Excellent points, Helen and JunoGator.  That's what we've been focusing on in 
our Gator house, too.  :-)

Cee
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Helen Huntley 
  To: gatortalk 
  Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2012 3:17 PM
  Subject: [gatortalk] Re: [gatornews] Gatornews from the Miami Herald and Palm 
Beach Post courtesy of JunoGator


  I agree that we've got a lot to be proud of.
  After the way the regular season ended, I never thought we'd have a chance to 
make to the Elite Eight. 
  And the women earned kudos by beating Ohio State.
  So Go Gators!


  On Sun, Mar 25, 2012 at 9:29 AM, JunoGator <[email protected]> 
wrote:

    Gatorfans:



    As disappointing as it is to see our beloved Men's and women's basketball 
teams fall in their respective championship tournaments, we can all be so proud 
of the campaigns just completed.


    The women showed a level of competitiveness that can make us all feel 
optimistic about the building that is continuing in that program.  


    The men's season is particularly outstanding.  This was a team with but one 
senior and he might be considered a pint sized dynamo with a giant heart. The 
only other returning starters was a junior who appeared to provide leadership 
and mentoring to the two sophomore and one freshman other starters even as he 
grew as a player right up until the elite eight game. 


    If we are fortunate enough to see this team grow as much from this year to 
next year as was shown from from last year to this, next year should be another 
fine one.


    So thanks Coaches Butler and Donovan, together with your outstanding staff 
of assistants, for continuing to make it 


    Great to be a Florida Gator! 




    Commentary: It's another Elite Eight meltdown as Florida Gators lose 72-68 
to Louisville

    By DAVE GEORGE Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

    PHOENIX — The only time to start thinking about cutting down the nets is 
when you're standing on top of the ladder and somebody's handing up the 
scissors.

    Those are the words that Florida should put on a plaque and hang next to 
Tim Tebow's famous speech about renewed dedication in the face of defeat.

    That is the lesson that Billy Donovan will have to teach again, and again, 
no matter how many times the Gators basketball team comes within strutting 
distance of a national title.

    Saturday's 72-68 loss to Louisville in the West Regional final was another 
example of Florida falling headlong and helpless into the canyon of competitive 
fire that separates the Elite Eight from the Final Four.

    Just like last year's Elite Eight loss to Butler, the Gators led by 11 
points in the second half. Just like last year, they ended up firing desperate 
three-point shots at game's end and marveling at how shockingly simple it is to 
kill a dream.

    "We thought we had control of it, and we thought we'd be able to keep them 
at bay," said senior guard Erving Walker, who draped a towel over his head in 
the locker room to hide tears that, likewise, couldn't be stopped.

    Louisville went on a 23-8 run in the game's final 10 minutes. Even worse, 
the Gators didn't score at all in the final 2:39. In the end, Donovan turned to 
freshman Bradley Beal, who almost surely will leave Florida now as an NBA 
lottery pick, while the veterans tortured by that close call against Butler 
last March clung to the blind hope that the basketball gods couldn't possibly 
drop the same anvil on them two years in a row.

    Beal missed a couple in close coming down the stretch, bothered by 
6-foot-11 shot-blocking specialist Gorgui Dieng. Louisville, meanwhile, kept 
coming, with a couple of tough buckets by Chane Behanan down low to finally 
take the lead at 69-68 with 1:06 remaining.

    From there, nothing went right for Florida, with a missed jumper by Walker, 
a traveling call on Beal and a foul by Kenny Boynton to keep Louisville from 
dribbling out the clock, which led to a pair of free throws by Russ Smith and a 
71-68 Cardinals lead with 17 seconds to play.

    Donovan's last timeout was to draw up a three-point opportunity for Beal, 
who had a good chance but missed it. An offensive rebound set Boynton up for 
one last attempt to force overtime, but his three-point try also clanged off 
the rim. One tack-on free throw by Louisville officially ended the season for 
Florida and sent Rick Pitino over to shake the hand of Donovan, his former 
player at Providence and assistant at Kentucky, to offer condolences.

