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THE WINCHESTER SUN MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2012 — A9 Scoreboard Kentucky Fried Chicken 1 Carol Road • Winchester, KY No Drink Included *Coupon must be present to purchase. * $ 5 99 BUFFET MONDAY - FRIDAY • 11 - 3 VINYL LETTERING . VEHICLES . LOGOS MAGNETICS . AWNINGS . POINT OF SALE BANNERS . WINDOWS . GRAPHICS TRADE SHOW . CORPORATE . POSTERS 850 BYPASS RD . WINCHESTER KY JIM WOODRUM Realtor, BBA, ABR, CTA, CREN, GRI 859-492-0737 VOTED WINCHESTER’S BEST REALTOR 2010 • Residential and commercial carpet cleaning experts since 1947. • Top-quality cleaning of upholstery, Oriental & specialty area rugs. • We’ll leave your house exactly as we found it – but without the dirt. • Fast emergency service available. • Water extraction service available. • Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back! • We Now Clean Tile, Grout, & Upholstery • $33 per room w/minimum 3 rooms 10% Discount For Seniors Call 745-2608 ONE CALL Makes you feel right at home. Recommended by Shaw Industries America’s largest carpet maker Sofa, Chair & Loveseat $189 95 Prep Basketball Sunday’s Scores The Associated Press BOYS BASKETBALL 6th Region Semifinal Lou. Butler 50, Bullitt East 48 Lou. Pleasure Ridge Park 61, Lou. Moore 56 9th Region Championship Boone Co. 54, Newport Central Catholic 49 GIRLS BASKETBALL 1st Region Championship Marshall Co. 60, Murray 50 2nd Region Webster Co. 51, Livingston Central 35 3rd Region Championship Muhlenberg County 56, Grayson Co. 46 4th Region Championship Glasgow 51, Monroe Co. 41 5th Region Championship Marion Co. 56, Elizabethtown 39 6th Region Championship Lou. Butler 59, Lou. Mercy 47 8th Region Championship Walton-Verona 52, South Oldham 47 9th Region Championship Boone Co. 62, Notre Dame 58, OT 10th Region Championship Montgomery Co. 47, Campbell Co. 40 11th Region Championship Dunbar 75, Madison Central 60 College Basketball Sunday’s College Basketball The Associated Press EAST Michigan 71, Penn St. 65 SOUTH Florida St. 80, Clemson 72 Kentucky 74, Florida 59 NC State 70, Virginia Tech 58 Virginia 75, Maryland 72, OT MIDWEST Indiana 85, Purdue 74 Ohio St. 72, Michigan St. 70 Wisconsin 70, Illinois 56 FAR WEST Arizona St. 87, Arizona 80 Stanford 75, California 70 TOURNAMENT America East Conference Semifinals Stony Brook 57, Albany (NY) 55 Vermont 77, Hartford 73, 2OT Colonial Athletic Association Semifinals Drexel 68, Old Dominion 51 VCU 74, George Mason 64 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Semifinals Fairfield 85, Iona 75 Loyola (Md.) 70, Siena 60 Missouri Valley Conference Championship Creighton 83, Illinois St. 79, OT Northeast Conference Semifinals LIU 78, Quinnipiac 75 Robert Morris 71, Wagner 64 Southern Conference Semifinals Davidson 83, Elon 67 W. Carolina 82, UNC Greensboro 77 Summit League First Round S. Utah 84, Oakland 82 W. Illinois 58, N. Dakota St. 53 Sun Belt Conference Quarterfinals Arkansas St. 64, Middle Tennessee 61 Denver 61, South Alabama 50 North Texas 65, Louisiana-Lafayette 62 W. Kentucky 68, UALR 63 Big East Tourney At Madison Square Garden New York First Round Tuesday, March 6 UConn vs. DePaul, Noon St. John’s vs. Pittsburgh, 2:30 p.m. Seton Hall vs. Providence, 7 p.m. Rutgers vs. Villanova, 9:30 p.m. Second Round Wednesday, March 7 West Virginia vs. UConn-DePaul winner, Noon Georgetown vs. St. John’s-Pittsburgh winner, 2:30 p.m. Louisville vs. Seton Hall-Providence winner, 7 p.m. USF vs. Rutgers-Villanova winner, 9:30 p.m. Quarterfinals Thursday, March 8 Syracuse vs. West Virginia- UConn-DePaul winner, Noon Cincinnati vs. Georgetown-St. John’s-Pittsburgh winner, 2:30 p.m. Marquette vs. Louisville-Seton Hall-Providence winner, 7 p.m. Notre Dame vs. USF-Rutgers-Villanova winner, 9:30 p.m. Semifinals Friday, March 9 Syracuse- West