INDIANAPOLIS (AP) a' A gruesome injury that left Louisville guard Kevin Ware with a broken leg plunged Lucas Oil Stadium into horrified silence, with mentor Rick Pitino wiping away tears and shocked teammates openly weeping during Sunday's Midwest Regional closing. Ware's right leg bent in such a difficult and scary perspective that CBS ended featuring replays shortly after the fall in the NCAA tournament game against Duke. He was taken in to surgery at Methodist Hospital following the game to correct the break. College officers said the leg, broken in two areas, was reset and a rod inserted into his right leg. Ware is expected to stay in Indianapolis until at the least Tuesday. Ware was encouraging his teammates, whilst he was being treated on the court, Pitino said. "The bone's 6 inches out of his knee and all he's yelling is, 'Win the game, win the game,'" Pitino said. "I have not seen that in my life. ... Pretty unique small man." On TV audiences who observed the damage reacted on social support systems and (hash )KevinWare shot to one of the top global trending matters on Twitter. Video of the injury was posted on YouTube a' CBS originally replayed it twice before changing course. The intense accident occurred after Ware got to contest a by Tyler Thornton. Ware's knee secured when he landed, twisting very nearly at the right angle. Not exactly six seconds ran off the clock ahead of the officers, at Pitino's advocating, stopped the overall game with 6:33 left in the initial half. Louisville star Russ Smith noticed the split and Chane Behanan, Ware's closest friend, couldn't believe that which was happening. "The bone was virtually out. I saw white, it had been literally out," said Behanan, who collapsed to his feet and hands at the sight. The two spoke at halftime. "He said 'Do not be worried about me, I'm good, I will have my surgery tonight,'" Behanan said. "Go gain it for me." Two health practitioners speculated Ware could have had stress fractures that predisposed him to this type of break. Pitino said it was exactly the same injury former Louisville running back Michael Bush had in football. Bush, now with the Chicago Bears, has recovered to truly have a successful NFL career. It turned out Bush was watching the game on TV. "I just cried," he wrote on Twitter. "I feel therefore bad. Flashback of myself. Anybody if he needs anything please let me know." The damage happened right in front of Pitino and the Louisville seat, and several Cardinals were overcome with emotion. Louisville forward Wayne Blackshear fell to the floor, crying, and Behanan seemed as though he would definitely be ill on the court, kneeling on his hands and feet. Peyton Siva lay a few feet away, a covering his mouth. "I dropped to get the floor. I have never seen such a thing like that," Behanan said. "I do not remember the last time I cried." Henry Hancock patted Ware's chest as doctors done the sophomore and Russ Smith a' who's from New York City like Ware a' stepped away, taking his jacket over his eyes. Someone eventually pulled Behanan to his feet, but he doubled over and needed a matter of seconds to collect herself. As Ware had been loaded onto a, the Cardinals collected at midcourt until They were called by Pitino over, saying that Ware wished to keep in touch with them before he left. In the immediate aftermath, condolences poured in on social networking. Former Washington Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann, who famously suffered a leg on "Monday Night Football" in a casino game from the Gambling, tweeted that "Watching Duke/ Louisville my heart fades to Kevin Ware." Dr. Reed Estes, associate professor of orthopedic surgery at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and team physician for the UAB soccer team, said basketball players are vulnerable to stress fractures in the tibia, the more expensive of the two leg bones, and that will weaken them. "If these are not recognized they could create a crack, particularly when the landing technicians are only right" after having a leap, Estes said. Surgery to secure the bones is normally effective, and Ware ought to be great to play next year, he said. Dr. Frederick Azar, head of the Campbell Clinic in Memphis, Tenn., and a for the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, said Ware "jumped pretty far horizontally and vertically, and he landed with a twist," which sets so much torsion and pressure on the bones they could have just snapped. He agreed with Estes' examination that the stress fracture would have made Ware more vulnerable to this kind of injury. Louisville, the most effective over all seed in the tourney, went over 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 success. "We won this for him," Pitino said. "We were all blocked up with emotion for him. We'll get him back again to normal. We've got great doctors, great trainers. We discussed it every timeout, 'Get Kevin home.'" Ware, a sophomore from the Bronx who enjoyed his senior school basketball in the Atlanta area, was important in Louisville's victory over Oregon in the regional semifinals. Points were scored 11 by him on 5-for-7 shooting in 25 minutes off the seat. Behanan turned in to Ware's No. 5 jersey close to the end of the game. Afterward, he kept on it and the heavily partisan Louisville crowd was led by the Cardinal players in chants of "Kev-in, Kev-in." Dumb AP Chief Medical Writer Marilynn Marchione added for this statement.
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