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Kansas basketball vs. Illinois recap: Jayhawks face Fighting Illini in exhibition game – The Topeka Capital-Journal

  1. Kansas basketball vs. Illinois recap: Jayhawks face Fighting Illini in exhibition game The Topeka Capital-Journal
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  3. KU basketball vs. Illinois: Probable starters, tipoff time, TV info for exhibition game Kansas City Star
  4. LIVE! No. 1 Kansas at No. 25 Illinois | Content | news-gazette.com The News-Gazette
  5. Kansas at Illinois: Free Live Stream College Basketball Online – How to Watch and Stream Major League & College Sports Sports Illustrated
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Kentucky vs. Kansas score, takeaways: Jayhawks snap three-game losing streak with road win in blue-blood clash

No. 9 Kansas snapped its three-game losing streak in one of college basketball’s toughest venues as the Jayhawks took an early punch from Kentucky and held the Wildcats at bay for the rest of the way in a 77-68 win Saturday at Rupp Arena. Jalen Wilson led the Jayhawks with 22 points and Kansas dominated Kentucky on the offensive glass to end the Wildcats’ winning streak at four games and avenge last season’s 80-62 home loss to the Wildcats.

The game was the marquee showdown of the final SEC/Big 12 Challenge, and it delivered with both teams playing well offensively in a battle of the sport’s all-time winningest programs. Kentucky jumped out to an early 11-6 lead, but Kansas weathered the storm and never trailed again after the 9:35 mark of the first half. With the win, KU avoided its first-ever four-game losing streak under 20th-year coach Bill Self.

Oscar Tshiebwe led Kansas with 18 points and nine rebounds, but the Jayhawks negated his impact on the offensive glass by finishing with an 11-0 edge in second-chance points. Kentucky entered the game ranked No. 5 nationally in offensive rebounds per game at 14 while Kansas ranked No. 145 in the same category at 10.7 per game.

With the Jayhawks relying on an undersized center in KJ Adams Jr. and the Wildcats boasting one of the game’s top rebounder in Tshiebwe, it seemed UK would have an obvious advantage on the glass. Instead, it was Kansas that dominated in that regard while picking up a much-needed victory. Adams finished with 17 points on 8-of-10 shooting while Kevin McCullar Jr. played through injury to finish with 11 points and 12 rebounds for the Jayhawks.

Wilson makes case for national player of year

This marked Wilson’s 12th game of 20 or more points this season as the redshirt junior continued to make his case for national player of the year consideration. The 6-foot-8 forward made 9 of 18 shots from the floor and came up with huge shots in the second half as the Jayhawks answered every Kentucky run. After the Wildcats closed within 51-50 at the 11:55 mark, Wilson promptly drilled a 3-pointer. He then made all three of his shot attempts in the final seven minutes, including a dagger of a jump shot with 1:52 remaining that put KU ahead 75-68. 

Purdue center Zach Edey will be difficult to overcome in the national player of the year race, but Wilson continues to produce huge performances against quality opponents for a Kansas team with legitimate aspirations of repeating as national champions.

Kansas gets help from unexpected source

When KJ Adams left the game after picking up his second foul with 7:58 left in the first half, Kansas turned to backup center Zuby Ejiofor. But when Ejiofor left the game less than a minute later with an injury, it forced Self to go deeper into his bench than he likely expected. He turned to freshman center Ernest Udeh Jr., who entered averaging just 6.9 minutes in only 14 appearances this season. 

Udeh had appeared in just two games this month but he gave the Jayhawks 12 important minutes, matching his most time on the court in any game since mid-November. Kansas outscored Kentucky by six with Udeh on the floor as he finished with four points on 2-of-2 shooting and pulled down a couple of rebounds while brushing with Tshiebwe on the interior.

