INDIANAPOLIS — A  gruesome injury that left Louisville guard Kevin Ware with a broken leg  plunged Lucas Oil Stadium into horrified silence, with coach Rick Pitino  wiping away tears and shocked teammates openly weeping during Sunday’s  Midwest Regional final. Ware’s right leg bent in such an awkward  and frightening angle that CBS stopped showing replays shortly after the  fall in the NCAA tournament matchup against Duke. He was taken  into surgery at Methodist Hospital after the game to repair the  fracture. Team officials said the leg was broken in two places. “The  bone’s 6 inches out of his leg and all he’s yelling is, ’Win the game,  win the game,’” Pitino said. “I’ve not seen that in my life. … Pretty  special young man.” Pitino said that he and his son, Richard, who  recruited Ware, along with the team’s equipment manager would stay in  Indianapolis overnight so they could see Ware when he comes out of  surgery. Viewers who watched the injury on TV reacted on social  networks and (hash)KevinWare shot to one of the top worldwide trending  topics on Twitter. Video of the injury was posted on YouTube — CBS  initially replayed it twice before changing course. The brutal  mishap occurred after Ware jumped to contest a 3-pointer by Tyler  Thornton. Ware’s leg buckled when he landed, bending almost at a right  angle. Nearly six seconds ran off the clock before the officials, at  Pitino’s urging, stopped the game with 6:33 left in the first half. Louisville star Russ Smith heard the break and Chane Behanan, Ware’s closest friend, couldn’t believe what was happening. “The bone was literally out. I saw white, it was literally out,” said Behanan, who collapsed to his hands and feet at the sight. The two spoke at halftime. “He said ’Don’t worry about me, I’m good, I’ll have my surgery tonight,’” Behanan said. “Go win it for me.” Two  doctors speculated Ware might have had stress fractures that  predisposed him to such a break. Pitino said it was the same injury  former Louisville running back Michael Bush had in football. Bush, now  with the Chicago Bears, has recovered to have a productive NFL career. It  turned out Bush was watching the game on TV. “I just cried,” he wrote  on Twitter. “I feel so bad. Flashback of myself. Anyone if he needs  anything please let me know.” The injury happened right in front of Pitino and the Louisville bench, and several Cardinals were overcome with emotion. Louisville  forward Wayne Blackshear fell to the floor, crying, and Behanan looked  as if he was going to be sick on the court, kneeling on his hands and  feet. Peyton Siva sat a few feet away, a hand covering his mouth. “I dropped to go the ground. I’ve never seen anything like that,” Behanan said. “I don’t remember the last time I cried.” Luke  Hancock patted Ware’s chest as doctors worked on the sophomore and Russ  Smith — who is from New York City like Ware — walked away, pulling his  jersey over his eyes. Someone finally pulled Behanan to his feet,  but he doubled over and needed a few seconds to gather himself. As Ware  was being loaded onto a stretcher, the Cardinals gathered at midcourt  until Pitino called them over, saying that Ware wanted to talk to them  before he left. In the immediate aftermath, condolences poured in  on social media. Former Washington Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann,  who famously sustained a broken leg on “Monday Night Football” in a game  against the New York Giants, tweeted that, “Watching Duke/ Louisville  my heart goes out to Kevin Ware.” Dr. Reed Estes, assistant  professor of orthopedic surgery at the University of Alabama at  Birmingham, and team physician for the UAB football team, said Ware’s  injury “looks like a pretty bad break to both his tibia and fibula,” the  two long bones in the lower leg. Basketball players are prone to stress fractures in the tibia, the larger of these two bones, and that can weaken them, he said. “If  these are not detected they can result in a full fracture, particularly  if the landing mechanics are just right” after a jump, Estes said.  Surgery to stabilize the bones is usually successful, and Ware should be  fine to play next season, he said. Dr. Frederick Azar, head of  the Campbell Clinic in Memphis, Tenn., and a spokesman for the American  Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, said Ware “jumped pretty far  horizontally and vertically, and he landed with a twist,” which puts so  much torsion and stress on the bones they could have just snapped. He  agreed with Estes’ assessment that a stress fracture could have made  Ware more prone to such an injury. Louisville, the top overall  seed in the tourney, went more than 3 minutes without scoring after the  accident but regained its composure to take a 35-32 halftime lead and  went on to an 85-63 victory. “We won this for him,” Pitino said.  “We were all choked up with emotion for him. We’ll get him back to  normal. We’ve got great doctors, great trainers. We talked about it  every timeout, ’Get Kevin home.’” Ware, a 6-foot-2 sophomore from  the Bronx who played his high school basketball in the Atlanta area, was  instrumental in Louisville’s victory over Oregon in the regional  semifinals. He scored 11 points on 5-for-7 shooting in 25 minutes off  the bench. Behanan switched into Ware’s No. 5 jersey near the end of the game. Afterward, he kept on it and the Cardinal players led the heavily partisan Louisville crowd in chants of “Kev-in, Kev-in.”
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