UConn stifles Butler for NCAA title
Loading...
The 2011 national championship game fell right into the pattern of this year鈥檚 NCAA tournament when it played out, full of surprises.
And that鈥檚 not to say that Connecticut, a No. 3 seed, didn鈥檛 deserve this year鈥檚 crown, as the Huskies became champions of the ultimate dogfight with a 53-41 victory against Butler.
But for the first time in a long while, the nation didn鈥檛 get a front row seat to the Kemba Walker scoring show. While Walker did post a game-high 16 points, Monday night鈥檚 performance wasn鈥檛 the star guard鈥檚 normal performance.
For that matter, the entire game didn鈥檛 exactly revolve around offense at all. The Huskies instead won their third national title since 1999 with a resilient man-to-man defense that stunned Butler鈥檚 offense.
UConn kept the Bulldogs to the lowest field-goal percentage ever seen in the NCAA finale, as Butler went on to shoot just a meager 18.8 percent. And the Bulldogs' shots weren鈥檛 falling because the Huskies wouldn鈥檛 let them.
After Butler scratched its way to a 22-19 edge at the half, thanks to a buzzer-beating 3-pointer, Butler guard Shelvin Mack struggled in his 13-point performance 鈥 largely due to Jeremy Lamb鈥檚 smothering coverage.
UConn center Alex Oriakhi also helped to shut down Butler鈥檚 offensive production from the start, as the sophomore kept Butler forward Matt Howard to just seven points, all while putting up his own double-double with 11 points and 11 rebounds.
Add four blocks next to Oriakhi鈥檚 name, as well as four by freshman Roscoe Smith, and it became clear that UConn's interior defense let Walker and Lamb take over on scoring. The Huskies found their route to cutting down the nets.
It鈥檚 been quite a run for the same Huskies that finished ninth in the Big East this year, with a 9-9 conference record. Heading into the title game, it wasn鈥檛 really clear whether the Huskies overtook Butler鈥檚 previous underdog title from the Bulldogs' unfinished Cinderella story from the year prior.
But UConn鈥檚 five straight wins en route to a Big East tournament title set the Huskes on a path where they haven鈥檛 stopped running since. Eleven games later, the Huskies and head coach Jim Calhoun are this year鈥檚 NCAA national champions.