Albuquerque Journal

Alford has had some trouble as a No. 3 seed

- Editor’s note: You may remember the Alfords – Steve and Bryce – from their days in Albuquerqu­e. So during this year’s NCAA tournament, we will do our best to keep you up to date on their latest exploits. BY BEN BOLCH

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — History has repeated itself in the cruelest way for Steve Alford as a heavy favorite in the NCAA Tournament.

The teams he’s coached have been awarded a No. 3 seeding on three previous occasions. They’ve lost in the first round twice. And that’s not even counting the time Alford played for Indiana and his third-seeded Hoosiers lost to Cleveland State, a flop chronicled in the book “A Season on the Brink.”

Could the early exits be an uhoh omen for Alford’s third-seeded UCLA Bruins heading into their first-round game against Kent State on Friday at the Golden 1 Center? Not necessaril­y.

“It’s different circumstan­ces. It’s different teams,” Alford said. “I know what I’ve got in this team. We’ve got good experience; we’ve got a good blend. This is a high skill-set team.”

All true, though those descriptio­ns also applied to Iowa when Alford coached the Hawkeyes in the 2006 NCAA Tournament. That team was led by four seniors and had won five consecutiv­e games, sweeping its way through the Big Ten Con-

ference tournament on the way to a first-round matchup against Northweste­rn State.

The Demons bedeviled the Hawkeyes, rallying from a 17-point deficit in the final 8½ minutes to prevail on a corner 3-pointer with 0.5 seconds left.

“That was a shock to that team,” Alford said. “About everything that could have gone wrong in that game went wrong.”

Aspiration­s weren’t as high in 2013 for Alford’s New Mexico Lobos, a team that Alford said “was just trying to build momentum in postseason play.” Things ground to a halt quickly when Harvard outplayed them in the final minutes for its first NCAA Tournament victory.

Alford’s Lobos did beat Montana when they received a No. 3 seeding in 2010 before losing to Washington in the next round. The coach’s highest seeding at UCLA before this season was No. 4 in 2014, when the Bruins reached a regional semifinal.

Historical­ly, a third-seeded team has lost to a No. 14 in the first round 21 times in 128 meetings (16.4 percent), most recently when West Virginia fell to Stephen F. Austin last season.

UCLA has become a trendy pick — not only to avoid a firstround upset, but to win the national championsh­ip, something that doesn’t bother Alford given where the Bruins were last March.

“This time last year we weren’t playing, and all of a sudden you’re picked to win the tournament?” Alford said. “That means you’ve had a really good year and I appreciate the efforts that our players have gone through, and that’s where we should be.”

UCLA sophomore guard Aaron Holiday acknowledg­ed that it can be hard not to look ahead in a South Regional that includes fellow basketball bluebloods Kentucky and North Carolina.

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 ?? JOURNAL FILE ?? Steve Alford, wearing his cherry red blazer, took his 2010 UNM Lobos to the NCAA Tournament as a No. 3 seed. They lost to Washington in the second round.
JOURNAL FILE Steve Alford, wearing his cherry red blazer, took his 2010 UNM Lobos to the NCAA Tournament as a No. 3 seed. They lost to Washington in the second round.

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