Virginia- UConn-DePaul winner vs. Cincy- Georgetown- St. John’s-Pittsburgh winner, 7 p.m. Marquette- Louisville- Seton Hall-Providence winner vs. Notre Dame- USF- Rutgers-Villanova winner, 9:30 p.m. Championship Saturday, March 10 Semifinal winners, 9 p.m. SEC Tournament At New Orleans Arena First Round Thursday, March 8 LSU vs. Arkansas, 1 p.m. Alabama vs. South Carolina, 3:30 p.m. Mississippi vs. Auburn, 7:30 p.m. Mississippi State vs. Georgia, 10 p.m. Quarterfinals Friday, March 9 Kentucky vs. LSU-Arkansas winner, 1 p.m. Florida vs. Alabama-South Carolina winner, 3:30 p.m. Tennessee vs. Mississippi-Auburn winner, 7:30 p.m. Vanderbilt vs. Mississippi State-Georgia winner, 10 p.m. Semifinals Saturday, March 10 Kentucky-LSU-Arkansas winner vs. Florida-Alabama- South Carolina winner, 1 p.m. Tennessee-Mississippi-Auburn winner vs. Vanderbilt-Mis- sissippi State-Georgia winner, 3:30 p.m. Championship Sunday, March 11 Semifinal winners, 1 p.m. NASCAR Sprint Cup-Subway Fresh Fit 500 Results The Associated Press Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway Avondale, Ariz. Lap length: 1 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (13) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 312 laps, 130 rating, 47 points, $238,016. 2. (8) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 312, 134.7, 44, $222,836. 3. (7) Greg Biffle, Ford, 312, 96.4, 41, $139,400. 4. (4) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 312, 120.5, 41, $156,121. 5. (28) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 312, 109.4, 40, $141,495. 6. (12) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 312, 117.2, 39, $140,158. 7. (25) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 312, 92.3, 38, $122,539. 8. (30) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 312, 94.9, 37, $134,211. 9. (1) Mark Martin, Toyota, 312, 106.4, 36, $90,175. 10. (9) Joey Logano, Toyota, 312, 95.5, 34, $92,000. 11. (5) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 312, 87.2, 33, $111,066. 12. (18) Aric Almirola, Ford, 312, 74.9, 32, $116,211. 13. (26) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 312, 94.7, 32, $122,836. 14. (29) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 312, 73.1, 30, $84,625. 15. (19) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 312, 78.7, 30, $102,883. 16. (17) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 312, 70.3, 28, $98,983. 17. (24) Carl Edwards, Ford, 312, 78, 27, $116,716. 18. (15) A J Allmendinger, Dodge, 311, 69, 26, $114,825. 19. (41) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 311, 57.4, 25, $95,908. 20. (3) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 311, 76.7, 24, $93,483. 21. (6) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 310, 67.1, 23, $115,108. 22. (2) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 310, 93.5, 23, $123,125. 23. (23) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 309, 55.4, 21, $69,450. 24. (42) Mike Bliss, Ford, 309, 50.7, 0, $80,800. 25. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 309, 44.6, 20, $82,647. 26. (35) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 309, 41.6, 18, $69,050. 27. (40) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 308, 47.4, 17, $80,225. 28. (36) David Gilliland, Ford, 308, 42.6, 16, $72,000. 29. (43) David Stremme, Toyota, 306, 36.5, 15, $71,775. 30. (16) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 306, 48.5, 14, $99,239. 31. (20) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 303, 55.9, 13, $79,385. 32. (14) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, engine, 295, 73.4, 12, $98,608. 33. (11) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, engine, 291, 78.2, 12, $110,150. 34. (10) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 274, 53.1, 10, $75,950. 