Houston Chronicle

Wildcats have dynastic look

After 2 titles in 3 years, Wright’s team loaded with talent for future quests

- By Dan Gelston

PHILADELPH­IA — Villanova players flash their fingers in a “V” symbol to celebrate big wins.

For coach Jay Wright, that's a finger for every national championsh­ip ring.

Already cemented as a dominant program in college basketball, the Wildcats are flirting with putting their names on a more opulent D-list: dynasty.

The Wildcats' romp through the NCAA Tournament that ended Monday with a second national title in three seasons has them up for debate as one of the top programs since the tourney field was expanded to 64 teams in 1985.

You know, the year the Wildcats won their first national title.

There's plenty of time to talk about Villanova's place in history after the partying is done this week. The Wildcats were to return home to a raucous celebratio­n at their suburban campus on Tuesday and a parade was planned for Thursday in downtown Philadelph­ia just hours before the Phillies' home opener.

Parades have suddenly become a thing in Philly. See: the Eagles. Jalen Brunson, Mikal Bridges and breakout star Donte DiVincenzo helped the Wildcats win all six NCAA Tournament games by double digits, joining Michigan State in 2000, Duke in 2001 and North Carolina in 2009. Villanova also joined the 1968 UCLA team as the only ones to win both their Final Four games by 16 or more points.

“I knew we were good, but you don't think we can win this,” Wright said.

He should know they can: The Wildcats set a program best in wins (36-4) and won an NCAArecord 136 games over a four-year span.

And if anyone is still stumped about how Villanova could be considered on the short list of college basketball's blue bloods following a decade of dominance, consider:

In the post-John Wooden/UCLA era, only three other teams have won two titles in three seasons: Duke in 1991 and 1992, Florida in 2006 and 2007 and Kentucky in 1996 and 1998. Villanova became just the ninth program to win three championsh­ips (1985 and 2016) and has made three Final Fours since 2009.

In the last five seasons, the Wildcats have four regular-season Big East titles, three Big East tournament titles and two national championsh­ips. The list of accolades under Wright stretches longer than the combined distance of the Final Four-record 18 3pointers hit against Kansas in Saturday's national semifinals.

Wright leads a loaded roster fully positioned to go back-to-back and show college basketball that Duke, Kentucky, Kansas and North Carolina can all be rolled into one program nestled in the Philadelph­ia suburbs.

Here's what's ahead for the Wildcats:

The Wildcats had no seniors in their rotation and should return a nice chunk of their roster. But Brunson, the AP Player of the Year , and Bridges are both likely to declare for the NBA draft.

DiVincenzo, Eric Paschall, Omari Spellman and Phil Booth are all expected to be in the starting lineup and joined by fivestar point guard Jahvon Quinerly. Quinerly is one of Wright's more anticipate­d and prized recruits in his 17 years at Villanova.

Cole Swider and Brandon Slater are also prized incoming freshmen expected to help.

Throw in Collin Gillespie, Dhamir Cosby-Roundtree and Jermaine Samuels, and the Wildcats should keep rolling as national championsh­ip favorites.

Wright's success has again made his future a hot topic at Villanova. He has said many times he wouldn't leave Villanova for another college job, and with good reason. He has turned the Wildcats into a dynasty even Blake Carrington would envy.

 ?? Tim Tai / Associated Press ?? Fans and team alike flash “V” for victory during Villanova’s celebrator­y return to campus Tuesday following the Wildcats’ final conquest of the NCAA Tournament with Monday’s championsh­ip win over Michigan.
Tim Tai / Associated Press Fans and team alike flash “V” for victory during Villanova’s celebrator­y return to campus Tuesday following the Wildcats’ final conquest of the NCAA Tournament with Monday’s championsh­ip win over Michigan.

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