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Jamal Murray Drops 43 Points In Massive Game Five Victory

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Jamal Murray
NBA | Denver Nuggets

Three things are certain in life. Death, taxes and Jamal Murray dropping random 40-point explosions in the NBA Playoffs.

The former Kentucky star, who averaged 20.0 points per game for the Wildcats in the 2015-16 season, took over last night and had a historic performance against the No. 5 seeded Los Angeles Clippers.

This series, between the No. 4 seed Denver Nuggets and the Clippers, serves as one of the only first round matchups that remains competitive, with both teams winning two games a piece before the tip on April 29.

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Murray, who had only scored 13 points in game four, went to on to record his sixth career 40-point postseason game, sinking eight threes and shooting 65.4% from the field, helping the Nuggets regain the series advantage.

In his 70 postseason matchups, Murray has the same amount of 40-point performances as he does in 536 regular season games, proof that the former Cat is one to fear when it matters most. He has also surpassed legends such as Larry Bird, Reggie Miller, Tracy McGrady, Karl Malone and even his own teammate Nikola Jokic in 40-point playoff games.

The former champion is due for these type of performances every now and then and is capable of performing on the big stage, recording a 34-point triple double in the 2023 NBA Finals.

The Canada native and the Nuggets now hold a 3-2 lead, looking to send Kawhi Leonard and James Harden packing on May 1 and begin the road back to the NBA Finals.

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SERIES RECAP: Kentucky Tops Tennessee in Yet Another Sport

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Ethan Hindle celebrates in the dugout in Game 2. Photo by Eddie Justice from UK Athletics.
Photo via UK Athletics

Big Orange gets peeled for a second straight year.

It’s frankly been a struggle for Kentucky (29-16, 11-13 SEC) this season in more ways than one – from injury and illness being placed on the Cats’ best batters to only winning one conference series this year (a sweep vs Alabama).

It’s been concerning on whether or not Wildcats could make the postseason again. Luckily for Big Blue, Tennessee (31-17, 11-13 SEC) came to town, and when Tennessee and Kentucky meet to play sports, it almost never goes well for the team in orange.

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Game 1: Kentucky Wins 9-2

The series opener between the Bat Cats and Ball Vols in Lexington was a game of polar opposite pitching performances. Kentucky wasn’t the team struggling on Friday night, as they won 9-2 in dominating fashion.

For Tennessee, starting pitcher Tegan Kuhns allowed a season-high 10 hits and a season-high six earned runs in his six innings. Ben Cleaver delivered his best pitching performance of the season for Kentucky, throwing seven shutout innings and allowing just four hits.

With Cleaver’s season opus, the Wildcats were able to break out and score their nine straight runs without interruption, including a two-run homer from Ethan Hindle and a three-runner from Braxton Van Cleave.

Game 2: Kentucky Clinches Series, Wins 12-2

I was able to cover Saturday’s game in person, and while the skies remained cloudy throughout all nine innings, it didn’t stop the Cats from shining again as they run-ruled the Vols 12-2 to clinch their second straight series win in the bitter rivalry.

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Those sparks of rivalry angst started to show itself immediately after a fastball to the wrist of Tyler Bell spawned a heated exchange between Nick Mingione and the umps.

Miraculously, it wouldn’t stop Bell from launching a two-run homer just two innings later to break out of the pitching duel that jumpstarted the match.

Hudson Brown also broke through with a homer that put Big Blue Nation in a frenzy. The designated hitter had missed 12 games due to illness, but it only took two at-bats to bomb it to the big screen.

Tennessee would quickly start to shift the momentum, as their first three hits of the day would result in two doubles, a home run, and two scores.

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It’d prove worrying for Big Blue as the bright orange in the stands started to get louder, but a wack pitching performance from the Vols in the sixth inning would break the doors wide open for the Cats to run with the wind like the horses at Churchill.

An easy run-in from Tyler Bell in the eighth stamped in a Kentucky run-rule win, giving the Cats their second series win in the SEC this year.

