Dayton Daily News

Kentucky shuts down 3-point king to edge Wofford

- By Paul Newberry

JACKSONVIL­LE, FLA. — Kentucky ended Wofford’s season in the NCAA Tournament with a stifling defensive effort on Fletcher Magee, carrying the Wildcats to the regional semifinals with a 62-56 victory Saturday.

Reid Travis scored 14 points, including two huge free throws with 17.8 seconds left to help seal the victory for second-seeded Kentucky (29-6). The graduate student, a transfer from Stanford and one of the few experience­d players among coach John Calipari’s latest group of fabulous freshmen, also grabbed 11 rebounds to help hold off the upstart Terriers.

Wofford (30-5) certainly had its chances, holding the Wildcats to 40 percent shooting (21 of 52) and holding its own on the boards.

But Magee simply couldn’t make a shot in his final college game. Two days after setting the NCAA Division I record for career 3-pointers, he stunningly went 0 of 12 beyond the arc. After the final attempt ricocheted wildly off the rim, skipping out of bounds in front of a stunned Wofford section, Magee rubbed his head in seeming disbelief.

It was only the second time all season that Magee failed to make at least one shot from long range, following an 0-for-9 performanc­e in a loss at Kansas in early December. He made seven 3s on Thursday in Wofford’s victory over Seton Hall — the first NCAA Tournament win in school history.

The rest of the Wofford roster went 8 of 15 from 3-point range. Nathan Hoover made four of them to finish with 19 points and Cameron Jackson had 11 points, the only other Terrier player in double figures. Magee finished with 8 points on 4-of-17 shooting overall.

Kentucky’s length, athleticis­m and effort certainly had something to do with Magee’s dismal showing. Tyler Herro had a tough shooting game himself, but he did a yeoman’s job on the Wofford gunner. Ashton Hagans and Jemari Baker Jr. also stepped up at times to keep an eye on Magee.

Hagans added 12 points for the Wildcats, who fell behind by as many as 6 points in the first half before going on a late spurt that sent them to the locker room with a 28-26 lead. The Terriers briefly recaptured the lead early in the second half, but Kentucky went ahead for good with 141/2 minutes remaining and doggedly protected their advantage the rest of the way.

The Wildcats managed to win twice in Jacksonvil­le without their leading scorer and rebounder, sophomore PJ Washington, who watched the games with a hard cast on his sprained left foot.

 ?? MIKE EHRMANN / GETTY IMAGES ?? UK’s Tyler Herro (left) drives against Donovan ThemeLove of Wofford in Saturday’s game in Jacksonvil­le, Florida. Herro helped harass Terriers’ 3-point ace Fletcher Magee into an 0-12 day from long range.
MIKE EHRMANN / GETTY IMAGES UK’s Tyler Herro (left) drives against Donovan ThemeLove of Wofford in Saturday’s game in Jacksonvil­le, Florida. Herro helped harass Terriers’ 3-point ace Fletcher Magee into an 0-12 day from long range.

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