CATS SURVIVE BADGER ATTACK
MIDWEST
Kentucky 63
Wisconsin 57
MINNEAPOLIS – That sound you heard late in the first half was an entire Commonwealth gasping in horror. There was Kentucky’s Keith Bogans, the best player on America’s best team, wincing, limping, his face a mask of pain and his ankle a ruined, swollen mess.
Here were the Wildcats, their No. 1 ranking suddenly in jeopardy, their championship aspirations suddenly jarred, already engaged in a gritty staredown with the Wisconsin Badgers. Already battling a building that was squarely against them, many of the 28,168 inside the Metrodome defending the Big Ten’s honor, hoping to witness the first humbling of a No. 1 seed in this NCAA tourney.
“Every good team needs to face down a moment of truth,” Kentucky coach Tubby Smith said afterward. “Maybe we’ve just confronted ours.”
They certainly survived it. Helped by a career-defining performance by senior center Marquis Estill, who single-handedly reduced Wisconsin’s defense to dust with 28 points, the Wildcats won their 26th straight game and moved within one win of advancing to their first Final Four in five years with a 63-57 victory, earning a spot in the NCAA Midwest Regional finals.
Chuck Hayes also was a key figure, turning in a splendid defensive effort on Wisconsin’s best player, 6-6 swingman Kirk Penney. Penney scored 20 points in the game’s first 24½ minutes, but only managed two shots across its final 151/2, with Hayes shadowing his every movement.
At halftime, the Wildcats learned they would be without Bogans, their leading scorer at 16.0 ppg, who suffered a high ankle sprain.