Poor shooting bites Kentucky

After a Quad 4 home loss to South Carolina on Jan. 10 dropped Kentucky to 1-3, the Wildcats clearly turned a corner during a four-game winning streak over the last two weeks. However, the Wildcats made just 25.7% of their 3-pointers during that stretch, and the run of poor outside shooting finally caught up with them against Kansas. 

Kentucky hit just 2 of 13 shots from beyond the arc with Cason Wallace responsible for both makes. CJ Fredrick and Antonio Reeves — a pair of transfers lauded for their perimeter shooting — combined to go 0 for 8 from deep. The poor shooting is a new development for the Wildcats, who made 35.4% of their 3-pointers as a team in the season’s first 16 games. If Kentucky is going to put the Kansas loss behind it quickly and build off the progress it made since the loss to the Gamecocks, it will need to find better shooting from somewhere. Wallace is doing his part, but getting Reeves and Fredrick going is going to be essential to this team’s long-term success.

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Duke vs. Kansas score, takeaways: Jalen Wilson leads Jayhawks’ late rally vs. Blue Devils in Champions Classic

The first game of the 2022-23 college basketball season played between top-10 teams delivered in a captivating way Tuesday night as No. 6 Kansas outlasted No. 7 Duke 69-64 during the Champions Classic in Indianapolis. The Jayhawks were without coach Bill Self, who was serving the third game of a self-imposed four-game suspension in response to alleged NCAA violations.

But even without Self and some key players from last season’s national title team, the Jayhawks looked like a national contender once again. Kansas freshman Gradey Dick came alive in crunch time for three clutch buckets in the final two and a half minutes, two of which gave the Jayhawks the lead. 

His diving, twisting lay-up with 1:04 remaining made it a 65-62 lead for the Jayhawks, who rallied from a six-point deficit late in the second half. Dick had been scoreless for the half until his late finishing flurry but finished with 14 points for the game.

For most of the second half, the Jayhawks essentially force-fed junior wing Jalen Wilson, who is the leading returning scorer after the losses of stars such as Ochai Agbaji and Christian Braun to the NBA Draft. Wilson finished with a game-high 25 points and helped the Jayhawks weather a storm in the second half.

Duke trailed by 11 points early but settled in as the game progressed with freshman forward Kyle Filipowski standing out for his aggression in the second half. Filipowski led the Blue Devils with 17 points and 14 rebounds but was just 6 of 18 from the floor. Jeremy Roach added 16 points for Duke.  

Both teams plagued by poor shooting

Duke had hit a respectable 34% of its 3-point attempts through two games entering Tuesday, but the Blue Devils went cold from beyond the arc against Kansas. Jeremy Roach and Tyrese Proctor were each 1 for 5 from deep, and Filipowski was 1 of 6 while Jaylen Blakes and Jacob Grandison combined to go 0 of 5.

Kansas wasn’t much better as the Jayhawks hit only 3 of 19 attempts from 3-point range, but KU did have more success attacking the rim. Overall, Kansas shot 46.3% from the floor compared to 35.8% for Duke. Undersized big man KJ Adams Jr. quietly made 4 of 4 attempts from the field without being a focal point of KU’s offense. His task against Duke’s much taller bigs was unenviable, but he handled it well enough to allow the Jayhawks to capitalize in other ways.

Kansas shows off its wings

How KU capitalized was through the aggression of its versatile corps of wings. Wilson made into the lane against anyone who guarded him and Dick managed to get loose in key moments. Texas Tech transfer Kevin McCullar also provided a big lift in the first half, particularly early when he often found himself guarded by Filipowski, a 7-footer. McCullar scored eight of his 12 points in the opening half. He had six early as the Jayhawks opened up a 17-6 lead less than seven minutes in.

The size and versatility of the Wilson-Dick-McCullar trio stood out for Kansas. Though just three games into his career, Dick looks capable of playing a similar type of role to the role Christian Braun played for the Jayhawks on their way to a national title last season. Though replacing Ochai Agbaji is going to be a bit more difficult, it’s clear KU has the perimeter weapons necessary to be a matchup nightmare once again.