    If Pitino really were a pal, he wouldn't have changed Louisville's 
defensive strategy at halftime, going from an unsuccessful zone to a 
smothering, switching man-to-man. Just like that the Gators went from a 
ridiculous 8-for-11 on three-pointers in the first half to 0-for-9 in the 
second.

    That's not the only reason that Billy's basketball daddy ran his career 
record against Donovan to 7-0. The Gators helped by getting stagnant on 
offense, letting Walker dribble too much and trying to bleed the shot clock 
down too much. Aggressive play is what pushed Florida out to a 41-33 halftime 
lead and 65-54 with 8:16 to play. Overthinking by the Gators, mixed in with a 
run of clumsy turnovers, gave Louisville a way to come back even after star 
point guard Peyton Siva fouled out near the four-minute mark.

    "Believe it or not," said Donovan, "I think Russ Smith is more dangerous 
than Siva because he really has got a fearless spirit about him. Siva is a 
little more under control. Russ Smith is sometimes crazy, you know, with some 
of the things he does."

    March Madness is crazy by definition, and Smith's 19-point effort, marked 
by knifing drives and killer whistles in the lane, fully played the part.

    No real highlight-reel plays in there, like the one-handed dunk that Patric 
Young slammed down on an alley-oop pass from Walker, but more than enough body 
shots to take the fight out of Florida.

    "I've got a different feeling than I did last year," said Donovan, who 
squeezed a 26-11 record out of a Gators team that lacked a great post game and 
lost three times to Kentucky because of it. "I think last year we didn't do 
enough to win the game (against Butler). I felt like our guys did enough in 
this game to have a chance to win."

    Eight three-pointers in the first half and 50 percent shooting overall in 
the game should give a team more than a chance. It should make victory almost 
impossible to avoid. That Florida failed here is confirmation of its No. 7 seed 
in the region. Halfway to the six tournament wins needed for an NCAA title, the 
Gators understand again how much farther there is to go.

    Meanwhile, it's time to hide the scissors and other sharp objects from the 
Gators. Somebody else will be cutting down the nets next weekend in New 
Orleans, somebody that won't start looking up at the clock with 10 minutes to 
play and a nice lead in hand, somebody that doesn't know when to quit.




    Florida Gators crumble late, fall to Louisville



    In a virtual repeat of last year’s Elite Eight, UF watched a late 11-point 
lead evaporate.

    BY MATT WATTS MIAMI HERALD WRITER

    PHOENIX -- As Peyton Siva, Kyle Kuric and Russ Smith celebrated, jumping up 
and down on the US Airways Center floor and donning T-Shirts and hats 
emblazoned with the words “Final Four,” Brad Beal, Erving Walker and Kenny 
Boynton fought back tears.

    For these Gators, Saturday’s 72-68 loss in the Elite Eight was painful if 
not just because it of the way it happened and the fact that put a 
disappointing bookend to their season, but because it ended a second 
consecutive season just two games from the ultimate prize.

    “It hurts more for me, personally, and probably for a lot of guys that 
returned,” forward Erik Murphy said. “A lot of people don’t get the shot to go 
to Final Four ever, and we’ve had it twice and did the same thing both times.”

    Florida (26-11) led from the 12:27 mark of the first half to the 1:06 mark 
of the second, establishing a 41-33 lead at halftime and extending it to as 
many as 11 midway through the second half. But a 10-0 run coinciding with a 
nearly six-minute scoring drought brought the Cardinals (30-9) back into a game 
they had been shot out of by the Gators, who made 8 of 11 from beyond the arc 
in the first half before being held to 0 of 9 when it mattered most.

    Last year, Florida allowed an 11-point lead at the 9:26 mark of the second 
half to evaporate down the stretch against Butler in the Elite Eight. This 
year, Florida held the lead by the same 11-point margin at the 9:04 mark of the 
second half.

