"I doubt he plays," coach John Calipari said Monday on a teleconference with the other Final Four coaches. "He will be on our bench, cheering like crazy."

Cauley-Stein injured his ankle after playing four minutes of Friday's Sweet 16 victory over Louisville. He did not appear in Sunday's regional final victory over Michigan. His place in the rotation was taken by freshman Marcus Lee, a McDonald's All-American in high school but used very little during the course of the Southeastern Conference season. He played only one minute of the Louisville game after Cauley-Stein was hurt but appeared for 15 minutes against the Wolverines and delivered 10 points, 8 rebounds and 2 blocks. Lee made the Midwest Region all-tournament team despite his limited playing time.

Cauley-Stein is the team's most accomplished interior defender. He averaged 2.9 blocks to go with 6.8 points and 6.1 rebounds. Freshman Dakari Johnson, who has been starting at center, is not as comfortable moving his feet to defend ball screens and perimeter-oriented big men. That becomes a problem against Wisconsin because of the varied skills of Badgers center Frank Kaminsky, who scored 28 points and hit three times from 3-point range in the West Region final against Arizona.

UK ASSISTANT COACH TAKES JOB


Orlando Antigua stayed all four years and is now moving on to bigger things.

Kentucky's assistant coach spent five years coaching under John Calipari — four at Kentucky — and has accepted now accepted a vacant head coaching position.  He'll receive a five-year deal according to ESPN. 

South Florida had a coach lined up, but Steve Masiello didn't receive a degree from the school he said he had received a degree from. Oddly enough, that school was the University of Kentucky.

Antigua has also worked at Pittsburgh, his alma mater. He's known for his recruiting skills, bringing in four straight top-ranking recruiting classes.

Antigua will stay with the team through the Final Four run. A press conference is expected Tuesday, per CBSSports.com.

MARTIN STAYING


Cuonzo Martin will not be the new men's basketball coach at Marquette.

CBSSports.com and Rivals.com reported early Tuesday that Martin has removed himself from consideration for the job and is now expected to remain at Tennessee, the school he led to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament this month.

Martin, 42, spoke with Marquette officials on Sunday, according to the CBS report.

With Martin out of the picture, Marquette likely will focus on Duke assistant Steve Wojciechowski, according to CBSSports.com's report.

Marquette is searching for a successor to Buzz Williams, who left the Golden Eagles to take the head coaching job at Virginia Tech.

Martin owns a 63-41 record in three seasons at Tennessee and led the Volunteers to a 24-13 record this year that ended Friday with a 73-71 loss to Michigan in the Midwest Regional semifinals. Tennessee reached the NIT in each of his first two seasons in Knoxville.

AP ALL-AMERICAN TEAM ANNOUNCED


Doug McDermott of Creighton is a unanimous choice for The Associated Press All-America team, the first three-time selection in 29 years.

McDermott is the nation's leading scorer at 26.9 points a game. The senior is joined on the team Monday by freshman Jabari Parker of Duke and seniors Russ Smith of Louisville, Shabazz Napier of Connecticut and Sean Kilpatrick of Cincinnati.

Smith, Napier and Kilpatrick all played in the first-year American Athletic Conference, the first time a conference had three players on the first team since the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2000-01.

McDermott finished his career with 3,150 points, fifth on the all-time list. He is the 11th three-time AP All-American and the first since Patrick Ewing of Georgetown and Wayman Tisdale of Oklahoma from 1982-85.

WOODEN AWARD ALL-AMERICAN TEAM ANNOUNCED


Creighton's Doug McDermott is having a great day. Early Monday he was named to his third The Associated Press All-American team; hours later he was named to his third John R. Wooden Award All American Team.

The senior is the only returner to the team and the first men's three-time selection since UNC's Tyler Hansbrough earned his third in 2009.

He's joined in the top 5 by Wichita State's Cleanthony Early, Arizona's Nick Johnson, Duke's Jabari Parker and Louisville's Russ Smith. The five are invited to Los Angeles for the 38th Annual Wooden Award Gala April 11, which will honor the winners from the men's and women's side.

Also named to the All-American team: Sean Kilpatrick (Cincinnati), Shabazz Napier (Connecticut), Casey Prather (Florida), Nik Stauskas (Michigan) and Andrew Wiggins (Kansas).

The team is selected by nearly 1,000 college basketball experts and by fans on a 1 to 10 voting ranking of college basketball players. All players have proven they're making progress toward graduation and have a cumulative GPA of at least 2.0, as insisuted upon by Coach Wooden.

The women's team will be released Wednesday.

Contributors: Mike DeCourcy, Cassandra Negley, Tom Gatto, The Associated Press

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