35. (22) Landon Cassill, Toyota, 272, 45.9, 9, $95,170. 36. (32) David Reutimann, Chevrolet, engine, 248, 53.9, 8, $67,675. 37. (21) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, engine, 212, 55.3, 8, $98,588. 38. (33) Josh Wise, Ford, vibration, 110, 30.1, 6, $68,903. 39. (31) Casey Mears, Ford, accident, 109, 47.5, 5, $64,675. 40. (38) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, brakes, 62, 30.6, 0, $64,500. 41. (39) Robby Gordon, Dodge, brakes, 33, 30.4, 3, $64,350. 42. (27) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, brakes, 29, 29.4, 2, $64,225. 43. (37) Michael McDowell, Ford, brakes, 8, 27.3, 1, $64,597. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 110.085 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 50 minutes, 35 seconds. Margin of Victory: 7.315 seconds. Caution Flags: 7 for 35 laps. Lead Changes: 25 among 13 drivers. Lap Leaders: M.Martin 1; T.Stewart 2-10; J.Johnson 11-16; K.Harvick 17-59; J.Johnson 60; M.Bliss 61; D.Ragan 62; J.Johnson 63-64; Ku.Busch 65-66; J.Johnson 67-112; Ky.Busch 113-140; K.Harvick 141- 144; Ky.Busch 145-168; K.Harvick 169-183; B.Ke- selowski 184-186; D.Hamlin 187; J.Gordon 188; M.Kenseth 189; J.Burton 190-196; M.Truex Jr. 197- 206; J.McMurray 207; K.Harvick 208-228; D.Hamlin 229; M.Truex Jr. 230-248; K.Harvick 249-253; D.Ham- lin 254-312. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): K.Har- vick, 5 times for 88 laps; D.Hamlin, 3 times for 61 laps; J.Johnson, 4 times for 55 laps; Ky.Busch, 2 times for 52 laps; M.Truex Jr., 2 times for 29 laps; T.Stewart, 1 time for 9 laps; J.Burton, 1 time for 7 laps; B.Ke- selowski, 1 time for 3 laps; Ku.Busch, 1 time for 2 laps; J.Gordon, 1 time for 1 lap; M.Martin, 1 time for 1 lap; M.Kenseth, 1 time for 1 lap; M.Bliss, 1 time for 1 lap; D.Ragan, 1 time for 1 lap; J.McMurray, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 12 in Points: 1. D.Hamlin, 89; 2. G.Biffle, 83; 3. K.Harvick, 81; 4. M.Kenseth, 79; 5. D.Earnhardt Jr., 72; 6. M.Truex Jr., 71; 7. M.Martin, 71; 8. J.Logano, 70; 9. Ky.Busch, 66; 10. C.Edwards, 63; 11. B.Labonte, 58; 12. B.Keselowski, 52. NBA Saturday’s Games Atlanta 97, Oklahoma City 90 Orlando 114, Milwaukee 98 Washington 101, Cleveland 98 Indiana 102, New Orleans 84 Memphis 100, Detroit 83 Dallas 102, Utah 96 Minnesota 122, Portland 110 Sunday’s Games Boston 115, New York 111, OT L.A. Lakers 93, Miami 83 New Jersey 104, Charlotte 101 Toronto 83, Golden State 75 L.A. Clippers 105, Houston 103, OT Chicago 96, Philadelphia 91 Phoenix 96, Sacramento 88 Denver 99, San Antonio 94 Monday’s Games Utah at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Orlando at Toronto, 7 p.m. Golden State at Washington, 7 p.m. Indiana at Chicago, 8 p.m. On the Air Today MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 7 p.m. ESPN — Colonial Athletic Association, champi- onship game, teams TBD, at Richmond, Va. ESPN2 — Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, championship game, teams TBD, at Springfield, Mass. 9 p.m. ESPN — West Coast Conference, championship game, teams TBD, at Las Vegas ESPN2 — Southern Conference, championship game, teams TBD, at Asheville, N.C. NBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. WGN — Indiana at Chicago NHL HOCKEY 8 p.m. NBCSN — Buffalo at Winnipeg WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5 p.m. ESPN2 — Atlantic 10 Conference, championship game, teams TBD, at Philadelphia Local Sports Today BOYS BASKETBALL 10th Region Tournament Semifinals at the MCHS Arena 5 p.m. Montgomery County vs. Mason County 6:30 p.m. George Rogers Clark vs. Campbell County Tuesday BOYS BASKETBALL 10th Region Tournament at the MCHS Arena 7 p.m. Finals wait for your run to come when you go against teams playing on that high energy.” Humphrey added that his team was “used to close games” and taking