No. 2 Kentucky downs No. 15 Tennessee 74-45 at SEC tourney

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Kentucky is back in the Southeastern Conference tournament title game, a win away from the championship Wildcats fans see as their birthright.

DeMarcus Cousins had 19 points and 15 rebounds, and No. 2 Kentucky beat 15th-ranked Tennessee 74-45 Saturday and advanced back to the final for the first time since 2004.

Kentucky (31-2) will play either No. 20 Vanderbilt or Mississippi State on Sunday, looking to add a 26th tournament title to the 44th regular season championship the Wildcats won in coach John Calipari’s first season.

Eric Bledsoe had 17 points on 5-of-8 shooting from 3-point range, and John Wall added 14. The Wildcats improved to a league-best 113-22 in this tournament and 35-2 in the semifinals.

Scotty Hopson had 11 points for Tennessee (25-8), which snapped a five-game winning streak with its worst scoring performance this season.

The well-rested Wildcats never trailed and scored 14 straight points to push the lead to 29 late. That was even though Cousins missed a layup off the opening tip. He came back and dunked to put Kentucky ahead, and the best Tennessee could do was tie the Wildcats three times — the last at 10.

These programs don’t like each other anyway in the SEC’s second-longest series. The addition of Calipari, who brought his personal rivalry with Tennessee coach Bruce Pearl from Memphis, and the high expectations from both teams created an electric atmosphere not seen at this tournament in many years.

Kentucky came in trying to cement a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament, while Tennessee hoped a win would help earn a No. 3 seed.

It was billed as a neutral court game, but the transformation of Bridgestone Arena into Rupp South couldn’t have been clearer than a text poll in the first half posted on the video board of which team fans expected to win. Kentucky drew 77 percent in the early results.

Every time Tennessee’s pep band cranked up “Rocky Top,” the Wildcats’ fans did their best to drown it out, chanting, “Go Big Blue.”

Tennessee point guard Bobby Maze noticed the blue crowd in the quarterfinals and said Kentucky fans travel like the “Million Man March.” So the Vols knew exactly what they’d be walking into on a court technically in their home state but about three hours away from campus — just as it is for the Wildcats.

And Pearl had his orange blazer packed and ready for this game against the opponent Tennessee wants to measure its basketball program against. The Vols were the last team to beat Kentucky — 74-65 in Knoxville on Feb. 27 — as they split the regular season series.

Kentucky wound up winning its fourth straight by holding Tennessee to a season-low 19 points in the first half. The Wildcats improved to 5-1 in SEC semifinals and 144-66 all-time against the Vols.

The Volunteers, playing their third game in as many days, got into early foul trouble, and they spent more time pleading with officials than hitting shots. Kentucky did hit more free throws (16-of-30) than Tennessee attempted (9-of-15).

Officials were busy, handing out double technicals twice in the second half with Tennessee guard Melvin Goins ejected after both a technical and a flagrant foul with 3:33 left.

Tennessee pulled within 45-39 on a bucket by Brian Williams with 9:27 left. That was as close as the Vols would get.

Patrick Patterson dunked for only his second field goal, Bledsoe hit a 3, then Darnell Dodson hit consecutive 3s before dunking on an alley-oop pass from Darius Miller to put Kentucky up 58-41 with 6:02 remaining. The Cats just kept adding to it from there.

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