<
>

Saint Peter's Peacocks shock No. 2 Kentucky Wildcats in first round of men's NCAA tournament

INDIANAPOLIS -- Saint Peter's coach Shaheen Holloway stood on the sideline with his arms crossed and showed no emotion as guard Matthew Lee made two free throws to give the Peacocks a four-point lead over Kentucky with 20 seconds left in overtime of their first-round game in the NCAA tournament.

Holloway didn't show emotion because he believed his team would be in position as the No. 15 seed to knock off the No. 2 seed Wildcats. And that's also why, as the final buzzer sounded in Saint Peter's 85-79 victory over heavily favored Kentucky, Holloway didn't celebrate, he simply got his players together to shake hands with the Wildcats.

"Proud of my guys for battling, like we do all year," Holloway said. "This is something that these guys understand, no disrespect to anybody, but we wasn't coming down here just to lose. We came down here to fight and we did."

To those outside of the program, Saint Peter's wasn't supposed to stand a chance against the Wildcats. Not a program from a school in Jersey City, New Jersey, with an enrollment of about 2,300 students, that plays in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference and entered Thursday as an 18.5-point underdog. But it was the Peacocks who gave John Calipari his first opening-round loss since he became coach of the Wildcats while being just the 10th No. 15 seed to win a first-round game since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985.

The Peacocks' win tied the fourth-largest point-spread upset in the tournament since 1985. (ESPN's story previously called it the largest upset, but Norfolk State's win over Missouri as a 21.5-point underdog in 2012 holds the record since the tournament expanded to 64 teams.)

"Putting Jersey City on the map, in New Jersey, we come from a small state," Saint Peter's guard Daryl Banks III said. "Probably a lot of people probably don't even know who we are. It's huge for our school and everybody back home."

Peacocks forward KC Ndefo added: "We just love being the underdogs, going out there fighting, staying together, staying poised and getting the job done."

Banks kept the Peacocks in the game in the first half with his 3-point shooting as he scored 16 of his 27 points in the first 20 minutes. Guard Doug Edert picked things up in the second half by scoring 15 of his 20 points in the final 25 minutes, including a runner to tie the score at 71-71 and send the game to overtime after Saint Peter's trailed by eight points late.

"Sad day," Calipari said. "Not just we lose a game. It's that this season ended with this group and how much joy they brought to me and our staff. And I'll just say one thing: that you have an eight-point lead, and I'm a guy that's been through a lot of these, you have an eight-point lead with three minutes to go, you win the game."

The Wildcats, a favorite to come out of the East Region and reach the Final Four, didn't enter the tournament playing as crisply as they wanted to. They had a late-season loss at Arkansas and then lost to Tennessee in the semifinals of the SEC tournament. Kentucky was 4-of-15 on 3-pointers Thursday.

"This was probably something they never felt in their lives," Calipari said. "And that's why I wish I had some answers with three minutes to go to help them through it to get by the first one. But I tell you what, we missed shots, and Saint Peter's made shots. They made 3s. They made layups; we missed. They made free throws; we missed.

"It's one of those games that I was hoping I could get it by them to get them on to the next game to get their feet underneath them, and obviously I didn't do a very good job with it."

Thursday could be viewed as a makeup for the last time Holloway played in the NCAA tournament. He missed Seton Hall's East Regional semifinal loss to Oklahoma State because of an ankle injury during his senior year in 2000. Now he's in position to lead Saint Peter's past the second round of the tournament for the first time in school history.

"This is about the players," Holloway said. "These guys put up with my nonsense every day in practice. This is about them. I'm so proud of them and so happy for them because these are moments people can't take away from them. These guys came in and took down one of the biggest schools in the country, right? So they are going to remember this moment for the rest of their life. So it's not about me."

ESPN's David Purdum contributed to this story.