the other team’s best shot and liked the way the Cards re- sponded. “It wasn’t like we were completely out of the ordi- nary,” Humphrey said. “That team had a ton of re- spect (from us) coming in. This wasn’t a deal of over- looking (them).” Howard said the Cards were prepared in their re- gion opener and weren’t surprised by Augusta’s showing. “You have to be prepared to handle the environment and the crowd,” Howard said afterward. “I thought we did that pretty well, with the exception of the first half.” Clark closed out the first half with a 12-2 run and a 3-pointer at the buzzer by Bopper Stenzel gave Clark a 31-27 advantage at the break. Clark increased the margin to double figures in the third frame and used a 19-2 run to put the game away. Clark seniors Taylor Howard and Charlie Rogers combined for 12 points during the decisive spurt. “We just came out and stayed focused, like coach told us to do,” Rogers said. Howard tied teammate Adam Fatkin for team-high scoring honors with 19 points. Rogers scored 11 points in the second half and finished with 16 for the Cards. Fatkin com- pleted a double-double with 11 rebounds despite missing most of the second quarter because of foul trouble The Panthers (19-13) scored 11 of the first 15 points of the fourth quar- ter, but couldn’t get no closer than 13 down the stretch. Clark committed 21 turnovers, but scored 15 points on second-chance baskets and outrebounded the Panthers 50-29. Brent Back led Augusta with 17 points and earned praised from Humphrey. “He’s as good (of a guard) as we have seen,” the Clark coach said. “He is a really nice player.” ——— Augusta 13 14 07 19 — 53 Clark 11 20 23 21 — 75 AUGUSTA (19-13) — Back 17, Appleman 14, Moore 10, Kelsch 9, Linville 3. CLARK (28-5) — Blanton 2, VanCleve 3, Israel 2, Sten- zel 8, Howard 19, Rogers 16, Fatkin 19, Roberts 6. DELAY FROM PAGE A8 can still make a shot. ... I think that’s what makes re- ally, really good teams.” Patric Young led Florida (22-9, 10-6) with 21 points while Erik Murphy added 14 points and eight rebounds. Young and Murphy had few answers for Davis and Jones, who both were 9 of 13 from the field, including a 3- pointer each. Kentucky shot 53 percent from the field and seemingly scored at will in the paint, fin- ishing with 40 points in the key. And when the Wildcats aren’t missing many shots and aren’t turning the ball over, they are tough to beat — maybe even impossible. “This line of guys they have really good chemistry, they’re really together,” Young said. “No one’s out there trying to score from himself. ... They have a really complete team. It will be really tough to beat them.” The Wildcats took a 28-16 lead in the first half, often abusing the Gators in one-on- one situations. And even when Kentucky did miss, Davis and Jones were there for rebounds and putbacks. “It was one of those nights that Kentucky’s length really caused us some problems,” Donovan said. Florida crawled back in the second half. The Gators cut the lead to 46-44 with about 16 minutes remaining, but couldn’t get any closer as Kentucky responded with clutch shots every time the score got close. Kentucky started pulling away from there. Florida responded thanks to some inspired play by Young and made it 59-55. But the Cats just dialed it up on both ends of the court. The Gators made just one basket over the final 9:02, a meaningless shot in the clos- ing minute. Davis, meanwhile, took over. He had a putback, a layup, a dunk and a free throw down the stretch. “John is now putting him in situations that he did not do a lot of,” Donovan said. “When you go through a season, teams start to guard you dif- ferently, throw different things at you and it’s enabled him to grow as Kentucky’s team’s grown because he adds a different dimension for them on the perimeter.” CATS FROM PAGE A8

