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Kansas shocks Memphis to win title in OT

Chalmers' 3-pointer with 2.1 seconds left in regulation saves Jayhawks

Joe Mitchell / Reuters
Kansas players celebrate with their trophy after defeating Memphis for the NCAA championship on Monday.
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LeBron James, Kevin Garnett
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Darrell Arthur, Robert Dozier
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Take a visual tour of Kansas’ overtime victory over Memphis.

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updated 1:59 a.m. ET April 8, 2008

SAN ANTONIO - Memphis kept missing. Mario Chalmers wasn’t about to.

Chalmers’ 3-pointer with 2.1 seconds left in regulation put the game in overtime, and Kansas pulled away to a 75-68 victory on Monday night for its first national championship since Danny and the Miracles 20 years ago.

Mario and the Miracles? That has a good ring to it, too.

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Chalmers’ game-saving 3 came after Memphis missed four of five free throws that would have put the game and the title out of reach. It completed a comeback from nine points down with 2:12 left.

“It’ll probably be the biggest shot ever made in Kansas history,” Kansas coach Bill Self said.

The ending made a mockery of Memphis coach John Calipari’s theory that his players, one of the country’s worst with 59 percent free-throw shooting, didn’t have to be good because they would always come through when the stakes were highest.

“It will probably hit me like a ton of bricks tomorrow, that we had it in our grasp,” Calipari said.

All those bricks meant something in a game where every point counted. So did Derrick Rose’s two-point shot off glass initially ruled a 3 — and correctly overturned — with 4:15 left.

Nothing about Chalmers’ 3-pointer was in doubt.

“I had a good look at it,” he said. “When it left my hands it felt like it was good, and it just went in.”

Although Chalmers will go down in history, the most memorable overall performance came from Rose, the Memphis freshman, who completely took over the game in the second half, scoring 14 of his team’s 16 points during one stretch to lift the Tigers to a 60-51 lead with 2:12 left.

But Kansas (37-3) used the strategy any smart opponent of Memphis’ would — fouling the heck out of one of the country’s worst free-throw-shooting teams — and when Rose and Chris Douglas-Roberts made only one of five over the last 1:12, it left the door open for KU.

“Ten seconds to go, we’re thinking we’re national champs, all of a sudden a kid makes a shot, and we’re not,” Calipari said.

Hustling the ball down the court with 10.8 seconds left, no timeouts and trailing by three, Sherron Collins handed off to Chalmers at the top of the 3-point line, and Chalmers took the shot. It hit nothing but net and tied the score at 63.

Robert Dozier missed a desperation heave at the buzzer, and Rose went limping to the bench, favoring his right leg. Brandon Rush, Darrell Arthur and Darnell Jackson scored the first six points of overtime to put Kansas ahead 69-63.

Memphis, clearly exhausted, didn’t pull any closer than three the rest of the way. Rose played all 45 minutes in what could very well be his last college game.

“Overtime, they kind of beat us down,” Calipari said. “I didn’t sub a whole lot, because I was trying to win the game at the end.”

Arthur was dominant inside, finishing with 20 points and 10 rebounds, lots on dunks and easy lay-ups off lob passes. Chalmers finished with 18 points. Rush had 12 and Collins had 11 points, six assists and did a wonderful job shutting Rose for the first 28 minutes.

Rose wound up with 18 points in a game that showed how ready he is for the NBA. He was 3-for-4 from the line, however, and that one miss with 10.8 seconds left is what almost certainly would have sealed the game and given the Tigers (38-2) their first title.

“It wasn’t really the free throws,” Rose said. “If we’d done things before the free throws, we would’ve been in good shape.”

  Going OT
NCAA Championship overtime games
— 2008 — Kansas 75, Memphis 68, OT
— 1997 — Arizona 84, Kentucky 79, OT
— 1989 — Michigan 80, Seton Hall 79, OT
— 1963 — Loyola, Ill. 60, Cincinnati 58, OT
— 1961 — Cincinnati 70, Ohio State 65, OT
— 1957 — North Carolina 54, Kansas 53, 3OT
— 1944 — Utah 42, Dartmouth 40, OT
Instead, the title goes back to Lawrence for the third time in the fabled program’s history.

The inventor of the game, James Naismith, was the first Jayhawks coach. It’s the school that made household names of Wilt Chamberlain, Manning — and yes, even North Carolina’s Roy Williams, the coach who famously left the Jayhawks, lost to them in the semifinals, but was, indeed, in the Kansas cheering section Monday wearing a Jayhawks sticker on his shirt.

After the game, Self didn’t exactly end speculation that he might also bail for his alma mater, Oklahoma State.

“I’m not going to say that couldn’t potentially happen because I guess it potentially can,” Self said.

This game was not about coaches or sidestories, though. It was about the game, and what a dandy it was — a well-needed reprieve from a more-or-less blah tournament in which 42 of 63 games were decided by double digits.

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