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The hoop gave Connecticut a 74-71 lead, but Gibbs got free off a screen and calmly drilled his sixth 3-pointer to knot it up with 47.9 seconds left.
Walker brought the ball up court and went right around Wanamaker to get an open look, but he left the jumper short and Coombs-McDaniel pulled down only his second rebound of the game. He quickly and alertly called timeout to set up the final shot.
Walker made it count.
"I had missed a shot and my teammates told me to just stay aggressive," he said. "Everybody in the world knew that ball was coming to me. I wanted to take that shot."
The Huskies played the second half without guard Roscoe Smith, who took an elbow to his face with 7:20 left before the break. He received eight stitches and was tested for a concussion, then spent the rest of the game on the bench.
Calhoun said he's not sure whether Smith will be available in the semifinals.
"It was one of those games where Pittsburgh asks you, 'How tough are you? If you're tough enough, you can beat us,'" Calhoun said. "And we were tough enough today."
Especially when it came to rebounding, the obvious strength of the Panthers.
They came into the game plus-11 in rebounding margin, by far the top mark in the Big East and among the best in the nation. Yet they were outrebounded 32-25 by some scrappy Huskies, including 17-9 on the offensive glass.
UConn also took advantage of 11 turnovers by converting them into 20 points.
"We played hard, but at the end we simply got beat at our own game. We got beat on the boards, it was clear and evident down the stretch," Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said. "It's something we'll address as we get ready for the NCAA tournament."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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