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Page 1: SUN-0305-A09.qxp Layout 1nyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7z610vrc2j/data/09_70264_WS120305A09.pdf · BANNERS . WINDOWS . GRAPHICS TRADE SHOW . CORPORATE . POSTERS 850 BYPASS RD . WINCHESTER KY

THE WINCHESTER SUNM O N DAY, M A R C H 5 , 2 0 1 2 — A 9

Scoreboard

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Prep Basketball

Sunday’s ScoresT he Assoc iated Press

BOYS BASKETBALL6th RegionSemifinalLou. Butler 50, Bullitt East 48Lou. Pleasure Ridge Park 61, Lou. Moore 569th RegionChampionshipBoone Co. 54, Newport Central Catholic 49

GIRLS BASKETBALL1st RegionChampionshipMarshall Co. 60, Murray 502nd RegionWebster Co. 51, Livingston Central 353rd RegionChampionshipMuhlenberg County 56, Grayson Co. 464th RegionChampionshipGlasgow 51, Monroe Co. 415th RegionChampionshipMarion Co. 56, Elizabethtown 396th RegionChampionshipLou. Butler 59, Lou. Mercy 478th RegionChampionshipWalton-Verona 52, South Oldham 479th RegionChampionshipBoone Co. 62, Notre Dame 58, OT10th RegionChampionshipMontgomery Co. 47, Campbell Co. 4011th RegionChampionshipDunbar 75, Madison Central 60

College BasketballSunday’s Co l lege Basketba l lT he Assoc iated PressEASTMichigan 71, Penn St. 65SOUTHFlorida St. 80, Clemson 72Kentucky 74, Florida 59NC State 70, Virginia Tech 58Virginia 75, Maryland 72, OTMIDWESTIndiana 85, Purdue 74Ohio St. 72, Michigan St. 70Wisconsin 70, Illinois 56FAR WESTArizona St. 87, Arizona 80Stanford 75, California 70TOURNAMENTAmerica East ConferenceSemifinalsStony Brook 57, Albany (NY) 55Vermont 77, Hartford 73, 2OTColonial Athletic AssociationSemifinalsDrexel 68, Old Dominion 51VCU 74, George Mason 64Metro Atlantic Athletic ConferenceSemifinalsFairfield 85, Iona 75Loyola (Md.) 70, Siena 60Missouri Valley ConferenceChampionshipCreighton 83, Illinois St. 79, OTNortheast ConferenceSemifinalsLIU 78, Quinnipiac 75Robert Morris 71, Wagner 64Southern Conference

SemifinalsDavidson 83, Elon 67W. Carolina 82, UNC Greensboro 77Summit LeagueFirst RoundS. Utah 84, Oakland 82W. Illinois 58, N. Dakota St. 53Sun Belt ConferenceQuarterfinalsArkansas St. 64, Middle Tennessee 61Denver 61, South Alabama 50North Texas 65, Louisiana-Lafayette 62W. Kentucky 68, UALR 63

Big East Tourney

At Madison Square GardenNew YorkFirst RoundTuesday, March 6UConn vs. DePaul, NoonSt. John’s vs. Pittsburgh, 2:30 p.m.Seton Hall vs. Providence, 7 p.m.Rutgers vs. Villanova, 9:30 p.m.Second RoundWednesday, March 7West Virginia vs. UConn-DePaul winner, NoonGeorgetown vs. St. John’s-Pittsburgh winner, 2:30 p.m.Louisville vs. Seton Hall-Providence winner, 7 p.m.USF vs. Rutgers-Villanova winner, 9:30 p.m.QuarterfinalsThursday, March 8Syracuse vs. West Virginia- UConn-DePaul winner, NoonCincinnati vs. Georgetown-St. John’s-Pittsburgh winner,2:30 p.m.Marquette vs. Louisville-Seton Hall-Providence winner, 7 p.m.Notre Dame

vs. USF-Rutgers-Villanova winner, 9:30 p.m.SemifinalsFriday, March 9Syracuse- West Virginia- UConn-DePaul winner vs.Cincy- Georgetown- St. John’s-Pittsburgh winner, 7 p.m.Marquette- Louisville- Seton Hall-Providence winner vs.Notre Dame- USF- Rutgers-Villanova winner, 9:30 p.m.ChampionshipSaturday, March 10Semifinal winners, 9 p.m.

