Times-Call (Longmont)

First Four teams look to bust some brackets

CU, CSU play among early March Madness games

- By Mitch Stacy The Associated Press

A year ago, Fairleigh Dickinson landed in the First Four and by the following weekend became one of the most improbable bracket-busters in NCAA Tournament history.

After routing Texas Southern in Dayton, the 16th-seeded Knights — one of the shortest teams in the tournament facing the tallest — upset No. 1 seed Purdue 63-58, only the second time a No. 16 seed had beaten a top-seeded team.

“Anybody has a chance. Anything can happen, no matter what’s going on,” said Donald Copeland, the coach of an injury-depleted Wagner team that opens this year’s First Four against Howard on Tuesday night. “Now our path is probably different, but it gives you motivation to want to hopefully achieve something like that.”

The winner of that game will advance as the No. 16 seed to face top-seeded North Carolina on Thursday in the West Region.

In an unusual twist, the First Four brings together both Colorado and Colorado State. Both finished 24-10.

Six Pac-12 teams went into the tournament ahead of Colorado, despite the Buffs being the runnerup in the conference tournament. They play Boise State (22-10, 13-5 Mountain West) in the late game on Wednesday, with the winner moving on as the 10th seed to face seventh-seeded Florida in a South regional.

Colorado State draws Virginia (23-10, 13-7 ACC) in the late game on Tuesday for the right to move on as the 10th seed in the Midwest to play No. 7 seed Texas. Virginia has made 10 NCAA appearance­s in the last 12 seasons under coach Tony Bennett and won the national title in 2019.

“It’s a great opportunit­y for us to kind of test ourselves and see where we’re at as a program. At this point there are no cupcakes,” said Isaiah Stevens, Colorado State’s top scorer at 16.5 points.

“The way I look at this is, we’re a 10 seed in the NCAA Tournament, and we just get to play one more game than everybody else,” said Rams coach Niko Medved. “That’s a pretty cool deal.”

Making a name

Wagner, a school with around 2,000 students in Staten Island, New York, returns to the NCAA Tournament after a drought of 21 years.

Howard — the Seahawks’ opponent on Tuesday — was in last year, but hopes to make a better showing this time around.

Wagner (16-15, 7-9 Northeast Conference) finished in sixth place in the conference in the regular season. After losing their final two regular-season games, the Bison won three straight in the NEC tournament, beating Merrimack in the final, despite Copeland’s rotation being down to seven players because of injuries.

In fact, it got so bad that Damen Mazil, the quarterbac­k of the Wagner football team, was added to the roster in February for some depth.

“A small island, and we’re back here after 21 years,” Wagner guard Javier Ezquerra said. “It’s amazing.”

Howard (18-16, 9-5 MEAC) was 9-14 in early February but roared back, winning nine of its last 11 games, including the conference tournament.

Welcome to the show

Grambling State is making its first ever appearance in the NCAA Tournament after winning nine of its last 10 games, including the SWAC regular-season title and the conference tournament.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Colorado forward Tristan da Silva drives against Oregon center N’faly Dante, left, and guard Kario Oquendo during the second half of the Pac-12 championsh­ip on Saturday in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Colorado forward Tristan da Silva drives against Oregon center N’faly Dante, left, and guard Kario Oquendo during the second half of the Pac-12 championsh­ip on Saturday in Las Vegas.

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