Key players missing in action

Neither team had its full roster available. One of Duke’s five-star freshmen, versatile wing Dariq Whitehead, has yet to make his debut while recovering from offseason foot surgery. The 6-6 wing would have given Duke another versatile defender to deploy against Wilson and Dick.

Kansas was without two players as well, though. Freshman guard MJ Rice (illness) and sophomore Zach Clemence (injury) were unavailable. Rice is a McDonald’s All-American who played a major role off the bench last week, and Clemence is a sophomore fighting for minutes in the front court.

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Fresh off winning 2022 NCAA men’s basketball championship, Kansas Jayhawks head into offseason as 2023 title favorites

The rock chalk champions are the favorites to win it all again next season.

Caesars Sportsbook has installed the Kansas Jayhawks as the favorites, at 10-1, to win the 2023 national championship.

On Monday, the Jayhawks pulled off the largest comeback in a championship game to nip North Carolina 72-69 to earn the program’s fourth national title and first since 2008. Now Kansas heads into the offseason as the favorite for next season, too.

Gonzaga is next at 12-1, although the Bulldogs are expected to lose star big man Chet Holmgren to the NBA. Arizona, Kentucky and Duke each opened at 15-1 at Caesars Sportsbook, followed by Arkansas at 16-1.

Houston, Baylor, North Carolina and UCLA are each 18-1 and round out the teams with odds better than 20-1.

Auburn opened as 22-1, followed by Villanova at 25-1. Purdue and Michigan are each 28-1.

Kansas entered this season’s NCAA tournament at 12-1 at Caesars Sportsbook. Gonzaga was the pre-tournament favorite but was knocked out in the Sweet 16 by Arkansas.

The pre-tournament betting favorite has won seven of the past 17 tournaments.

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Kansas vs. UNC score, takeaways: Jayhawks complete historic comeback to win first NCAA championship since 2008

A meeting of college basketball powers in Monday night’s national title game delivered a game for the ages as Kansas rallied from a 16-point deficit to beat North Carolina 72-69 and secure the program’s fourth national championship. The Jayhawks’ furious rally marked the largest-ever comeback in a national title game, besting Loyola-Chicago’s 15-point comeback against Cincinnati from the 1963 title game.

David McCormack scored a critical go-ahead lay-up with 1:21 remaining to put Kansas ahead 70-69. Then, he added another bucket with 22 seconds left to make it a 72-69 edge. North Carolina missed consecutive 3-pointers on the ensuing possession and a look from the top of the key at the buzzer to cement the outcome.

Kansas jumped out to an early 7-0 lead but was outscored 40-18 over the rest of the first half as the Tar Heels dominated the offensive glass for an 18-2 edge in second-chance points entering the break. But whatever coach Bill Self told the Jayhawks at halftime worked wonders as KU came bursting out of the locker room with 31-10 spurt.  

McCormack finished with 15 points and 10 rebounds and was particularly clutch late while doing battle with injured UNC big man Armando Bacot. The Tar Heels’ junior center was playing on a twisted ankle that he re-injured while maneuvering for a potential go-ahead bucket in the final minute. But he got the best of McCormack in the first half before McCormack came up with key plays late in an epic finish.

Here are the takeaways from a classic national title game on Monday night in New Orleans. 

David McCormack’s redemption

When David McCormack hit a jumper less than a minute into the game to give the Jayhawks a 5-0 lead, it seemed like he was picking up right where he left off in a semifinal win over Villanova on Saturday. In that 81-65 KU victory, he scored a season-high 25 points. With Bacot hobbled and McCormack riding high off the confidence of Saturday’s performance, the early returns suggested the Jayhawks might have an edge on the interior.

Bacot struggled initially, but as the half wore on, UNC’s wounded warrior repeatedly got the best of McCormack, who left the game with 4:17 remaining in the first half after picking up his second foul. His exit came amid a 16-0 run for North Carolina, and things did not improve amid McCormack’s absence. 

