UConn captures 3rd National Championship
Kemba Walker eletto MVP del torneo
Connecticut overcame a sub-par performance by All-America guard Kemba Walker with an inspired second-half rally to defeat Butler 53-41 on Monday, winning the NCAA basketball tournament for the third time.
Connecticut broke the game open when Jeremy Lamb scored 11 points during a 22-3 run that turned a six-point deficit into a 41-28 lead with six minutes to play.
Walker, the Huskies' leading scorer an average of 23.7 points per game, finished with a team-high 16 points on five of 19 shooting from the floor but missed all four of his three-point attempts.
Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun said the game was a defensive dogfight, a "thing of beauty" from a purist's standpoint.
"You'd like a few more baskets made, certainly," he said. "But it was two teams that weren't going to give in to each other and finally our superiority took over. But, damn, I loved it in the sense of the fight and competitiveness, between the two teams."
Butler hit only 12 of 64 shots to lose in the national championship game for the second consecutive year.
Coach Brad Stevens said: "Without question, 41 points, 12 of 64, is not good enough to win any game, let alone the national championship game.
"We guarded as well as we could. We gambled a little bit late because we had to, because we were just trying to figure out something to generate, a turn of the tide. And we just couldn't."
The Bulldogs' two best players, Shelvin Mack and Matt Howard, shot a combined five for 28, ending Butler's chances of pulling off an upset.
Mack hit a 23-foot, three-pointer at the first-half buzzer to give Butler a 22-19 lead, the lowest combined points total in the opening 20 minutes since 1945.
The Bulldogs shot 22% in the opening half but had the advantage by virtue of hitting five three-pointers, while Connecticut missed all five of their shots beyond the arc.
Connecticut and their Hall of Fame coach Jim Calhoun won NCAA titles in 1999 and 2004.
Butler, an arts school in Indianapolis with 4,200 students, lost the championship game to Duke last year 61-59 when a game-winning shot rebounded off the rim at the buzzer.
The Bulldogs lost their best player from a year ago, Gordon Hayward, to the NBA and were widely believed to have little chance of repeating last year's success.
The Huskies were also underdogs of sorts, at least this year, having been picked to finish in the bottom half.