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While Calipari tries to get the most out of a lot of talent, Pitino has been playing a different game this season. He is the only Final Four coach without an AP first-teamer. In fact, there were no Louisville players on the second or third teams either, or even on the honorable mention list.
According to most lists, not a single one of Pitino's players would get drafted by the NBA if they left this year. Meanwhile, a raft of injuries and roster adjustments has turned every practice this season into an adventure. Pitino coaxed his sixth Final Four trip out of a team that reminds him in many ways of his first -- an undersized, underappreciated group of players at Providence in 1987, headlined by Billy Donovan.
The Cardinals are led by point guard Peyton Siva and center Gorgui Dieng. Yet they went down the stretch in a tight game against Florida on Saturday with Siva gone from the game with five fouls and with a relatively unheralded freshman, Chane Behanan, taking over.
"We may not have as much talent in certain areas as other teams. But there's young talent and we're going to develop," Pitino said. "The great thing about March Madness and college basketball is that, generally speaking, in the pros, 90 percent of the time, the best team is going to win a five- or seven-game series. In college, it's a one-game stint, maybe somebody shoots great, anything can happen."
Kansas has this year's only unanimous all-AP selection in junior Thomas Robinson, who figures to be an NBA lottery pick if he leaves.
He could spend much of the night Saturday matched up against Sullinger, who sat out with back spasms when these teams met in December and Kansas won 78-67.
"He's one of those kids that, even when he doesn't play his best, he still gets numbers," Self said of Robinson. "Some kids, that happens, and they get eight points, four rebounds. He doesn't play well and he ends up with 15 and 11. It's such a bonus when you can pencil that in for the most part."
Players like that must make coaching easy. Calipari recognizes there are plenty of them -- on all four teams at this year's Final Four. Coaches coach, he said. Players win.
"Everyone's talented," Calipari said. "Yes, we have good players. So does everyone else. You think they just have a system and that's why they're winning? They do it because they've got basketball players."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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