    “Same feeling,” said Boynton, who sat slouched backward in his locker while 
reporters surrounded him, using his white iPhone as a distraction. “We made 
mistakes on our own. It wasn’t that they were playing good, it wasn’t anything 
that they did, it was just we lost the game on our own, our mistakes.”

    The Gators were 0 for 4 from the field during the Cardinals 10-0 run and 1 
of 12 in the final eight minutes. Walker, a senior, missed two key free throws 
after drilling four in a row earlier in the game after a foul and technical 
called on Louisville coach Rick Pitino.

    Beal, who was named to West regional All-Tournament Team, also committed a 
turnover which led to a jumper from Louisville guard Russ Smith and he was 
called for a travel with just 18 seconds left after coming up with a steal. In 
all, Florida turned it over 14 times, giving Louisville 15 points.

    But the Gators and Beal had their chances late. Beal, who scored 63 points 
on 23-of-38 (60.5 percent) shooting and grabbed 33 rebounds in UF’s four 
tournament games, had a layup attempt blocked with 48 seconds left and Florida 
trailing by one.

    “It’s terrible,” Beal said of letting the game slip away. “I was thinking 
about that as soon as I saw the shot miss. … When you foul and you’re walking 
down to the other end, you’re like, ‘Dang, we had the game in our hands.’”

    Still, with the Gators down two after a couple of free throws from Russ 
Smith, who scored six of Louisville’s final eight points, Beal had a chance to 
tie it. But his three-point attempt from near the top of the key clanged off 
iron, as did Boynton’s second attempt with just eight ticks left.

    “I felt I was open for a minute, and then I let it go,” Beal said. “It went 
off. I got the rebound back, kicked it to Kenny, it was off. It just happens. 
We just didn’t execute plays down the stretch at all.”

    Florida was 21-1 when leading at halftime before Saturday’s loss, and now 
head into an offseason uncertain about the future. Walker is graduating and 
Beal, who is projected as first-round pick in the NBA draft, said he wasn’t 
even thinking about next season yet.

    Five Gators scored in double-figures, with Murphy and Beal leading the way 
with 14 apiece. Murphy also grabbed eight rebounds, while Beal had seven.

    Walker, who afterward in the locker room clutched a towel to his face to 
block the tears, finished with 12 points and seven assists in his final 
collegiate game.

    Pitino is now 6-0 all-time against Florida coach Billy Donovan, who played 
under Pitino at Providence 25 years ago and coached under him at Kentucky. Both 
talked fondly of the other leading up to Saturday, and that didn’t change after 
a closely contested game with everything on the line.

    “I personally, for me, am very happy for coach Pitino,” Donovan said. 
“Certainly emotionally going into the game it’s always a difficult situation 
like that, with our relationship, but I don’t think any coach enjoys losing in 
this type of situation. But if I had to lose, it would be to him.”

    After saying Friday that it’s not difficult for him to play against a coach 
he loves, Pitino backed off that statement and was similarly effusive Saturday.

    “It was very difficult because of the way the game ended, because they 
outplayed us,” Pitino said. “For 32 minutes they outplayed us. And it really 
hurt inside. As much as I felt like celebrating, it really hurt because he did 
such a masterful job of coaching.”







    -- 
    GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
    1996 National Football Champions | 2006 National Basketball Champions
    2006 National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions
    2008 National Football Champions | 
    Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
    Tim Tebow (2007) - Visit our website at www.gatornet.us



  -- 

  Helen Huntley
  (727) 823-3801
  www.helenhuntley.com


  -- 
  GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
  1996 National Football Champions | 2006 National Basketball Champions
  2006 National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions
  2008 National Football Champions | 
  Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
  Tim Tebow (2007) - Visit our website at www.gatornet.us

-- 
GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
1996 National Football Champions   |   2006 National Basketball Champions
2006 National Football Champions   |   2007 National Basketball Champions
2008 National Football Champions   |   
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
Tim Tebow (2007) - Visit our website at www.gatornet.us

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