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Eric Crawford | Be happy Darius Miller's not one-and-done for Kentucky basketball
#1
LEXINGTON, KY. — Senior Day for the University of Kentucky got off to an early start when a panel on ESPN’s “Outside the Lines” spent a couple of segments talking about the one-and-done success of John Calipari.

And nobody would, with a straight face, try to argue that the recruitment of NBA-ready talent by Calipari was not the driving force behind the swift resurgence of this proud program.

But here’s a statement I will make with a straight face.

It wouldn’t have happened without Darius Miller.

Oh, UK would’ve won plenty of games. It would’ve earned high tournament seeds, climbed in the national rankings. It certainly would’ve beaten Georgia on Senior Night in Rupp Arena Thursday, although Miller tossed in a team-high 17 points in a 79-49 win.

But look back to last season.

UK doesn’t go to the Final Four without Miller. In fact, while one-and-dones were the subject of the day on Thursday, nobody mentioned that Calipari ended a 13-year UK Final Four absence with a team heavy on overachieving upperclassmen.

The guy who has become one of UK’s best late-game performers this season passed up a couple of chances to make big shots late in games a year ago. Remember the loss at Ole Miss, when Miller had an open look late and passed it up?

Weeks later, he was holding up the SEC Tournament Most Valuable Player trophy.

But what about this season? Surely a team with Anthony Davis, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, Terrence Jones and the rest would’ve been fine without Miller.

Sure they would’ve. But they wouldn’t be 29-1. They wouldn’t be perfect in the SEC. By my count, the statistic on how many times Calipari has said at some point after games, “We won this because of Darius Miller,” is five.

The C-J’s Kyle Tucker outlined Miller’s late-game exploits in a story on Thursday: In the final 10 minutes of UK’s 10 closest games, he is 15 of 20 from the field, 5 of 8 from three-point range and 13 of 14 from the free-throw line.

Miller has been described as a “glue guy,” but that works on several levels. He’s an experienced player who seems to know what this team needs and when it needs it.

And he’s a player who binds UK’s frustrating not-to-distant past to its promising present.

Don’t underestimate this. UK has never been to a Final Four, much less won a national title, without a native Kentuckian among its top five in scoring.

And while a bunch of one-and-dones has drawn the headlines, a former Kentucky Mr. Basketball from Maysville has stood in the middle of it and very much provided an understated substance to the new style brought by Calipari.

A lot of talented guys came to UK in the 13 years between its last Final Four and last season’s run. I don’t know if anyone would’ve picked Darius Miller to be the most instrumental Kentucky kid in breaking the drought.

His long-term place in the UK story probably is greater than many now realize. And he’s further proof that there remains a special bond between in-state stars and this storied program.

http://www.courier-journal.com/article/2...ext|Sports

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