Football
Associated Press 16y

Patterson scores 23 to lead Kentucky to a 79-73 double-overtime win over No. 13 Vanderbilt

LEXINGTON, Ky. -- Unlike the start of his tenure at
Kentucky, coach Billy Gillispie more than met expectations in his
Southeastern Conference debut.

Freshman Patrick Patterson had 23 points and 12 rebounds to lift
the Wildcats to a 79-73 double-overtime win over No. 13 Vanderbilt
on Saturday, stealing back some of the luster missing from the
historic program during Gillispie's rocky start.

"There's a lot of basketball left," Gillispie said. "Not one
time have I heard anyone make an excuse for them and not one time
have I heard them make an excuse."

Ramel Bradley added 20 points, and Joe Crawford had 17 for
Kentucky (7-7, 1-0), which gave Gillispie his first win against a
ranked opponent this season.

But the Wildcats weren't spectacular.

They allowed Vanderbilt (16-1, 1-1) to crawl back from 16-point
second half deficit, then blew an overtime lead before mounting a
comeback.

But the hustle and effort that Gillispie has chastised his team
for not having returned, and finally the Wildcats have a win they
hope can spark their season.

"When you win a game like that it says a lot about the
toughness of your team," Gillispie said. "They didn't give up and
we wouldn't give up either. That's what made me most proud."

Shan Foster had 20 points for Vanderbilt, which started the day
as one of five unbeaten teams in Division I. A.J. Ogilvy struggled
early for the Commodores, but ended with 16 points and five
rebounds.

Still, Ogilvy admitted the 23,965 fans at Rupp Arena -- the
largest crowd he's played in front of with Vanderbilt -- had him
rattled.

"I think we got taken out of our game a little bit at the
start," Ogilvy said. "We just tried to recover, but never
could."

Bradley's jumper in the second overtime put Kentucky ahead
77-73, clinching the first win over a ranked opponent this season.

For a team that had seemed to lose confidence under Gillispie,
Kentucky got a much needed boost that comes with an exhausting win
over a ranked SEC East opponent.

Other games this season weren't as telling.

Kentucky was shocked with a 16-point home loss to Gardner-Webb
in Gillispie's second game and the poor showings snowballed. The
Wildcats lost to top-ranked North Carolina and were routed at No.
11 Indiana. They lost at home to unheralded San Diego. They were
beaten by instate rival Louisville.

They didn't show any affects of all that against Vanderbilt,
playing with the passion of the Kentucky team's of old.

"We wanted this one, we needed this one and we got this one,"
Bradley said. "There's a whole new season ahead, and now we need
to go out and keeping getting more wins."

Ogilvy's putback with 1.8 seconds left in the first overtime
tied it at 72, sending a once blowout game into a second overtime.

After Vanderbilt took a 69-68 lead in the first overtime on a
layup by Alan Metcalfe, Bradley answered with a layup for Kentucky.
Patterson would the put the Wildcats ahead 72-69 on a tip-in,
pumping his fist in a premature celebration.

"This is why I came to Kentucky," Patterson said. "I knew we
could win games like this -- Kentucky is supposed to win games like
this."

Foster hit a 3-pointer with 14 seconds left in regulation that
tied the game at 65, one possession after the Commodores forced
Crawford into a turnover.

But it was the slow start that Vanderbilt coach Kevin Stallings
said led to the loss.

Derrick Jasper hit two 3-pointers to cap a 10-0 run that gave
the Wildcats a 23-10 lead with 9:36 to play in the opening half.

Kentucky then built a 46-30 with 15 minutes to play in
regulation, and collapsed with the kind of blunders that have come
to typify this year's Wildcats.

"They came out ready to play and I thought we really did all we
could the first 10 minutes of the game to accommodate them,"
Stallings said. "I thought our team fought extremely hard after
the first 10 minutes."

Vanderbilt tried to creep back, but Foster and Ogilvy couldn't
get free from Kentucky's smothering defense, which held them to a
season-low five points at halftime.

On one of the few occasions this season, Gillispie said he liked
his team's effort and that's what led to the sudden turnaround.

"I think our guys are a little tougher than they're given
credit for," Gillispie said. "They just showed what they can do
when they're pushed to the brink."

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