Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsSaturday, June 20, 2026

2012 Final Four, Kentucky vs. Louisville: Wildcats Hold Off Cardinals, Win National Semifinal 69-61

The Kentucky Wildcats, the NCAA Tournament's favorite to take home the championship, held their intrastate rival, the Louisville Cardinals, in check, largely thanks to freshman Anthony Davis, who was just named the AP National Player of the Year, led the country in blocks and scored 18 points with 14 rebounds and five blocks. Though the Cardinals put up a good fight, the Wildcats were just too much, winning 69-61.

Kentucky was up 13 points early in the second half, but Louisville big man Gorgui Dieng and littler men Wayne Blackshear, Russ Smith and point guard Peyton Siva led the Cardinals to a big run, climbing back to within two points with 7:34 left in the game. Siva didn't score in the first half, but had seven quick points midway through the second to bring the Cardinals close. Overall, terrific defense and efficient offense brought them back in it.

Then the Wildcats' upperclassmen took over. Senior Darius Miller, the key player for the 'Cats off the bench, combined with Terrence Jones to extend the 'Cats' lead to seven point immediately. Though Davis, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, despite a brief quad injury, and Miller tried to pull away, the Cardinals wouldn't give in.

It didn’t matter. The Wildcats were too good, they made too many free throws and didn’t let the Cardinals make the really important shots, and John Calipari got perhaps the most important win of his NCAA coaching career, beating Rick Pitino despite one of Pitino’s better coaching jobs in his career.

Davis was really the star, but Miller was terrific in the second half and finished with 13 points. Jones finished with six points and seven rebounds, several of which were huge, late in the game. Louisville shot just 34.8 percent as a team, a mark forced entirely by Kentucky's defense. Five Cardinals — Siva, Smith, Blackshear, Chris Smith and Chane Behanan — scored eight points or more, but no one scored more than 11. Ultimately, no Cardinal was able to really take over, and that was the difference between coming within two points and taking the lead and winning the game.

Kentucky will play the winner of Ohio State and Kansas in Monday night’s championship game.

For up-to-the-minute scores on all NCAA Tournament games, please check out SI.com’s complete scoreboard.

For more on the 2012 NCAA Tournament bracket, stay with SB Nation’s Selection Sunday StoryStream, and stick around SB Nation’s NCAA Tournament hub for a complete printable NCAA Tournament bracket. For more on this game, check out our 2012 Final Four StoryStream.

Check out the SB Nation Channel on YouTube

See More:

More in General

GeneralFromPosting and Toasting
An SB Nation New Yorker needs our helpAn SB Nation New Yorker needs our help
GeneralFromPosting and Toasting
General
Sabastian Sawe breaks 2-hour barrier, shatters marathon world recordSabastian Sawe breaks 2-hour barrier, shatters marathon world record
General

The mythical two-hour mark was broken at the London Marathon.

By Bernd Buchmasser
A Huge Dog
THE HISTORY OF CHARGING THE MOUND, EPISODE 1THE HISTORY OF CHARGING THE MOUND, EPISODE 1
Play
General
Super Bowl 60 coin toss resultsSuper Bowl 60 coin toss results
General

The Seahawks and Patriots will open the Super Bowl with the coin toss to determine who starts with the ball. We have the full coin toss results for Super Bowl 60.

By David Fucillo
General
Marc Marquez completes a comeback for the agesMarc Marquez completes a comeback for the ages
General

MotoGP’s Marc Marquez completed a comeback for the ages with his 2025 title

By Mark Schofield
General
How to make sure SBNation.com appears in your Google search resultsHow to make sure SBNation.com appears in your Google search results