Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

Leave Buffs out of tournament? March Madness, indeed!

- By Sean Keeler skeeler@denverpost.com

Dropkick me through the goalposts of life for even typing this, but the best defense for the Buffs and the NCAA Tournament rests by paraphrasi­ng … Scott Frost.

Yeah, yeah, I know. That one.

It ain’t big-time college sports without a little old-fashioned politickin­g, is it? So to the esteemed wingtips on the Big Dance party-planning committee on this Selection Sunday, I would seal Tad Boyle’s case by asking one simple question: If your job depended on playing either CU or Indiana State in order to keep said job, which team would you rather face? Right now?

It ain’t the one with KJ Simpson in the backcourt, I can promise you that. Or the one with Cody Williams, future NBA gazilliona­ire, coming off the bench. Or the one that had won seven straight, four of those coming on road or neutral floors, entering late Friday night.

“At that point, there’s no excuses,” Simpson, the best college guard most of America’s never heard of, told reporters in Vegas after dropping 18 points, 10 rebounds, six assists and four 3-pointers on Utah in a Pac-12 tourney quarterfin­al win late Thursday night.

“The moment we make an excuse, that’s when stuff will start to go bad for us as a team and as a group. I think we’re all just all bought-in as (far as) team basketball and playing together and playing for each other.”

You want hot? Before Friday, among major-conference peers, only Houston (10-0), Uconn (9-1), Purdue (9-1), Saint Mary’s (9-1) and South Florida (91) had won more of their last 10 games than CU’S eight.

You want substance? The Buffs went into Friday evening ranked No. 26 in the NET, one of the NCAA’S top metrics when it comes to comparing at-large candidates for the Big Dance. Context: Since the NET was introduced for the 2018-19 season, no team with a ranking of No. 28 or better has failed to get their tickets punched to Bracketvil­le.

You want pathos? The Buffs have been running with a limp for months, a Macgyvered roster held together through injuries by duct tape, guts, and the sheer force of Tad Boyle’s will. Four of those aforementi­oned, gotta-have-it, late-season victories came without the services of Williams.

Skeptics will point to a 2-5 record in Quad 1 games and howl at the moon, but that’s more about the Pac-12 going out with a whimper than the size of the fight in Boyle’s dawgs. Flags for March are planted in November and December, and yes, CU got a lot of its worst work out of the way early. But since Boxing Day, the Buffs are also 7-4 in games against teams ranked among the top 70 in the NET, 3-3 away from Boulder. Over that same span, CSU — which has largely been considered to be a lock to crack the NCAA field for months — is 5-6 in those same top 70 tests since Dec. 26. And 1-5 away from Moby before Friday evening.

Besides, are you gonna tell CU center Eddie Lampkin Jr. no? To his face?

“What’s crazy is,” Lampkin told the Pac-12 Network immediatel­y after double-doubling Utah to death, “(that) I’m really a pass-first big.”

Speaking of passing, Simpson did Shedeur Sanders proud with 6:04 left in the Utes game. The Buffs guard dropped a cross-court dime from about seven feet in front of one baseline, on a rope, to a target six feet in front of the other. A laser fired straight from the Death

Star that knifed through a sea of Utes defenders and hit a racing Lampkin, in stride, as he galloped into the lane. The pass had so much mustard on it that it grazed the CU big man’s fingertips before he was able to recover, secure it and set himself for an easy layup.

America needs to see this guy. They need to see Simpson. They need to see Tristan Da Silva, pure silk when it counts. They need to see Williams, a potential NBA lottery pick with a game smoother than an Isaac Hayes ballad, on college basketball’s biggest stage. While they can.

And Lampkin? If you don’t love Big No. 44, who plays basketball the way Fred Flintstone used to bowl, a defensive lineman with a pillow-soft touch, you don’t love the game. With 2:24 left in the Cuutah quarterfin­al, a winor-else eliminatio­n tilt, big, bad Lampkin barged ex-buffs center Lawson Lovering out of the way for a putback that pushed the CU lead to 70-55. He then made a rock-a-bye-baby motion with his arms, cradling the Madness.

That moment put everything — the Utes, the game, the Buffs’ Bracketvil­le bona fides — to bed. Because if it didn’t, the committee’s going to have one heck of a tap dance on its hands Sunday explaining why.

 ?? AARON ONTIVEROZ — THE DENVER POST ?? Eddie Lampkin Jr. (44) and KJ Simpson (2) of the Colorado Buffaloes celebrate a jump ball during the second half of CU’S 72-58 win over the Utah Utes at T-mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on Thursday, March 14, 2024. The Buffs advance to the PAC-12 Tournament semifinal with a matchup against Washington State Friday.
AARON ONTIVEROZ — THE DENVER POST Eddie Lampkin Jr. (44) and KJ Simpson (2) of the Colorado Buffaloes celebrate a jump ball during the second half of CU’S 72-58 win over the Utah Utes at T-mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on Thursday, March 14, 2024. The Buffs advance to the PAC-12 Tournament semifinal with a matchup against Washington State Friday.

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