But in the second half, the KU big man found his footing. He finished with his 11th double-double of the season, and his two baskets in the final two minutes made the difference. It’s been an up-and-down career for McCormack, and that was embodied in Monday’s game. Ultimately, it ended on the greatest up as he lifted the Jayhawks to a national title.

Role players emerge

The trio of Remy Martin, Christian Braun and Jalen Wilson combined to shoot 3 of 18 from the floor in the first half for Kansas. In the second half, those same three players combined to make 13 of 18 shots from the field. Wilson tied McCormack for a team-high with 15 points, and Braun added a double-double with 12 points and 12 rebounds. Martin, meanwhile, hit all four of his shot attempts in the second half, including a trio of 3-pointers.

While Agbaji and McCormack were arguably the most important players for this Kansas team throughout the season, what set the Jayhawks apart were their role players. In particular, the dynamic play of Braun and Wilson as players with a unique combination of size and versatility made KU a tough matchup all season.

With Agbaji, Martin and McCormack as seniors on this season’s team, the display from Braun and Wilson may only be a preview of things to come. While either or both could choose to test the NBA Draft waters, the pair of dynamic playmakers could make Kansas a contender to repeat as national champions if they return next season.

UNC runs out of star power

Bacot put the Tar Heels on his back in the first half but ran out of gas in the second half, going 0 for 6 from the floor after halftime. With 50 seconds remaining, he twisted his injured right ankle again and fell to the floor in agony while making a move toward the basket with the Tar Heels trailing 70-69.

The play was symbolic of how Bacot gave everything he had before hitting a literal breaking point in the game’s final minute. With guards RJ Davis and Caleb Love combining to shoot 10 of 41 from the floor, North Carolina simply lacked the firepower it needed in the second half to keep pace with the red-hot Jayhawks.

eeSophomore forward Puff Johnson provided a huge lift off the bench with 11 points, including nine in the second half as he played extended minutes due to Leaky Black’s foul trouble. But a UNC squad that got so many clutch buckets from Love, Davis, Brady Manek and Bacot on a memorable run needed just one or two more to get across the finish line.

Kansas Jayhawks championship gear released

The Jayhawks have won their first national title since 2008. You can now buy Kansas championship shirts, hats, jerseys, hoodies, and much more to celebrate the historic win. Get gear here now.


We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.

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How the Kansas Jayhawks won the 2022 men’s national championship, and what’s next for both KU and the North Carolina Tar Heels

Men’s college basketball has a new national champion. The Kansas Jayhawks launched a historic comeback to prevail 72-69 over the North Carolina Tar Heels in Monday night’s final in New Orleans, the school’s fourth national title and second under head coach Bill Self, who also led KU to the 2008 crown. Kansas made history by overcoming the largest halftime deficit ever for a national champion, trailing 40-25 at the break before storming out of the locker room with an 18-6 run that eliminated any notion of a Tar Heels runaway. The previous largest halftime deficit for a champ was 11, attained by the 2001 Duke Blue Devils and 1958 Temple Owls.

With Kansas cutting down the nets to put a bow on the 2021-22 season, ESPN’s team of Myron Medcalf, Jeff Borzello, John Gasaway and Joe Lunardi took a final look at this historic national championship game, including what went right for Kansas and what went wrong for North Carolina in the second half. The ESPN quartet also reflected on the meaning of the Kansas triumph, of the past five months of college basketball and also took a look ahead at the personnel the Jayhawks and the Tar Heels have coming back in 2022-23.


What was the No. 1 reason Kansas beat North Carolina?

North Carolina and Kansas came together to give us one of the most thrilling national title games in years. With five minutes to play, Kansas had a 63-61 edge after being down 15 points at halftime. North Carolina’s offensive firepower and defensive pressure had created that cushion going into the break, but Kansas’ offensive efficiency helped it recover and take the lead in the second half. That 10-minute stretch for Kansas at the start of the second half, when it outscored North Carolina 31-10, kept the Tar Heels chasing it until the end of the game. In the final minutes, however, both teams had a chance.