Game 3: Tennessee Wins 10-9

First-year Vols head coach Josh Elander emphasized his frustrations in Saturday’s postgame after getting outscored by the Cats 21-4 in the first two games. With that massive concern in mind, Tennessee delivered in the final game with a strong offensive showing, highlighted by two homers from Levi Clark, including a three-run homer in the ninth inning.

Kentucky made it scary for Big Orange after a home-run combo from Bell and Van Cleave cut the deficit to one, but it wouldn’t be enough as Tennessee would be able to close the series on a narrow victory.

What’s Next?

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With the regular season coming to an end, Kentucky needs a few more wins to solidify their postseason entry. The Bat Cats will head to Gainesville to take on No. 25 Florida from May 8-10, come back to Lexington to face Northern Kentucky, and close the season at home vs No. 22 Arkansas from May 14-16.

For updates on the rest of Kentucky Baseball’s season, follow KY Insider on socials.

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Football

UK Moves Forward with Plans for Entertainment District Near Kroger Field

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The University of Kentucky is moving forward with a new entertainment district near Kroger Field, selecting the “Cooper Connector” proposal ahead of construction.
UK Athletics

Last year, Champions Blue LLC, the LLC created for UK Athletics, announced the plan to build an entertainment district near Kroger Field to create a new revenue stream. Earlier this week, the school made the next step before the district’s construction, choosing one of four proposals.

On Tuesday, Kevin Locke, UK’s Associate Vice President of planning, design and construction, informed the Champions Blue Board of Governors that the school is moving forward with the “Cooper Connector” plan. This proposal is based on similar districts created near arenas for Ohio State University, Arizona State University, the Green Bay Packers, and the Atlanta Braves.

As an effect of this plan, Bluegrass Community and Technical College will vacate from the school’s original home on Cooper Drive by the end of 2026, a spokesperson told the Lexington Herald-Leader.

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Despite BCTC still holding classes, Kentucky originally took control over the property with an agreement in 2008, after BCTC built a new campus at the former site of Eastern State Hospital, which moved to land owned by UK on the Coldstream Research campus.

The “Cooper Connector” plan includes retail and a hotel conference center, but dining will serve as the anchor, as Locke explained to the board on Tuesday.

“Food and beverage, that would serve as the anchor use for this scheme,” Locke said. “This location needs genuine energy, with multiple retail spots creating critical mass, rather than an isolated, one-off destination. And with the right mix of food, entertainment, and access, this corridor will come alive and attract private investors as well as become an asset for the university, staff, and surrounding community.”

With the plan, there are still some final decisions to be made over the coming weeks, including the precise location for the hotel conference center.

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Perhaps the biggest decision will be whether to include a multi-use facility that would include a new basketball practice facility into the Kroger Field entertainment district or as part of a district to be built near Historic Memorial Coliseum that will include retail, housing, and parking. A conversation study is needed, set to be complete this summer.

Also posted on A Sea of Blue.

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Lexington Legends Comeback Win on Opening Day

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The Lexington Legends (2-2) had its home opener against the Charleston Dirty Birds (2-2) on Friday April 24th and it was the stuff of movies

Not only did the Legends climb back from being down as much as six runs, they won it 10-9 in the most dramatic of finishes

Tie ball game, two outs, bases loaded, bottom of the tenth inning and it’s Dylan Rock at the plate

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The Legends scored six runs in two innings to force the extra frame

The rain that started an hour before had finally let up

Taking advantage of the calm weather first was the Dirty Birds going up 9-7 in the top of the tenth

But after a few power hits and a walked batter sent a runner on third home, the score sat at nine even

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So there was Dylan Rock with the pressure of 3400 fans weighing on him

The moment so tense you almost heard the whoosh of the pitch flying, but what everyone did hear was the crack of the bat sending the ball flying to right center

And just like that the runner on third made it home and and the dug out rushed the diamond

Rock was swarmed by his team before he could even clear second base

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The cheers roared almost as loud as the fireworks boomed after the game was over

From being down 7-1 in the seventh inning to a walk off win in extra innings

Top to bottom this was a opening day game that will take a long time to forget

Up next for the Legends is game two of their opening weekend series versus the Charleston Dirty Birds on Saturday April 25 at 7:00 p.m. ET streaming on the Hometeam Live Network

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