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A night immersed in March Madness

By Rob Burchianti 4 min read
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Oakland fans pose for photos with the Golden GrizzliesÎÞëÊÓƵ™ Jack Gohlke, who hit 10 3-pointers and scored a game-high 32 points in a 80-76 win over Kentucky in Thursday nightÎÞëÊÓƵ™s NCAA menÎÞëÊÓƵ™s basketball tournament first-round game at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh.
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Rob Burchianti

PITTSBURGH ÎÞëÊÓƵ“ They call it March Madness for a reason and a night at PPG Paints Arena showed why.

Meet Jack Gohlke and DJ Burns Jr. everyone.

No offense to KissÎÞëÊÓƵ™s Paul Stanley, but those two were rock stars on this night.

Pittsburgh welcomed the NCAA menÎÞëÊÓƵ™s basketball tournament to town for the second time in three years with four first-round games split into two sessions on Thursday and if youÎÞëÊÓƵ™re one who roots for the underdog then the night games were made for you.

The first match-up of the late doubleheader was supposed to be a happy homecoming for Kentucky coach John Calipari, who hails from Moon Township. A team named Oakland (no, not the Oakland located in Pittsburgh, and, no, not that one in the state of California either, this Oakland is situated in Michigan) and that player named Gohlke turned that dream scenario into a complete nightmare for the Wildcats and their coach.

Gohlke, a 6-foot-3 senior guard, came off the bench to rain in 10 3-pointers as the 14th-seeded Golden Grizzlies, 13.5-point underdog, stunned No. 3 Kentucky, 80-76.

Gohlke shooting from long range ÎÞëÊÓƵ“ he came into the game hitting at 37.8% ÎÞëÊÓƵ“ shouldnÎÞëÊÓƵ™t have been a surprise to the Wildcats. He had taken 335 shots this season and all but eight of those were from beyond the arc and was second in the country at 3.7 3-pointers made per game.

Against a Kentucky team known for its 3-point shooting, it was Gohlke who drained seven treys in the first half which ended with Oakland ahead 38-35.

It wasnÎÞëÊÓƵ™t only that Gohlke was making those long bombs, it was how he was doing it that had the crowd cheering every time he launched the ball. Many were off-balance attempts of the catch-and-shoot variety. Several looked completely forced yet found nothing but the bottom of the net, with the exception of one banked-in try.

Gohlke shot 50% for the game, hitting half of his 20 attempts, all 3-pointers, in scoring a career-high and game-high 32 points. His other two points came while he was fouled attempting a 3-pointer and made two of the three free throws.

Despite the local connection in Calipari, the crowd gravitated to Gohlke and the Grizzlies as the game wore on, putting just that much more pressure on the Wildcats while lifting the underdogs.

Gohlke wasnÎÞëÊÓƵ™t the only one who made big 3-pointers for Oakland.

After Kentucky took its lone lead of the second half, 45-43, on an Antonio Reeves layup, the GrizzliesÎÞëÊÓƵ™ Trey Townsend ÎÞëÊÓƵ“ who finished with 17 points, 12 rebounds, four assists, two steals and a blocked shot in a fantastic all-around performance ÎÞëÊÓƵ“ made a trey that put his team ahead to stay.

The Wildcats whittled the gap down to 75-74 on a 3-pointer by Rob Dillingham with just over a minute left but DQ Cole delivered the dagger for Oakland with a corner 3-pointer with 37 seconds left to put his team up by four.

The finale of the four-game slate also produced an upset, although not on the level of GrizzliesÎÞëÊÓƵ™ stunner, as 11th-seeded North Carolina State pulled away from No. 6 Texas Tech, a 5.5-point favorite, for a surprisingly easy 80-67 victory.

Just like Oakland, the Wolfpack had a player come off the bench to score a career high in points to spur his team on. Ben Middlebrooks made six of eight shots from the field and nine of 10 free throws in scoring a game-high 21 points.

NC State also got strong outings from forward Mohaned Diarra, who made six of nine shots and put up 17 points and 12 rebounds, and guard DJ Horne, who contributed 16 points, six boards and five assists.

The fan favorite was Burns, however.

The bulky 6-9, 275-pound forward made seven of 11 shots, all in the paint, in scoring 16 points and displayed some quick spins and moves along with his power and hook shot that were eye-opening and obviously entertaining to the crowd.

Every time Burns touched the ball, fans roared with glee. Even the two charge fouls he was whistled for that sent Texas Tech players sprawling to the floor were amusing.

Gohlke and Burns will be on display together on Saturday at PPG Paints Arena in a second-round game between Oakland and NC State at 7:10 p.m. which promises to be a compelling clash.

The nightcap will feature the winners of the Thursday afternoon session in No. 3 Creighton, a 77-60 victor over No. 14 Akron, and 11th-seeded Oregon, a 87-73 winner over No. 6 South Carolina (who I had unfortunately had in my Final Four).

Ticket prices are admittedly steep but try to catch that doubleheader if you get the chance.

When youÎÞëÊÓƵ™re immersed in March Madness, you never know what you might see.

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