The reason Kansas won this game was because it did to North Carolina what it did to Texas Southern, Providence and Miami in the NCAA tournament, as it went on one of its fabulous game-altering runs. It was a different team in the second half. Leaky Black picked up his fourth foul early, which took pressure off Ochai Agbaji, who had otherwise been hounded by the North Carolina wing. Jalen Wilson got hot after the break, and in general, the Jayhawks found the same gear they hit when they outscored the Hurricanes 45-17 in the second half of their Elite Eight game.

As Kansas rallied, you could see the fatigue affecting North Carolina. Armando Bacot, who turned his ankle in his team’s win over Duke, was limping early in the second half. The Tar Heels were tired of chasing Kansas players off screens and tussling on the block with David McCormack, whose sky hook over Brady Manek gave Kansas a critical three-point lead in the final seconds.

Kansas made 58% of its shots in the second half while UNC connected on just 28%. Throughout the postseason, Kansas was able to elevate to a level that no opponent could match, and the Tar Heels met the same fate.

And so KU hit the button again and joined the 1962-63 Loyola Chicago squad as the only teams to come back from 15-point deficits in the national title game to win, and secure Bill Self’s second national championship. — Medcalf

Was this more of an epic Kansas comeback or an epic North Carolina collapse?

Definitely the former. As bad as the Jayhawks played after their 7-0 opening run, they used every weapon in their arsenal to spin the second half back in their favor. And it’s not as if North Carolina gave it away. Anything but. The Tar Heels made multiple big plays of their own after falling behind late, only to run out of time — and players — in the closing minutes.

In a way, Kansas won the game twice. The fast start might have crippled a lesser opponent, and the second-half reversal was championship caliber in every respect. It was an epic turnaround and a fitting end to one of the greatest NCAA tournaments.

Both teams deserve nothing but praise. — Lunardi

What is the historical impact of this game for Kansas and Bill Self?

The Atlanta Braves and manager Bobby Cox won 14 straight NL East titles from 1991 to 2005. And one World Series. Were they incredible achievers? Or underachievers? And what would multiple titles have meant to their legacy?

The Kansas Jayhawks have been a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament an inconceivable nine times (10 if we count the canceled 2020 tourney) under Bill Self — literally half of his tenure in Lawrence. And only once before had they won the final game. Even Self agrees there should have been more trophies.

Monday night, the Jayhawks did what the Braves never could: They earned the fourth national championship in school history — a signature second for their coach — and in the process turned all of those unfulfilled No. 1 seeds into happy accidents.

Winning cures all. One title can be a fluke, but two cements a legacy. Even if Bill Self never wins another game. — Lunardi

Which of these teams is in better shape for next season? Can Kansas become the first back-to-back winner since Florida in 2006-07?

Much of it obviously depends on the NBA draft and the transfer portal. But as it stands, I think Kansas is in slightly better shape. And given the Jayhawks are ranked No. 4 in my Way-Too-Early Top 25 and North Carolina slides in at No. 5, I clearly don’t think there’s a huge gap. While Kansas is expected to lose McCormack, Agbaji, Christian Braun, Remy Martin, Mitch Lightfoot and Jalen Coleman-Lands, Bill Self should return two starters from this season’s team in Dajuan Harris Jr. and Wilson. But the real optimism stems from the incoming recruiting class, a group that features three five-star prospects. Gradey Dick had as good a senior season as anyone in the 2022 class, while MJ Rice is physically ready for college basketball and Ernest Udeh will help anchor the interior. I also think the Jayhawks enter the portal for some help, especially up front.