SEC TournamentAt New Orleans ArenaFirst RoundThursday, March 8LSU vs. Arkansas, 1 p.m.Alabama vs. South Carolina, 3:30 p.m.Mississippi vs. Auburn, 7:30 p.m.Mississippi State vs. Georgia, 10 p.m.QuarterfinalsFriday, March 9Kentucky vs. LSU-Arkansas winner, 1 p.m.Florida vs. Alabama-South Carolina winner, 3:30 p.m.Tennessee vs. Mississippi-Auburn winner, 7:30 p.m.Vanderbilt vs. Mississippi State-Georgia winner, 10 p.m.SemifinalsSaturday, March 10Kentucky-LSU-Arkansas winner vs. Florida-Alabama-South Carolina winner, 1 p.m.Tennessee-Mississippi-Auburn winner vs. Vanderbilt-Mis-sissippi State-Georgia winner, 3:30 p.m.ChampionshipSunday, March 11Semifinal winners, 1 p.m.

NASCARSprint Cup-Subway Fresh Fit 500 ResultsThe Associated PressSunday at Phoenix International RacewayAvondale, Ariz.Lap length: 1 miles(Start position in parentheses)1. (13) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 312 laps, 130 rating, 47points, $238,016.2. (8) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 312, 134.7, 44,$222,836.3. (7) Greg Biffle, Ford, 312, 96.4, 41, $139,400.4. (4) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 312, 120.5, 41,$156,121.5. (28) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 312, 109.4, 40,$141,495.6. (12) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 312, 117.2, 39, $140,158.7. (25) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 312, 92.3, 38,$122,539.8. (30) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 312, 94.9, 37,$134,211.9. (1) Mark Martin, Toyota, 312, 106.4, 36, $90,175.10. (9) Joey Logano, Toyota, 312, 95.5, 34, $92,000.11. (5) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 312, 87.2, 33,$111,066.12. (18) Aric Almirola, Ford, 312, 74.9, 32, $116,211.13. (26) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 312, 94.7, 32,$122,836.14. (29) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 312, 73.1, 30,$84,625.15. (19) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 312, 78.7, 30,$102,883.16. (17) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 312, 70.3, 28,$98,983.17. (24) Carl Edwards, Ford, 312, 78, 27, $116,716.18. (15) A J Allmendinger, Dodge, 311, 69, 26,$114,825.19. (41) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 311, 57.4, 25, $95,908.20. (3) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 311, 76.7, 24,$93,483.21. (6) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 310, 67.1, 23,$115,108.22. (2) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 310, 93.5, 23,$123,125.23. (23) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 309, 55.4, 21,$69,450.24. (42) Mike Bliss, Ford, 309, 50.7, 0, $80,800.25. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 309, 44.6, 20, $82,647.26. (35) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 309, 41.6, 18, $69,050.27. (40) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 308, 47.4, 17,$80,225.

28. (36) David Gilliland, Ford, 308, 42.6, 16, $72,000.29. (43) David Stremme, Toyota, 306, 36.5, 15,$71,775.30. (16) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 306, 48.5, 14, $99,239.31. (20) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 303, 55.9, 13,$79,385.32. (14) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, engine, 295, 73.4, 12,$98,608.33. (11) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, engine, 291, 78.2, 12,$110,150.34. (10) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 274, 53.1, 10,$75,950.35. (22) Landon Cassill, Toyota, 272, 45.9, 9,$95,170.36. (32) David Reutimann, Chevrolet, engine, 248,53.9, 8, $67,675.37. (21) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, engine, 212,55.3, 8, $98,588.38. (33) Josh Wise, Ford, vibration, 110, 30.1, 6,$68,903.39. (31) Casey Mears, Ford, accident, 109, 47.5, 5,$64,675.40. (38) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, brakes, 62, 30.6, 0,$64,500.41. (39) Robby Gordon, Dodge, brakes, 33, 30.4, 3,$64,350.42. (27) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, brakes, 29, 29.4, 2,$64,225.43. (37) Michael McDowell, Ford, brakes, 8, 27.3, 1,$64,597.

