NCAA Men’s Tournament WEST REGION FINAL

Dagger of revenge

Long-range three-pointers send Badgers to Final Four

Arizona’s Brandon Ashley (21) and Gabe York (1) try to block out Wisconsin forward Frank Kaminsky after a free throw during the second half of Saturday’s West Region final at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. The Wildcats’ defense didn’t have much luck containing Kaminsky, who led the Badgers with 29 points and six rebounds.
Arizona’s Brandon Ashley (21) and Gabe York (1) try to block out Wisconsin forward Frank Kaminsky after a free throw during the second half of Saturday’s West Region final at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. The Wildcats’ defense didn’t have much luck containing Kaminsky, who led the Badgers with 29 points and six rebounds.

WISCONSIN 85, ARIZONA 78

LOS ANGELES -- Just call him Sam Dagger.

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AP

Wisconsin forward Sam Dekker (15) tries for a shot under pressure from Arizona forward Stanley Johnson during Saturday’s game. Dekker scored 27 points, including five second-half three-pointers.

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AP

Men's Division 1 Basketball Championship bracket.

Sam Dekker hit five of Wisconsin's 10 three-pointers in the second half on his way to a second consecutive career high of 27 points, Frank Kaminsky added 29 points and the top-seeded Badgers beat No. 2 Arizona 85-78 on Saturday to reach consecutive Final Fours for the first time in school history.

The Wildcats pulled to within five points twice in the last 2½ minutes, but both times Dekker connected on three-pointers, narrowly beating the shot clock on the first one.

"Sam Dekker pretty much just crushed our dreams with that shot," Arizona guard T.J. McConnell said.

Dekker confirmed the Badgers are more than just "Frank the Tank." The junior followed up his career-high 23 points and 10 rebounds in a semifinal victory over North Carolina with timely shooting that bailed out the Badgers.

"Incredible game," tweeted Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers from his seat behind the Badgers' bench, calling Dekker "cold blooded."

Wisconsin (35-3) denied the Wildcats (34-4) a Final Four berth for the second consecutive year, having beaten them by one point in overtime in Anaheim a year ago when their seeds were reversed.

"That loss left a sour taste in our mouth, so we wanted to get back," Dekker said of last season's one-point loss to Kentucky in the national semifinals. "As a team we set some goals of what we wanted to do, and now we're two games away from our last goal."

The Badgers and their 67-year-old coach, Bo Ryan, head to Indianapolis next week hoping for another shot at undefeated and top-seeded Kentucky.

"I'm so proud of these guys to be able to say that they've answered the bell in the second half in almost every game we've played here in the last seven to 10 games," Ryan said. "They're a tough bunch, and I hope they don't change."

Rondae Hollis-Jefferson and Brandon Ashley scored 17 points each for the Wildcats, who again failed to deliver a first-time Final Four appearance for coach Sean Miller. McConnell added 14 points in his college finale, and Kaleb Tarczewski and Gabe York had 11 each.

"It was tough to be playing hard on defense and trying to get a stop to win the game and he made those shots," Hollis-Jefferson said of Dekker. "It was tough to watch them go in, but in basketball you have those days."

Miller compared the Badgers' offensive execution and ability to make shots to a video game.

"Sam Dekker and Frank Kaminsky, they're really good," Miller said. "No team has done what they did to us in the second half. They made shots, and if they play like that next weekend they have a chance to win it all."

The Badgers hit 10 of 12 three-point attempts in the second half -- connecting on a season-high 67 percent overall -- and outscored the Wildcats 30-3 from long range. Dekker had five three-pointers and was named most outstanding player in the West Region.

"This tournament, he's really shown his full arsenal offensively and defensively," teammate Josh Gasser said. "When he's confident like that making plays, being aggressive, this is the stuff that happens."

Arizona closed to within two points early in the second half only to watch Dekker casually fling up a rainbow three-pointer. The Wildcats were within one a minute later, and Dekker let loose with another high-arcing three-pointer, sending Badger fans into delirium.

"Eventually when that ball gets out, everybody on the court can shoot it and they get you with an open three that breaks your back," Miller said. "They had two threes at the half. Think about that."

Arizona pressured full court in the last four minutes, making for some perilous possessions by the Badgers as they darted and passed trying to safely get the ball down court. A long inbounds pass by Wisconsin was nearly intercepted before Gasser grabbed it, was fouled and made both free throws to keep the Badgers ahead by 10 points.

"Emptied the bucket, and it was a big one," Miller said of his defensive schemes. "We've tried everything."

Just like a year ago, Kaminsky was a big key. He sidestepped and slithered, pivoted and deked in eluding the Wildcats' lockdown defense. Arizona tossed its biggest bodies on the 7-footer and he still found ways to score inside and out.

Kaminsky led the Badgers' offensive outburst to start the second half. He scored eight of their 14 points, working their inside-outside game to perfection in finding Dekker for a three-pointer to put Wisconsin ahead 44-36.

"I'm just so happy right now," Kaminsky said.

Hollis-Jefferson and Tarczewski picked up their third fouls and Stanley Johnson left the game to have his contact lens adjusted, all in quick succession. It didn't faze the Wildcats, who went on a 10-3 run to close to 47-46.

Dekker hit Wisconsin's fifth three-pointer of the second half, launching a 10-2 run that gave the Badgers a 57-48 lead. Nigel Hayes added a three-pointer and Kaminsky scored on a reverse layup before getting called for his third foul.

Sports on 03/29/2015

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