New York Post

You can’t Spell title without letter ‘C’

- By STEVE SERBY

SAN ANTONIO — There was Ed Pinckney in 1985, and there was Daniel Ochefu in 2016, and now Villanova believes Omari Spellman can be the big-man answer to their national championsh­ip prayers starting Saturday night against Kansas.

“Probably individual­ly the most important part of our growth as a team,” coach Jay Wright said of Spellman. “Everybody else on our team is pretty experience­d. And to get this far, you’ve got to have a good big man.”

Spellman, the redshirt freshman who 55 pounds and two years ago weighed an unwieldy 300 pounds, has resembled the good big man the Wildcats will need against Kansas monster Udoka Azubuike.

“I’ve been playing against Udoka since high school,” Spellman said. “He’s gotten better, but he’s still a really big, big dude. So you just have to try and move on him and make it as hard as possible to get to the deep post position that he likes, keep him off the offensive glass. As far as offensivel­y, try and make it as hard for him as possible and move a lot, get to the offensive glass, use my quickness and try and get around him. He’s a great competitor and I’m going to have to go out there and compete with him.”

Spellman, the Big East Freshman of the Year, has raised his game in the tournament with 9-of-19 shooting from behind the arc and an 18-point, eightrebou­nd, three-block dominance against West Virginia.

At 6-foot 9 ¹/2, 245 pounds, he’ll be giving up some size to the 7-foot, 280-pound Azubuike. But Spellman is a different player than he was at the start of the season.

“There was definitely a learning curve,” Spellman said. “I thought I would come in and be great. But it doesn’t work like that for everyone. I just had to take my lumps in the beginning.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States