Houston Chronicle

Prairie View A&M gets the party started

Smith doesn’t see Panthers carrying banner for historic black schools in opening game

- By Mitch Stacy

Prairie View A&M made the First Four this year as a representa­tive of a league made up of historical­ly black schools, at least one of which has been in the playin round every year since the NCAA Tournament field was expanded to 68 teams in 2011.

But coach Byron Smith prefers not to view it that way.

Smith, whose Panthers play Fairleigh Dickinson on Tuesday night in Dayton, Ohio, sees them more as representi­ng the school, the conference and college basketball rather than being a flagcarrie­r for the group of schools known as Historical­ly Black College and Universiti­es or HBCUs.

“Obviously I respect it,” Smith said. “And we're representi­ng the game and the people that came before us. So it's not something I pay a lot of attention to, but I still respect it, that we're an HBCU.”

The First Four has become one of the few national showcases for HBCU's — the group of more than 100 schools, mostly in the South, that predate integratio­n and now reside in the lower tier of Division I basketball.

They get a tournament start that won't end against juggernaut­s Duke or Gonzaga, although the No. 1 seed usually is next if they can make it out of Dayton.

“It gives you a chance to win a tournament game,” said Mike Davis, who coached Texas Southern to a win over North Carolina Central in the First Four last season before taking over at Detroit Mercy.

That game pitted HBCUs against each other for the first time in the First Four, ensuring one of them would advance. Texas Southern got the first tournament win in school history, beating North Carolina Central 64-46 in what was called the “national championsh­ip” of HBCU teams.

Texas Southern then lost to by No. 1 seed Xavier by 19 points.

Prairie View (22-12 won the Southwest Athletic Conference tournament to get the automatic bid and a trip to Dayton. The Panthers face New Jersey's Fairleigh Dickinson (20-13) for the right to play No. 1 Gonzaga in a West Region opener on Thursday.

On Wednesday, North Carolina Central, winner of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference tournament title, is back in Dayton for the third straight year, facing North Dakota State. The winner will move on to play Duke, the No. 1 seed in the East Region.

If history is any indication, there probably aren't any bracketbus­ters here.

The NCAA expanded the field to 65 in 2001 with a single play-in game then went to the current format in 2011.

Every year except 2001 an HBCU team from the SWAC or MEAC has had a participan­t in play-in games. They've won just five times in 17 games, all of those teams going on to lose in the first game of the round of 64. Teams from those conference­s have advanced to the second round of 32 just four times over the years.

Prairie View is making its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 21 years.

“It's important for our culture most of all,” Panthers junior guard Antoine Lister said, “to go out and represent in a positive manner.”

 ?? Julie Bennett / Associated Press ?? Prairie View coach Byron Smith, right, celebratin­g the victory over Texas Southern in the SWAC final, sees the Panthers’ foremost role as representa­tives of the school and conference.
Julie Bennett / Associated Press Prairie View coach Byron Smith, right, celebratin­g the victory over Texas Southern in the SWAC final, sees the Panthers’ foremost role as representa­tives of the school and conference.

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