USA TODAY International Edition

Free of ban, SMU on NCAA mission

Jankovich aiming for breakthrou­gh in post- Brown era

- Scott Gleeson

Southern Methodist coach Tim Jankovich is comfortabl­e to report that not much has changed with his program.

Since taking over in July after four years as the coach- in- waiting under Hall of Famer Larry Brown, Jankovich says much of the culture and philosophy remain the same. And the goals — staying atop the American Athletic Conference and being a top- 25 team that plays in the NCAA tournament regularly — are all the same, too.

However, his players have noticed the slight change between coaches.

“When Coach Brown left, everyone was shocked,” SMU forward Semi Ojeleye says of Brown leaving the program with one year left on his contract. “But Coach Jank had been there all along. We all knew the change wouldn’t be too big. They’re both great basketball minds who were always on the same page. But the biggest difference, for me, is that ( Jankovich) lets us play more freely. That’s allowed us to grow this year big time.”

Ojeleye also says Brown has maintained close ties with the team, serving as a mentor from afar as Jankovich steers the program to elite status. Yet the upward trajectory hasn’t been easy because sanctions still handcuff Jankovich. SMU will lose four scholarshi­ps over the next two seasons because of NCAA sanctions under Brown; the Mustangs lost nine total. SMU’s annual goal of playing in the NCAA tournament and going far wasn’t an option last season, when the Mustangs finished second in the AAC, because they were banned from the postseason by the NCAA.

Ranked No. 21 in the coaches poll, sitting atop the AAC standings — narrowly ahead of Cincinnati — and as a projected No. 7 seed in USA TODAY Sports’ bracketolo­gy, SMU ( 24- 4, 14- 1) looks poised to get back to the Big Dance. Jankovich notes that his team’s motivation is more of a renewed sense of hunger, though.

“We talked about it beginning of year, but we don’t revisit it and say, ‘ Hey, remember when we couldn’t play in ( the NCAA tour- nament) last year?’ ” Jankovich says. “I would say we’re very hungry to get to the tournament. But who isn’t? Is there a little extra? I’d say there’s a tiny, tiny bit. But I think we’d be playing with the same sense of urgency whether we went last year or not.”

That sense of urgency is necessary for an elite team in the AAC, a conference the NCAA selection committee hasn’t respected in the past. Though Connecticu­t won the national title in 2014 as a No. 7 seed and Tulsa was a surprise at- large bid last year, the seeding and inclusion of AAC teams haven’t always been favor- able. In 2014, for instance, the Mustangs were the most notable bubble team snubbed by the committee, and they went on to finish as National Invitation Tournament runner- up.

The committee also hasn’t been kind to Jankovich as a head coach. In his first season at Illinois State, the Redbirds were one of the “first four out” by national bracketolo­gists in 2008’ s NCAA tournament. He took the team to four NITs in five seasons but has never been to the NCAA tournament as a head coach, including three seasons at North Texas in the mid- 1990s before serving as an assistant at Illinois and Kansas under Bill Self.

“I think if you ask any coach across the country, they’ll tell you their conference deserves more respect than it gets,” Jankovich says. “I would fall right into that category. As far as how we’re perceived, I don’t follow much outside our walls. It’s hard to see us as under the radar because we’re nationally ranked.”

Calling SMU underrated feels necessary only because the program, which has won 25 games in each of the last three seasons, has seen its regular- season success overshadow­ed by omissions from the postseason. The one season SMU made the NCAAs as a No. 6 seed in 2015, its first trip since 1993, the Mustangs were upset by UCLA on a controvers­ial goaltendin­g call.

Jankovich is fully aware that a breakthrou­gh has to take place in March Madness, and not in Moody Coliseum in Dallas, where the Mustangs are 23- 0 under Jankovich — which encompasse­s the nine games he coached while Brown was serving an NCAA suspension last season. SMU has lost only four of 70 home games since the start of 2013- 14.

“When you get to the tournament, it has very little to do with the name and school you play for and it’s more of, ‘ Does your style fit their style?’ It’s about matchups, and I think we can be a hard matchup for a lot of teams,” Jankovich says. “This group thinks big, which I love. But we keep reminding ourselves that our ( regular- season) success is all wonderful, but we’re trying to do bigger than that.”

SMU, riding a 10- game winning streak, is particular­ly stellar on defense this season, limiting opponents to 58.9 points per game to rank third nationally in points allowed. The Mustangs also feature a wide arsenal of wing players, and Jankovich essentiall­y starts five guards. After losing 611 big man Harry Froling, who transferre­d to Marquette, in midDecembe­r, the team’s identity has been guard- oriented. Its tallest player in the starting lineup is 6- 8 senior Ben Moore ( 11.6 ppg, 8.4 rpg), who plays like a guard.

“Because of our personnel, I think we’re a bit unconventi­onal,” Jankovich says. “We don’t have one guy who is a point guard or a traditiona­l big guy. We have seven scholarshi­p players ( because of the NCAA recruiting punishment), and they’re all about the same size on the wing. They’re all guards to me. Then there’s an amazing chemistry and maturity with this group in terms of being united. Are we deep? Not really, but I’ll take that liability and keep all our other assets.”

Ojeleye, a Duke transfer, is one of those assets as a 6- 7 wing. He’s averaging a team- leading 18.3 points and 6.7 rebounds.

“We have guys who can all handle the ball, dribble, pass and shoot, which allows us to get rid of pressure on offense and easily switch ball screens on defense,” he says. “When we give up size, we trap in the post and then take advantage of mismatches on offense. What we give up on the inside, we more than make up for by taking advantage of matchups.”

 ?? TIM HEITMAN, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Semi Ojeleye, left, celebrates with forward Ben Moore after a basket in SMU’s 60- 51 victory against Cincinnati on Feb. 12, part of the Mustangs’ current 10- game winning streak.
TIM HEITMAN, USA TODAY SPORTS Semi Ojeleye, left, celebrates with forward Ben Moore after a basket in SMU’s 60- 51 victory against Cincinnati on Feb. 12, part of the Mustangs’ current 10- game winning streak.

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