Race StatisticsAverage Speed of Race Winner: 110.085 mph.Time of Race: 2 hours, 50 minutes, 35 seconds.Margin of Victory: 7.315 seconds.Caution Flags: 7 for 35 laps.Lead Changes: 25 among 13 drivers.Lap Leaders: M.Martin 1; T.Stewart 2-10; J.Johnson11-16; K.Harvick 17-59; J.Johnson 60; M.Bliss 61;D.Ragan 62; J.Johnson 63-64; Ku.Busch 65-66;J.Johnson 67-112; Ky.Busch 113-140; K.Harvick 141-144; Ky.Busch 145-168; K.Harvick 169-183; B.Ke-selowski 184-186; D.Hamlin 187; J.Gordon 188;M.Kenseth 189; J.Burton 190-196; M.Truex Jr. 197-206; J.McMurray 207; K.Harvick 208-228; D.Hamlin229; M.Truex Jr. 230-248; K.Harvick 249-253; D.Ham-lin 254-312.Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): K.Har-vick, 5 times for 88 laps; D.Hamlin, 3 times for 61 laps;J.Johnson, 4 times for 55 laps; Ky.Busch, 2 times for52 laps; M.Truex Jr., 2 times for 29 laps; T.Stewart, 1time for 9 laps; J.Burton, 1 time for 7 laps; B.Ke-selowski, 1 time for 3 laps; Ku.Busch, 1 time for 2 laps;J.Gordon, 1 time for 1 lap; M.Martin, 1 time for 1 lap;M.Kenseth, 1 time for 1 lap; M.Bliss, 1 time for 1 lap;D.Ragan, 1 time for 1 lap; J.McMurray, 1 time for 1 lap.Top 12 in Points: 1. D.Hamlin, 89; 2. G.Biffle, 83; 3.K.Harvick, 81; 4. M.Kenseth, 79; 5. D.Earnhardt Jr., 72;6. M.Truex Jr., 71; 7. M.Martin, 71; 8. J.Logano, 70; 9.Ky.Busch, 66; 10. C.Edwards, 63; 11. B.Labonte, 58;12. B.Keselowski, 52.

NBA

Saturday’s GamesAtlanta 97, Oklahoma City 90Orlando 114, Milwaukee 98Washington 101, Cleveland 98Indiana 102, New Orleans 84Memphis 100, Detroit 83Dallas 102, Utah 96Minnesota 122, Portland 110Sunday’s GamesBoston 115, New York 111, OTL.A. Lakers 93, Miami 83New Jersey 104, Charlotte 101Toronto 83, Golden State 75L.A. Clippers 105, Houston 103, OTChicago 96, Philadelphia 91Phoenix 96, Sacramento 88Denver 99, San Antonio 94Monday’s GamesUtah at Cleveland, 7 p.m.Orlando at Toronto, 7 p.m.Golden State at Washington, 7 p.m.Indiana at Chicago, 8 p.m.

On the Air

TodayMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL7 p.m.ESPN — Colonial Athletic Association, champi-onship game, teams TBD, at Richmond, Va.ESPN2 — Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference,championship game, teams TBD, at Springfield,Mass.9 p.m.ESPN — West Coast Conference, championshipgame, teams TBD, at Las VegasESPN2 — Southern Conference, championshipgame, teams TBD, at Asheville, N.C.NBA BASKETBALL8 p.m.WGN — Indiana at ChicagoNHL HOCKEY8 p.m.NBCSN — Buffalo at WinnipegWOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL5 p.m.ESPN2 — Atlantic 10 Conference, championshipgame, teams TBD, at Philadelphia

Local Sports

TodayBOYS BASKETBALL10th Region Tournament Semifinalsat the MCHS Arena5 p.m.Montgomery County vs. Mason County6:30 p.m.George Rogers Clark vs. Campbell County

