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Dufresne: It’s a familiar final four on the floor for NCAA tournament

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(MCT) — Next weekend’s Final Four in New Orleans has everything except something to hug. There are no lovable nicknames, or coaches named “Shaka,’ or teams left in the field that play in Hinkle field house.

Butler is the past’s blast, Virginia Commonwealth has deferred to the Commonwealth of Kentucky and all the 11th-seeded teams have gone home for the harvest.

This is a members’ only racket. Kentucky, Louisville, Ohio State and Kansas are all basketball bullies who like to steal your lunch money.

Call it a Final Fearsome Foursome.

The rafters in these programs reek of history. Each school has won at least one national title — with a total of 13.

The total seeding number (1, 2, 2, 4) of the schools adds up to nine. Last year it was 26.

Louisville, the West’s winner but the “runt” at No. 4, “only” won this year’s Big East tournament championship.

Kentucky, champion of the South, survived in tact as the top overall seeding with Sunday’s 82-70 win over Baylor.

A collective Heimlich maneuver was performed in Lexington when star freshman center Anthony Davis writhed in pain after suffering a second-half left knee injury.

The candlelight vigil was canceled, though, after Davis returned to the game.

“The knee is doing fine,” he said afterward, closely followed by the sound of “whew.”

No. 2 Ohio State took down top-seeded Syracuse in the East and re-established itself as the title-contending threat it was supposed to be in November.

No 2 Kansas was the last team to check in at Amazing Race when it defeated No. 1 North Carolina in the Midwest.

The national semifinal matchups — Kentucky vs. Louisville at 6 p.m. EDT Saturday, followed by Ohio State vs. Kansas — have a chance to be epic.

The last person leaving Kentucky on their way to New Orleans has been asked to turn out the coal lamps.

Kentucky vs. Louisville is the angriest rivalry outside of Duke and North Carolina, or maybe even inside of it. Duke and North Carolina, for all the fuss, have never met in the NCAA tournament.

Kentucky vs. Louisville was dubbed the “rivalry that never was” by former Louisville coach Denny Crum because of Kentucky’s refusal to acknowledge Louisville existed.

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