Rome News-Tribune

Villanova, Mich. coaches have different styles in title quests

- By Stephen Hawkins AP Basketball Writer

SAN ANTONIO — Jay Wright’s custom-tailored suits are as sharp as Villanova’s 3-point shooting. The game-day attire for Michigan coach John Beilein is more reflective of his team’s emphasis on old-school fundamenta­ls and defense.

“At the end of the game tomorrow, he’ll still look like George Clooney and I will look like Columbo by Peter Falk,” Beilein said Sunday. “I’d like to say Kevin Costner, but I can’t go there.”

For their drasticall­y different styles, both in dress and how their teams play, one of them will be national champions tonight. Wright will either get his second title in three seasons, or the 65-year-old Beilein his first in 40 seasons as a college head coach.

Villanova (35-4), the No. 1 seed from the East Region, has set records for making 3-pointers — both for the season (454), the NCAA Tournament (66) and their 18 in the national semifinal game against fellow No. 1 seed Kansas.

The title game in the Alamodome will be the first time in this NCAA Tournament that the third-seeded Wolverines (33-7) face a top-5 seed. They beat the Nos. 14, 6, 7 and 9 seeds in the West Region before overcoming a 10-point deficit after halftime Saturday night to be Loyola-Chicago, only the fourth No. 11 seed to ever make to the Final Four.

Loyola made only 1 of 10 3s against the nation’s No. 3 defense in terms of efficiency.

After Kris Jenkins hit a buzzer-beating 3-pointer against North Carolina to win the national championsh­ip two years ago, Villanova’s first since 1985 under Rollie Massimino, the now 56-year-old Wright noticed people looking at him differentl­y.

“Mostly positively. But sometimes if you don’t handle it well they look at you negatively. They just look at you a lot more. You just get a lot more attention,” said Wright, in his 17th season

Villanova head coach Jay Wright (left) and Michigan head coach John Beilein stop by CBS Sports Network’s “We Need to Talk” on Sunday before their teams face off today.

at Villanova after seven years at Hofstra.

Beilein has an impressive coaching resume with 799 wins when including all his previous stops — at Erie Community College in New York, Nazareth, LeMoyne, Canisius, Richmond and West Virginia. Missing is a national title.

Of course, Beilein would love to have a championsh­ip — the Wolverines made to the 2013 title game and lost to Louisville. Louisville was later forced to vacate that 2013 title because of NCAA sanctions in the wake of an embarrassi­ng sex scandal. It was the first time a Division I men’s basketball David J. Phillip / AP

program was stripped of a national championsh­ip.

Going into his 1,260th game as a head coach, Beilein doesn’t anticipate that winning a title, or not, will change how he sees his career.

“You hang in there and you just do your absolute best every single day. And someday you’re going to say, I gave it everything I had, and if I’m falling into my grave, that’s OK too,” Beilein said. “But you just do everything you can to be the best coach, the best mentor, the best teacher, the best husband, the grandfathe­r, father every day, and you go do it again. And that’s all I want to be.”

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