Remaining Final Four Teams Seeking More Magic to Upend Heavily Favored UConn

Remaining Final Four Teams Seeking More Magic to Upend Heavily Favored UConn

Connecticut players Jaylin Stewart (L) and Alex Karaban exit the interview room at the NCAA Final Four site in Glendale, Ariz., on April 4, 2024. (Brynn Anderson/AP Photo)

The Associated Press
The Associated Press

4/4/2024

Updated: 4/4/2024

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GLENDALE, Ariz.—The NCAA men’s Final Four on Saturday and Monday delivers the last entry in college basketball’s heartwarming yearbook, an annual assortment of legendary longshots, coaches looking for hugs, and magic oozing from every corner of the bracket.

The only problem with the 2024 version is that top-seeded Connecticut doesn’t believe in magic.

The lone thing that has come close to stopping the Huskies on their march to a possible second consecutive national championship has been the uncooperative airliner that had been assigned to fly them to Phoenix. Coach Dan Hurley and his players, who have won their four tournament games by an average of 27.8 points, finally arrived at 3:15 a.m. Thursday after a nightmare mix of mechanical issues and bad weather left them hanging in limbo for hours.

“It was therapeutic to watch the de-icing,” Mr. Hurley said.

Awaiting the Huskies once they finally arrived—nothing but feel-good stories.

—Purdue, led by 7-foot-4 Zach Edey, is back at the Final Four for the first time since 1980, trying to win a title a season after becoming only the second team in history to be bounced in the first round as a No. 1 seed.

—Alabama, which plays UConn on Saturday, is in the program’s first Final Four after a complete rebuild of a roster that was supposed to make a deep run last season, then lost nine players to the pros, the transfer portal, and graduation.

—And then there’s North Carolina State, which faces Purdue on Saturday. The Wolfpack is back in a reboot of 1983. Instead of the late former Coach Jim Valvano rushing the court, looking for someone to hug after winning the title, this year’s mascot is 6-foot-9, 275-pound DJ Burns Jr., the center with the mile-wide smile and, some say, potential in both the NBA and the NFL.

“We expected to be here. I know people don’t believe that,” Coach Kevin Keatts said. “But in our mind as a team, this is not a fluke.”

The Wolfpack did the same as the ‘83 squad, staring down a succession of must-win games in the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament simply to qualify for the NCAAs. That legendary group 41 years ago might have been the first to inscribe “Cinderella” into the March Madness dictionary, though it’s hardly the only team that rode momentum and dreams en route to a championship no one saw coming.

Some might say Alabama fits the same mold. Crimson Tide Coach Nate Oats had only three players returning from last year’s top-seeded squad, which went out in the Sweet 16.

In came Grant Nelson (from North Dakota State), Latrell Wrightsell Jr. (from Cal State Fullerton), and Aaron Estrada (from Hofstra, via Oregon and St. Peter’s). By the time March rolled around, Alabama was getting it together—taking a football school to a place it had never been in basketball.

“We had to sell our guys that we can make the run before the tournament,” Mr. Oats said. “Now that we made the run, get to the Final Four, I want our guys playing loose and free, but I want them thinking they’ve got a chance to win.”

Purdue has the reigning player of the year in Edey, but a year ago, that didn’t prevent the Boilermakers from joining the 2018 Virginia team as only the second No. 1 seed to exit in the first round. A lot of schools might have rebuilt. Purdue mostly decided to stand pat.

Purdue center Zach Edey (15) greets teammate Lance Jones after an NCAA Tournament Elite Eight game against Tennessee in Detroit on March 31, 2024. (Duane Burleson/AP Photo)

Purdue center Zach Edey (15) greets teammate Lance Jones after an NCAA Tournament Elite Eight game against Tennessee in Detroit on March 31, 2024. (Duane Burleson/AP Photo)

“I’ve always [dived] into what we’re doing and tried to pick at what we’re doing to make improvements,” Coach Matt Painter said. “When you get beat in the first round of the NCAA Tournament by a 16 seed, that doesn’t change anything.”

As great as all these stories are, the stark reality is that nothing—other than an airplane—has been making much of a dent in UConn this year. The Huskies are 35–3. They have won their past 10 tournament games, dating to last season, by 13 points or more. They have had at least a 30-point lead in all four March Madness games this year.

Even with the short night’s rest on the way in, they are 11 1/2-point favorites against the Crimson Tide and heavy favorites (minus-185) to win it all.

UConn lost five of its top seven scorers from last year’s championship team. The Huskies are back thanks to, according to Mr. Hurley, trusting a freshman (Stephon Castle), player development (Donovan Clingan, Alex Karaban), and what the coach called “strategic portal” (Cam Spencer).

All in all, nobody is navigating the chaos wreaked on college hoops by the transfer portal, and name, image and likeness, better than UConn.

“This tournament is the hardest thing to do,“ Mr. Hurley said. ”The programs, the best resources, biggest brands, have a hard time getting here because of the changes in the game recently. We’ve made an incredibly hard tournament to advance in look easy. Probably a lot easier than it really is.”

By Eddie Pells

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