Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Loyola hopes to ramble on from Cinderella run

- By Andrew Seligman

CHICAGO » An unforgetta­ble run to the Final Four is over, but the memories won’t be fading anytime soon.

Loyola-Chicago captured the imaginatio­n of a nation and even turned a lovable 98-year-old nun named Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt into a celebrity, with shirts and bobblehead­s flying off the racks and memes filling social media feeds.

It was fun while it lasted. And while the run ended with a loss to Michigan in the semifinals Saturday, the Ramblers insist this is just the beginning.

“This is something that’s been developing over the past couple of years, developing the culture of things. It’s the little things that separate us,” coach Porter Moser said. “We don’t have to be the most talented team, but I think we’re together.”

Loyola (32-6) set a program record for victories and won the Missouri Valley Conference tournament to reach the NCAAs for the first time since a Sweet 16 run in 1985. It was a huge step for a school that had struggled in the decades that followed.

Loyola loses three key seniors in Donte Ingram, Ben Richardson and Aundre Jackson. But Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year Clayton Custer leads a solid core of returning players. Recruiting should also get a boost after a run like this.

The biggest question for the Ramblers is whether Moser will return or move on to greener — and bigger — pastures. His stock might never be as high as it is now.

Then again, Moser is from the Chicago area and figures to get an extension that comes with a lucrative raise. He just might embrace the challenge of running a consistent winner at Loyola after turning around a struggling program.

“There’s a lot of things that I learned, life lessons from this guy,” Richardson said. “And I couldn’t be happier to have chosen Loyola and came to Chicago and played for him.”

The Ramblers endured 14 seasons without a winning record at one point. They have slowly turned it around under Moser, a protege of the late Rick Majerus who is 121111 in seven seasons.

Loyola stayed with him through a difficult start, with a 32-61 mark and a switch from the Horizon League to the MVC in his first three years. Loyola is 89-50 since then.

“Just the way that we’ve continuous­ly been prepped for every team we face this year and whether it’s film, walk-throughs, you know, practices and then extra walk-throughs just in ballrooms, we’ll set it up wherever we can just to get a competitiv­e advantage,” Richardson said. “And that’s something that (Moser’s) always been really passionate about, giving us that confidence, because by the time the game comes, we have prepped so much that we have a real confidence we’ll win the game because we know what they’re going to throw at us. And I think the way that he’s done that has really propelled us and helped us in this tournament.”

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