long enough, I’ll be label able to look back and digest it, and my assistants will probably have some recruiting stuff for me tomorrow, knowing them.
Q. Mike, you mentioned Pat and Jerian, is that kind of the toughest part of losing in this tournament, is saying goodbye to seniors, especially two that have meant so much to you guys?
COACH BREY: Yeah, the one thing I said to them in the locker room, “You know what’s really depressing? We lost the game but we don’t get to practice tomorrow, I don’t get to be around this group.” And that includes certainly our two seniors because it was so energizing and rewarding to be with this team, it was uplifting. I was thinking, walking down the hall, that’s over, you don’t get to do that anymore. But those two guys are big-time winners, and man, have they left a mark for the young guys in our program.
Q. 34 seconds left, sorting through the loose ball. Did you care one way or the other whether it was a jump ball or your possession?
COACH BREY: Well, I loved that we had it. One second’s a little tough to operate with, and we tried to get something for Jerian curling. The problem is when Cauley-Stein is hot on the ball, there wasn’t a whole lot of room to get anything, and it’s too bad we at least couldn’t get a shot upright there. But I thought the ball pressure of a 7-footer, and wing span on Pat, we just couldn’t get anything. And then you’ve got to be really mentally tough. And this group, they have been all year to kind of flush that and guard to get it to overtime. We’ve done that a bunch, but we couldn’t do it tonight, and you give Kentucky credit.
Q. Coach, you joked about being the loosest coach in America. What are you telling them in the second half when you guys go on that 13-4 run, and also the final minute?
COACH BREY: We were talking about this is what we’ve done in the second half, we’ve had runs offensively and we’ve played with great emotion and spirit and fearlessness. I wasn’t saying a whole lot. They were talking in the timeouts like, we’re up five, let’s see if we can get it to 10. All things that we talked about through the year. I mean, we gave ourselves a chance, and it’s disappointing because, you know, you really had — you had the thing, you had a great chance to win it. But our guys felt we had a great chance to win it.
Q. Looking ahead to the Final Four, what type of team, what sort of style do you think can give Kentucky the kind of —
COACH BREY: Wisconsin, did they win? Yeah, that’s a great match-up, that’s a great match-up. Wisconsin’s a little bit like us, they’re skilled and they can spread people out a little bit. They have a little more bulk and frontline size, but they’re really skilled offensive guys, and certainly we were able to get some things tonight. But the size does get to you, over 40 minutes it can take its toll on you and I thought the defensive possessions, as good as Jerian was getting us there, getting us a couple possession lead, it kind of swallowed him a little bit a couple times. But we’ll go down with him making plays because he’s made all the plays for us all year to get us here.
Q. Coach, you mentioned how you were looking ahead to next year even after — what do you see when you look ahead to next year?
COACH BREY: Quick snapshot. When you have Jackson, Auguste, Vasturia, Bonzie Colson, Beachem, you’ve got a nice nucleus of guys that were a big part of a heck of a year, so I really hope that’s something for us to build on. I’m excited about moving forward with that group.
MODERATOR: Coach Brey, thank you for your time
Notre Dame Postgame Locker Room Quotes
Demetrius Jackson – Sophomore, G
Question – How difficult is this loss?
“It’s very difficult just because of how much we invested into it. We worked really hard and the toughest part is our seniors not being able to do it again. They did such a great job and we really wanted this one for them. It’s tough.”
Question – Talk about trying to draw a charge at the end of the game?
“I got in the lane and just tried to step in and take a charge.”
Question – You took arguably the best team in the Nation to the last second. Is there any pride in that?
“Yeah. Our team did such a great job and a really great effort. We played really hard, but there were a few things we could have done differently down the stretch.”
Jerian Grant – Senior, G
Question – Are you taking this loss as if “I didn’t get a good shot at the end?”
“Yeah, you know – the ball was in my hands. I had the call to either make an isolation play or call a set. I made the isolation play and didn’t make the shot.”
Question – Talk about being guarded by Kentucky’s Willie Cauley-Stein most of the night.
“It was different. You want to go past him – you know you can go past him, but his length – you feel like he’s going to block the shot. With my step-back, I felt like I created a lot of space. I was getting good looks, but they didn’t go in when we needed them.”
Question – Talk about the final shot.
“I surrendered trying to get a look. They had help-side (defense) that I didn’t see. It was tough.”
Pat Connaughton – Senior, G/F
Question – The game came down to about five seconds – does it feel?
“Yeah – that’s how close it was. A two-point ballgame – you can look back on every little thing. You can look back on the threes that I missed, you can look back on the free throws. You can nitpick the whole game but at the end of the day, that’s basketball – that’s sports. That is why we get that rush from it and why you live and die with it.”
Question – How much energy was expended with a seven-player rotation versus Kentucky’s constant substitution?
“It’s something we’ve done all year. I don’t think it’s something that was that different. It’s something we are accustomed to. We gave them a run for their money.”
Question – Was the final shot just an impromptu play?
“Yeah, we didn’t have any timeouts left. We gave the ball to our best player and let him try to make a play. To be honest with you, I was right under the basket to try and get the rebound. It looked pretty close to going in. It was on line – just a little long. At the end of the day, you put yourself in position to get a jump shot to win the game and sometimes it goes in and sometimes it doesn’t .”