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Obama, Cameron take in NCAA game

U. S. President Barack Obama (L) and United Kingdom Prime Minister David Cameron enjoy a hot dog as they watch Mississippi Valley State University play Western Kentucky in the first round of the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship at the University of Dayton Arena on March 13, 2012 in Dayton, Ohio. UPI/Brian Kersey
1 of 10 | U. S. President Barack Obama (L) and United Kingdom Prime Minister David Cameron enjoy a hot dog as they watch Mississippi Valley State University play Western Kentucky in the first round of the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship at the University of Dayton Arena on March 13, 2012 in Dayton, Ohio. UPI/Brian Kersey | License Photo

DAYTON, Ohio, March 13 (UPI) -- Basketball fans cheered Tuesday when President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron took their seats to watch an NCAA Tournament game in Ohio.

The president is a well-known basketball fan, while the prime minister was attending his first basketball game -- one in which Western Kentucky beat Mississippi Valley State 59-58 in a South Region play-in game to reach the second round for a game Friday against Kentucky, the top seed in the South Region.

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Obama and Cameron sat in a section behind one of the baskets at University of Dayton Arena, accompanied by Ohio Gov. John Kasich, White House Chief of Staff Jack Lew and Cameron Chief of Staff Ed Llewellyn.

Obama and Cameron each had a hot dog and the president chatted with students sitting nearby.

At halftime, Obama and Cameron were interviewed on CBS.

Cameron said he was enjoying the experience, even though it was "hard to follow sometimes exactly who's done what wrong." He said Obama offered to "help me fill out my bracket" and Obama said Cameron offered to help him understand cricket because "I don't understand what's going on with that cricket thing."

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Obama said he probably won't be able to watch much of the tournament except for the Final Four, "and even that I may end up seeing in snippets."

Asked whether he thinks Obama will be re-elected in November, Kasich -- a Republican former member of Congress -- demurred.

"Oh, it's not a night to talk about all the election stuff," he said. "It's a time to have some comfortable time together."

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