The Palm Beach Post

Monk’s 47-point outburst dazzles

Freshman’s record day leads Kentucky past North Carolina.

- By Mike Cranston Associated Press

L A S V E G A S — M i d w a y t h r o u g h t h e f i r s t h a l f , a frustrated North Carolina fan stood and screamed at Malik Monk.

“You can miss!” she yelled, before pausing and changing tactics. “Please?” she added.

Monk rarely complied, setting a Kentucky freshman record with 47 points and hitting the go-ahead 3-pointer with 16.7 seconds left to lead the sixth-ranked Wildcats past No. 7 North Carolina 103-100 on Saturday.

“If you watched that game, if you never liked basketball, you’re going to start liking basketball,” Kentucky coach John Calipari said. “Like, wow.”

North Carolina’s Justin Jackson nearly outshined Monk with 34 points, and his basket with 45 seconds left put the Tar Heels (10-2) ahead after trailing much of the second half.

Monk responded with a right-wing 3 in transition to put Kentucky up 101-100 — going against Calipari’s wishes.

“Coach told me to drive, but I was hot and I shot it,” Monk said. Good choice. After Isaiah Hicks only hit the backboard at the other end, Kentucky’s De’Aaron Fox hit two free throws with 1.9 seconds left.

North Carolina got the ball in the front court with less than a second left. But Kenny Williams’ desperatio­n 3 at the buzzer got lodged between the rim and backboard.

“Heck of a college basketball game if you don’t care who won,” North Carolina coach Roy Williams said. “But I do care who wins. . Malik was off the charts.”

Monk hit 18 of 28 shots, including 8 of 12 3-point attempts, scoring in various ways in an electric performanc­e that was the most points in Division I this season. Only Duke’s Dick Groat (48 points) in 1952 has scored more against the Tar Heels.

And Kentucky needed Monk’s huge effort to offset Jackson’s four 3s and 10 free throws in a game played at a furious pace.

“Those are games you live for,” Fox said.

Fox added 24 points for Kentucky (10-1), which shot 54 percent from the field. North Carolina shot 53 percent. They combined for 37 assists and just 19 turnovers.

The Tar Heels fell to 52-2 when they score 100 points under Williams and 180-4 when they shoot better than 50 percent.

Joel Berry II returned from injury to score 23 points for the Tar Heels, but was slowed by foul trouble in the second half.

The enthusiast­ic crowd at the new T-Mobile Arena just off the Las Vegas Strip made it feel like an Elite Eight game. The quality of play in the CBS Sports Classic matchup gave it more of a Final Four feel.

Wi t h t wo o f t h e h i g h - est-scoring and fastest teams squaring off, Calipari joked earlier in the week he and Wi l l i a ms woul d b e c o n - stantly yelling, “Get back!” on defense.

I n t h e 3 8 t h m e e t i n g between the schools, Monk dominated early and Kentucky raced to a 12-point lead. Jackson and Berry, who returned from a two-game absence due to a sprained left ankle, kept scoring off the dribble as North Carolina closed to 56-51 at halftime.

There was hardly time to catch a breath. Kentucky took a 10-point lead in the second half. The Tar Heels rallied to tie it on Tony Bradley’s two free throws with 2:51 left and went ahead on Jackson’s 3 with 1:33 left.

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