Cinderella Story! 15-seed Saint Peter's takes down Kentucky
Saint Peter’s acted like it had been there before.
After the 15th-seeded Peacocks bounced storied Kentucky from the NCAA Tournament on Thursday night in Indianapolis, they calmly exchanged handshakes with the Wildcats before heading over to the opposite sideline to celebrate with a small contingent of true believers.
The tiny Jesuit school from Jersey City, New Jersey, got 27 points from Daryl Banks III as it took down basketball royalty, beating second-seeded Kentucky 85-79 in overtime and sending countless brackets into the digital wastebasket.
"It was an amazing feeling," Banks said. "You grow up you watching March Madness, the tournament, so to let that sink in — knowing the game was over — it felt really good."
The Peacocks became the 10th No. 15 seed to win a first-round game since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985 and handed Kentucky its first opening-round loss under coach John Calipari.
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"At the end of the day, every team that made it to the NCAA Tournament deserves to be here. Every team that made it to the NCAA Tournament believes they can advance. It’s about this night," Saint Peter’s coach Shaheen Holloway said.
Saint Peter’s, the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference champion, kept it close throughout and Banks’ two free throws with 1:45 left in overtime gave the Peacocks the lead for good. Doug Edert’s layup with 24 seconds left in regulation sent the game to overtime. He also made the final two game-sealing free throws for the Peacocks and finished with 20 points.
Saint Peter’s (20-11) moves on to face either Murray State or San Francisco in Saturday’s second round in the East Region.
Not bad for a school with an enrollment of about 3,500 that’s made half as many NCAA Tournament appearances (four) as Kentucky has national titles (eight). Kentucky had more than 22,000 undergraduates on its 900-acre campus as of 2020 and has the second-highest-paid coach in college hoops in Calipari (more than $8 million per year).
"It’s huge," Banks said. "We’re putting Jersey City on the map. We come from Jersey, a small school, probably a lot of people don’t even know who we are."
Oscar Tshiebwe had 30 points and 16 rebounds for Kentucky (26-8) but his pair of missed free throws early in overtime was costly, and the Wildcats lacked a reliable secondary scorer. TyTy Washington Jr. was held to five points on 2-for-10 shooting.
The Wildcats had their eyes set on a ninth title behind Tshiebwe, the 6-foot-9 forward who is a candidate for national player of the year honors. And Kentucky was playing in front of a predominantly blue-clad crowd at Gainbridge Fieldhouse, a 2 1/2-hour drive from Lexington.
"It is sad because I’ve been wanting this moment for a long time," Tshiebwe said.
Banks set the tone throughout, making all four 3s for 16 first-half points. He finished 9 of 19 from the field and 5 of 8 from deep, with a loud reaction following almost every big shot. Teammates followed suit.
Edert made 5 of 7 shots including both of his 3-point tries. Saint Peter’s finished 9 of 17 overall from 3 and shot 29 of 57 overall (50.9%). The Peacocks also stayed close on the boards (35 to Kentucky’s 36) and made 18 of 21 from the line.
"It feels amazing, truly it feels amazing," Edert said. "They had a great crowd, a lot of people. I don’t know if you saw it, but we had our own little section over there, too."
Kentucky was 26 of 61 (43%) overall and 23 of 35 from the line. The Wildcats were tentative at times with the ball, hesitation that ended with forced shots. And it led to a second consecutive loss to close the season.
"My whole thing this week, because I knew they had never played in this stuff, was to get them free and loose, and we never got to that point," Calipari said. "Even during timeouts, I was trying to do that. ... As a coach it’s your job to figure out how to finish the game and we didn’t do that."
While the result was a shocker, at least one person did pick the Peacocks to pull off the upset — former NBA player Nate Robinson.
The upset sparked a wide range of reactions across the sports world, as Kentucky's loss surely destroyed many brackets.
Here is a sampling of what observers had to say.
The Associated Press contributed to this story.