TuesdayBOYS BASKETBALL10th Region Tournamentat the MCHS Arena7 p.m.Finals

wait for your run to comewhen you go against teamsplaying on that high energy.”Humphrey added that

his team was “used to closegames” and taking theother team’s best shot andliked the way the Cards re-sponded.“It wasn’t like we were

completely out of the ordi-nary,” Humphrey said.“That team had a ton of re-spect (from us) coming in.This wasn’t a deal of over-looking (them).”Howard said the Cards

were prepared in their re-gion opener and weren’tsurprised by Augusta’sshowing.“You have to be prepared

to handle the environmentand the crowd,” Howardsaid afterward. “I thoughtwe did that pretty well,with the exception of thefirst half.”Clark closed out the first

half with a 12-2 run and a3-pointer at the buzzer byBopper Stenzel gave Clarka 31-27 advantage at thebreak. Clark increased themargin to double figures inthe third frame and used a19-2 run to put the gameaway. Clark seniors TaylorHoward and Charlie Rogers

combined for 12 pointsduring the decisive spurt.“We just came out and

stayed focused, like coachtold us to do,” Rogers said.Howard tied teammate

Adam Fatkin for team-highscoring honors with 19points. Rogers scored 11points in the second halfand finished with 16 forthe Cards. Fatkin com-pleted a double-doublewith 11 rebounds despitemissing most of the secondquarter because of foultroubleThe Panthers (19-13)

scored 11 of the first 15points of the fourth quar-ter, but couldn’t get nocloser than 13 down thestretch. Clark committed21 turnovers, but scored 15points on second-chancebaskets and outreboundedthe Panthers 50-29.Brent Back led Augusta

with 17 points and earnedpraised from Humphrey.“He’s as good (of a

guard) as we have seen,”the Clark coach said. “Heis a really nice player.”

———Augusta 13 14 07 19 — 53Clark 11 20 23 21 — 75

AUGUSTA (19-13) — Back17, Appleman 14, Moore 10,Kelsch 9, Linville 3.

CLARK (28-5) — Blanton2, VanCleve 3, Israel 2, Sten-zel 8, Howard 19, Rogers 16,Fatkin 19, Roberts 6.

DELAYFROM PAGE A8

can still make a shot. ... Ithink that’s what makes re-ally, really good teams.”Patric Young led Florida

(22-9, 10-6) with 21 pointswhile Erik Murphy added 14points and eight rebounds.Young and Murphy had few

answers for Davis and Jones,who both were 9 of 13 fromthe field, including a 3-pointer each.Kentucky shot 53 percent

from the field and seeminglyscored at will in the paint, fin-ishing with 40 points in thekey. And when the Wildcatsaren’t missing many shotsand aren’t turning the ballover, they are tough to beat— maybe even impossible.“This line of guys they have

really good chemistry, they’rereally together,” Young said.“No one’s out there trying toscore from himself. ... Theyhave a really complete team.It will be really tough to beatthem.”The Wildcats took a 28-16

lead in the first half, oftenabusing the Gators in one-on-one situations. And evenwhen Kentucky did miss,Davis and Jones were therefor rebounds and putbacks.

“It was one of those nightsthat Kentucky’s length reallycaused us some problems,”Donovan said.Florida crawled back in the

second half. The Gators cutthe lead to 46-44 with about16 minutes remaining, butcouldn’t get any closer asKentucky responded withclutch shots every time thescore got close.Kentucky started pulling

away from there.Florida responded thanks

to some inspired play byYoung and made it 59-55. Butthe Cats just dialed it up onboth ends of the court.The Gators made just one

basket over the final 9:02, ameaningless shot in the clos-ing minute. Davis, meanwhile, took

over. He had a putback, alayup, a dunk and a freethrow down the stretch.“John is now putting him in

situations that he did not do alot of,” Donovan said. “Whenyou go through a season,teams start to guard you dif-ferently, throw differentthings at you and it’s enabledhim to grow as Kentucky’steam’s grown because headds a different dimensionfor them on the perimeter.”

CATSFROM PAGE A8