The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Blue Raiders work to be next mid-major force

- By Teresa M. Walker

MURFREESBO­RO, TENN. — The Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders have gotten downright greedy when it comes to March.

They are trying to build Middle Tennessee into a powerhouse basketball program, rising from the ranks of mid-majors to join the Gonzagas and Wichita States on the NCAA landscape. The Blue Raiders are back in the tournament for second straight year with a gaudy 30-4 record featuring wins over two Southeaste­rn Conference teams after upsetting Michigan State in the tourney a year ago.

“But the hardest part is the sustainabi­lity, and that’s what Gonzaga and those teams have done,” Blue Raiders coach Kermit Davis said. “So we still have a lot of hard work ahead of us.”

The Blue Raiders will try to take the next step Thursday against Minnesota in Milwaukee as a popular pick to be the latest No. 12 seed to upset a five seed. Middle Tennessee has a chance to even reach the Sweet 16 in a loaded South Region.

Their biggest success to date came a year ago, stunning Michigan State as a No. 15 seed. Texts and messages poured in celebratin­g the shocking win, but then the bottom fell out in a loss to Syracuse by 25 in the second round.

Although they were blown out by the Orange, the big win against the Spartans lingered to the point that Davis had to sit his team down in July and remind everyone they could not fast-forward to March.

“Nick Saban’s the best at it where they go through that same process all the time, so we got back to the basics of what really makes you good,” Davis said.

It also helps to have talent, and Davis’ team has that.

JaCorey Williams, a 6-foot-8 and 220-pound forward, paid his own way to St. Louis to watch that upset of Michigan State while sitting out his transfer year from Arkansas. Now he is Middle Tennessee’s leading scorer, averaging 17.3 points and 7.3 rebounds. Tyrik Dixon has started 32 of 34 games at point guard as a freshman.

Davis still had senior Reggie Upshaw and junior guard Giddy Potts along with a deeper bench.

“It makes us a tough team to beat,” Upshaw said.

The Blue Raiders (30-4) have lost only once in 2017, 57-54 at UTEP, which they avenged in the league tournament last week by 26 points. They beat a pair of NCAA Tournament teams in UNC Wilmington, the No. 12 seed in the East; and Vanderbilt, the ninth seed in the West. They also beat a second SEC team, downing Mississipp­i by 15 in Oxford.

After fighting for respect a season ago, Davis said Middle Tennessee has gotten every team’s best shot. That has helped build the Blue Raiders’ confidence.

“I talk to them all the time about being a national program, and I think they carry themselves like they think they belong in the elite of college basketball,” Davis said.

Middle Tennessee’s No. 12 seed is three spots better than a year ago. But Davis still worries where his team would’ve been if it hadn’t won the league’s automatic bid with the tournament title even with a nonconfere­nce strength of schedule of 18, a 35 RPI, the first team getting votes in the final AP college basketball rankings.

 ??  ?? Coach Kermit Davis says team needs sustained success.
Coach Kermit Davis says team needs sustained success.

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