Meanwhile, North Carolina could be as high as the top five if Bacot, Caleb Love and R.J. Davis all return to Chapel Hill. Is that overly likely? Probably not. Bacot might have been out the door either way before the NCAA tournament run, while Love’s Kemba Walker impression this month has potentially put him in position to exit to the NBA as well. Black has a super-senior season he can use, but that’s undetermined at this point. So there’s a lot more up in the air for Hubert Davis next season. Regardless, Davis is going to need something from his newcomers, a pair of top-50 prospects in Seth Trimble and Jalen Washington. How big a role they have right off the bat will be determined by whether the current stars stay or go. — Borzello

What will be the most memorable aspect of the 2021-22 college basketball season? How will it be remembered?

We’ll remember that this was, finally, a return to normal, and that the season ended with an incredible run by No. 15 seed Saint Peter’s and a highly entertaining Final Four filled to the brim with blue bloods. The fans came back, and in retrospect, we’ll gloss over the fact that there were still games rescheduled or even canceled.

But things really got rolling once we got to March. Shaheen Holloway’s Peacocks made history by stunning Kentucky and becoming the first No. 15 seed ever to reach the Elite Eight. North Carolina made its own amazing run as a No. 8 seed. The Tar Heels ended Mike Krzyzewski’s career in a national semifinal at the Superdome, adding an indelible chapter to that storied rivalry.

Most of all, we’ll remember Kansas overcoming a 15-point halftime deficit and winning the title. The Jayhawks were the lone No. 1 seed among the storied names in New Orleans, and did what it takes to write their name in the history books yet again. — Gasaway

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Kansas vs. Miami score, takeaways: Jayhawks rout Hurricanes, head to Final Four as only remaining No. 1 seed

There won’t be a Final Four without a No. 1 seed this year. No. 1 Kansas used a strong second-half to erase a halftime deficit and ultimately put away No. 10 Miami 76-50 in the Midwest Regional final.

The Jayhawks (32-6) are headed to their fourth Final Four under coach Bill Self, and their first since 2018. The opponent in 2022 is the same as it was then, with Kansas taking on Villanova at 6:09 p.m. Saturday in New Orleans.

Kansas has struggled in the Elite Eight under Self, going 3-5 before Sunday’s win. And with Kameron McGusty scoring 14 first-half points, it looked like another rough regional final outing was in store for the Jayhawks. Kansas led 27-26 before Miami (26-10) ended the half on a 9-2 run to take a 35-29 halftime advantage.

Kansas didn’t waste much time erasing that edge in the second half. Christian Braun’s 3-pointer — Kansas’ first of the game — with 15:27 remaining broke a 40-all tie, and about five minutes later, Ochai Agbaji’s own 3-pointer pushed the lead into double digits at 12. Miami never cut that lead back to single digits again.

Five Jayhawks scored at least nine points, led by Agbaji, who broke out of his recent slump with 18 points on 8-of-12 shooting, and he added five rebounds, four assists and four steals.

McGusty finished with 18 points to lead the Hurricanes.

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KU and Les Miles Mutually Agree to Part Ways – Kansas Jayhawks

LAWRENCE, Kan. –  The University of Kansas and Les Miles have mutually agreed to part ways effective immediately. Terms of the agreement will be released in the coming days. While a national search for a new head coach begins immediately, Mike DeBord will continue to serve as the acting head coach until an interim head coach is determined.

Statement from Director of Athletics Jeff Long:

“I am extremely disappointed for our university, fans and everyone involved with our football program. There is a lot of young talent on this football team, and I have no doubt we will identify the right individual to lead this program. We will begin the search for a new head coach immediately with an outside firm to assist in this process. We need to win football games, and that is exactly what we’re going to do.”

Statement from Former Head Football Coach Les Miles:

“This is certainly a difficult day for me and for my family. I love this university and the young men in our football program. I have truly enjoyed being the head coach at KU and know that it is in a better place now than when I arrived. To our student-athletes, I want you to remember that you came to play for KU and earn a degree here. So, I implore you to stay and build on what we started and do all of the things we talked about doing together. There is a bright future for all of you and for KU Football.”



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