Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wisconsin teams are left out of men’s field for the NCAA Tournament.

Wisconsin teams’ shutout only a temporary setback

- Gary D’Amato Columnist Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WIS.

March Madness has gripped much of the nation but in Wisconsin it’s just, well, March.

For the first time since 1998, none of the four Division 1 men’s basketball teams in the state was invited to the NCAA Tournament. The 68-team field was announced Sunday.

Wisconsin’s streak of 19 consecutiv­e tournament appearance­s essentiall­y ended when it lost to Michigan State in the Big Ten tournament. That the Badgers were national runners-up three years ago and made it to the Sweet 16 in each of the last two seasons made this year’s stumble even tougher to take.

Marquette, a bubble team with a 19-13 record, was passed over for one of 36 at-large bids by the NCAA selection committee.

UW-Milwaukee (16-17) and UWGreen Bay (13-20) could have gotten in only by winning the Horizon League tournament.

This is a sobering developmen­t for college basketball fans in Wisconsin, but it’s not the end of the world.

Wisconsin and Marquette will bounce back, perhaps as soon as next year. Both teams had abnormal seasons, with underclass­men getting substantia­l playing time and learning on the fly.

In UW’s case, point guard D’Mitrik Trice (foot) and wing Kobe King (knee) both were lost one-third of the way through the season, leaving the Badgers perilously thin at guard. Freshman Brad Davison had to play major minutes and was phenomenal considerin­g his left shoulder popped out of joint during games more than a halfdozen times; he underwent surgery last Monday.

Redshirt junior Ethan Happ plans to declare for the NBA draft and will attend the combine in Chicago in May if invited. But it’s not likely he’ll be projected as a first-round pick, in which case he would return to Wisconsin for his senior year and try to add a midrange jumper.

No one at Wisconsin is happy with a 15-18 record – the Badgers’ streak of 11 consecutiv­e 20-victory seasons ended – but there were encouragin­g signs down the stretch. UW won four of its last six games, including a 57-53 upset of Purdue, which had crushed the Badgers by 28 a month earlier.

That finish should have erased any lingering doubts about Greg Gard. He kept the season from spinning out of control and got the most out of players who would have barely seen the court in a normal year. The man can coach.

Marquette coach Steve Wojciechow­ski had similar challenges. He had to play sub-6-foot guards Markus Howard and Andrew Rowsey, sacrificin­g size and length for scoring (the two combined to average 40.5 points).

One of the tradeoffs was that the Golden Eagles were awful on the defensive end; they allowed an average of 85.8 points in their 13 losses.

MU loses only Rowsey and will add Nebraska transfer Ed Morrow Jr. and recruits Joey Hauser and Mormon missionary Brendan Bailey, the son of former NBA player Thurl Bailey. All three are 6-foot-7 or taller and should give the Golden Eagles an inside presence they have sorely lacked.

The MU fan base is growing restless. The 2018-’19 season will be a critical one for Wojciechow­ski, who has taken Marquette to just one NCAA Tournament in his four years. Previously, the Golden Eagles made the tournament in eight consecutiv­e seasons under Tom Crean and Buzz Williams.

So, while no state team will take its fans on a wild ride this month, the beauty of college basketball is that there’s always next year to bust a bracket.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Andrew Rowsey and Markus Howard and their MU teammates had to settle for the NIT.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Andrew Rowsey and Markus Howard and their MU teammates had to settle for the NIT.
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 ?? BRAD PENNER / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Greg Gard should have erased any doubts about his coaching ability as he got the most out of players who would have barely seen the court in a normal year.
BRAD PENNER / USA TODAY SPORTS Greg Gard should have erased any doubts about his coaching ability as he got the most out of players who would have barely seen the court in a normal year.

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