2011 Crosstown Shootout brawl

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DateDecember 10, 2011
NetworkESPN2
Cincinnati Bearcats at Xavier Musketeers
Game called with 9.4 seconds left in the second half due to violent contact between players from both teams.
Cincinnati Bearcats Xavier Musketeers
53 76
Head coach:
Mick Cronin
Head coach:
Chris Mack
1st half2nd half Total
Cincinnati Bearcats 2528 53
Xavier Musketeers 3442 76
DateDecember 10, 2011
VenueCintas Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
United States TV coverage
NetworkESPN2

The 2011 Crosstown Shootout brawl, nicknamed the Crosstown Punch-Out, was a bench-clearing brawl that took place at the end of the 2011 edition of the Crosstown Shootout college basketball game between the University of Cincinnati Bearcats and the Xavier University Musketeers. The game and brawl took place on December 10, 2011, at Xavier's home arena, the Cintas Center in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

The Crosstown Shootout is one of the most intense rivalries in college basketball, exacerbated by the fact that Xavier University and the University of Cincinnati are only two miles (3.2 km) apart. On December 8, UC guard Sean Kilpatrick told Andy Furman of WQRT that Xavier's All-American guard Tu Holloway probably wouldn't start for the Bearcats "with the players that we have now."[1]

The series had developed a history of bad blood in the years leading up to the 2011 Crosstown Shootout. In 2008, a total of six technical fouls were called in a 76-66 Xavier win. Xavier's Derrick Brown was ejected, and two freshman post players were involved in an altercation that displayed the enmity between the two schools: Xavier's Kenny Frease headbutted UC's Yancy Gates. The following year, multiple verbal exchanges resulted in UC clearing their bench, as well as technicals called on Xavier's Jordan Crawford and UC's Rashad Bishop in Xavier's double overtime win. In 2010, Holloway received a technical foul for throwing an elbow late in UC's 66-46 win.

The brawl

The 2011 Crosstown Shootout was close at first, with eight ties and six lead changes in the first half. Xavier led 34–25 at halftime.[2] The first sign of trouble occurred in the closing seconds of the first half, when Bearcat backup Octavius Ellis began exchanging some words with Xavier player Mark Lyons from the bench. Ellis jumped up from the bench to confront Lyons, and the two players had to be separated. Before the start of the second half, according to Xavier coach Chris Mack, both teams were warned that any further incident would result in technical fouls.[3] The Musketeers started the second half on a 9–2 run and were never seriously threatened afterward.[4] Ultimately, the Musketeers outscored the Bearcats 42–28 in the second half.[2]

Tu Holloway

With 18.6 seconds remaining, Xavier's Tu Holloway scored a layup to give the Musketeers the 76–53 lead. As Holloway walked to the other end of the court, he began shouting at the Bearcat bench, bringing UC's Ge'Lawn Guyn over to confront him and triggering an argument between both men. As Guyn reached for Holloway's throat, Xavier's Dezmine Wells intervened by pushing Guyn to the floor,[4] causing UC's Yancy Gates to throw the ball at Holloway's head and both benches to empty. In the ensuing fight, Gates punched Xavier's Kenny Frease in the face, opening up a large cut under Frease's left eye and knocking him to the ground. As Frease tried to crawl away from the crowd, UC's Cheikh Mbodj stomped on the back of his head. Ellis threw a punch at Lyons, causing him and Wells to throw several back before coaches got in between them. This brought Gates over, who began shouting and throwing more punches at a Xavier backup, until Xavier assistant Aaron Williams and Lyons calmed him down.[5] Referees Michael Roberts, Jeff Anderson, and Tony Crisp ended the game with 9.4 seconds remaining, giving Xavier the 76–53 win. UC's Gates and Mbodj, and Xavier's Wells, were retroactively ejected from the game for fighting. Under National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rules, these players were suspended for their next game, a sanction that could not be appealed.

Aftermath

See also

References

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