Skip navigation
Listen now:
NBC Sports: The Clay Travis Show

Kilpatrick ensures Cincinnati sinks No. 13 UConn

Guard scores 16 points, including game-winner with 2.7 seconds left

Image: Sean Kilpatrick, Andre DrummondAP
Cincinnati's Sean Kilpatrick shoots over Connecticut's Andre Drummond.

STORRS, Conn. - Don't tell Cincinnati how hard it is to win road games in the Big East.

Sean Kilpatrick hit a 3-pointer with 2.7 seconds left and Cincinnati beat No. 13 Connecticut 70-67 on Wednesday night for its seventh straight conference road victory.

Kilpatrick scored 16 points to lead five Bearcats in double figures as Cincinnati (15-4, 5-1 Big East) withstood two big UConn second-half runs and a half-court shot by Niels Giffey at the buzzer that rimmed out.

Cashmere Wright and Yancy Gates each had 13 points for Cincinnati, which sits just behind Syracuse for the conference lead.

"We're to a point now mentally that our guys believe that if we play well, we can beat anybody," Cincinnati coach Mick Cronin said. "That's a big key for us."

Shabazz Napier had a career-high 27 points to lead Connecticut (14-4, 4-3), which lost for the first time at home this season.

Cincinnati took 26 shots from behind the arc, hitting 11 of them.

Beyond the Arc
Image: Sean Kilpatrick, Andre Drummond
Bearcats' post-brawl world working out
In 10 games since debacle with Xavier, Cincinnati's won nine games and suddenly become a Big East contender.
The Bearcats led by 12 points in the first half and nine at halftime. But they trailed 57-55 before a 3-pointer by Kilpatrick, one of his five in the game, and a late 10-0 turned that into a 65-57 lead.

A 3-point shot by Napier cut it to 66-63 with just over a minute left, and another tied it with 10 seconds to go.

But the Bearcats took the ball up the court and Kilpatrick calmly launched his shot from behind the top of the key.

"I saw the rest of my teammates covered, they were all denied, so I looked at it and said, `You know what, I've got to make this big play," Kilpatrick said. "I seen the lane, and then they closed it, so I just took my time. They didn't bite on the crossover move so I just pulled up."

Dion Dixon and JaQuon Parker each added 12 points for Cincinnati, which won its third straight.

Cincinnati led 48-37 just under 4 minutes into the second half when UConn went on its 15-2 run.

A block by Andre Drummond and a layup by Jeremy Lamb at the other end made it 48-44. A two-handed fast-break dunk by Drummond tied it and Roscoe Smith's layup gave the Huskies their first lead of the half at 52-50.

"We came back, we fought back and to lose this one at home where we play so great, It's always a tough one," Napier said.

Kilpatrick had eight early points and Cincinnati used an early 8-0 run to take a 21-15 lead. Consecutive 3-pointers by Wright and JaQuon Parker stretched the lead to 10 at 29-19.

Napier kept the Huskies in the game with 13 first-half points, but Cincinnati led 42-33 at the half on a tip-in by Jeremiah Davis just before the buzzer.

Cincinnati is 5-1 on the road and 5-1 in conference play. The Bearcats had won nine of their last 10 games, including consecutive conference wins over No. 10 Georgetown and Villanova. The start is the team's best since joining the Big East in 2005.

Cincinnati has won six of its last eight games against ranked opponents.

Gates starting for the third time since his six-game suspension for his part in the Dec. 10 brawl against Xavier also had 12 rebounds, and held UConn center Andre Drummond to just four points.

Philadelphia Phillies v Miami Marlins
Getty Images
The Week in Sports Pictures

The nation grieved for those hurt, killed and affected by the Boston Marathon bombings. After one of the suspects was caught on Friday — following a day-long lockdown and manhunt — sports returned to Boston over the weekend.

"What happened in December, we just took that as a positive," Kilpatrick said. "It happened and you just gotta move on forward, and that's what we did."

Drummond was coming off three consecutive double-doubles, making him the first UConn freshman to do that since Corny Thompson back in 1978-79.

Connecticut was playing for the second straight game without freshman point-guard Ryan Boatright. He's the subject of a second investigation this season into his eligibility.

Boatright, who has averaged more than 10 points and three assists in 10 games, was suspended for the first six games of the season for an infraction that involved accepting a plane ticket last year while he was playing AAU basketball.

The school, in a statement, said the latest development "arises from additional information provided by the NCAA that pertains to conditions and events that predate the university's relationship with Boatright."

Without Boatright, UConn relied on Napier and Lamb to handle the ball. Lamb played all 40 minutes and finished with 14 points. Napier played 38, hitting 10 of his 19 shots and adding seven assists.

"Honestly, I don't think we would have lost if we had Ryan," Napier said. "We would have had another ball handler.

Connecticut and Cincinnati had not played since UConn's 69-58 win in the third round of the NCAA tournament last March, part of the Huskies 11-0 postseason run to the national title.

Connecticut plays it final nonconference game of the season Saturday at Tennessee. Cincinnati travels to West Virginia.

"If you're going to compete for the Big East championship, which was our goal at the beginning of the season.you have to be able to beat UConn; you have to be able to beat Georgetown; you have to be able to beat West Virginia, our next game," Cronin said. "Obviously, Syracuse has a great team but you have to be able to beat those guys."

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

advertisement
More news
NBC Sports
Trickle down

  DPS: Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski admitted that coaching in the Olympics extended his tenure at Duke, saying, “I wouldn’t stop coaching at Duke while I am still the National [team] coach.”

Image: Duke v Louisville
Getty Images
CBT: Coach K to remain at Duke through 2016

CBT: Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski made it official that he'll be coaching Team USA at the 2016 Rio Olympics, and he'll also be with Duke at least that long, too.

College basketball videos
Team USA prolongs Coach K's tenure at Duke
DPS: Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski joins the Dan Patrick Show to talk about his decision to return as Team USA basketball coach. Coach K admits coaching in the Olympics has extending his tenure at Duke, saying, “I wouldn’t stop coaching at Duke while I am still the National [team] coach.”

Slideshow
Northwestern State v Florida
  Three cheers for college hoops
Take a look at cheerleaders in action from around the country.

NBCSports.com