USA TODAY US Edition

Virginia, Villanova put trust in veterans

No. 1 seeds hope their experience provides a tournament advantage

- Lindsay Schnell

CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. – Often times, when Virginia center Jack Salt catches highlights of the bevy of oneand-done players dominating college basketball this season, two words flash through his mind: Ice bath.

It’s not that the redshirt junior, who plays 20 minutes a night for UVA, is low on energy. But as a seasoned veteran in a sport where uber-talented freshman often get the attention, Salt sometimes looks around college hoops and feels like an old man.

That’s understand­able. As the NCAA tournament tips off Thursday, two No. 1 seeds — Virginia and Villanova — will rely heavily on upperclass­men. The Cavaliers (31-2) and Wildcats (30-4) are favorites to get to San Antonio, though Virginia’s hopes were dealt a brutal blow Tuesday with the

announceme­nt that ACC Sixth Man of the Year DeAndre Hunter, a redshirt freshman, will miss the postseason with a broken wrist. Still, the top seeds in the South and East regions, respective­ly, hope their experience will give them an advantage this month over talented teams full of youth.

Villanova is led by junior Jalen Brunson, a national player of the year candidate who averaged 24 minutes a game as a freshman in 2015-16, when the Wildcats won the national title. Last season as a sophomore, he averaged 14.7 points per game as the defending champs were bounced in the second round by Wisconsin.

“Walking into freshman year and winning a national championsh­ip you’re like, ‘This is easy, we can do this every year!” Brunson laughs. “But last season definitely showed me how hard it was to win. I feel like I got the best of both worlds. The experience (of losing in the tournament) has really helped.”

Brunson’s running mate is 6-7 forward Mikal Bridges, a redshirt junior who is the Wildcats’ best pro prospect. That’s something else Virginia and Villanova have in common — they like the redshirt year.

Villanova coach Jay Wright jokes of Bridges, “If you think he’s skinny now, at 210 (pounds), you should have seen him his freshman year.” Wright and Bridges agreed redshirtin­g, and spending a year in the weight room, would benefit everyone.

“It’s not that I’m against one-anddones, that’s not it at all,” Wright says. “It’s just that someone who knows they’re one-and-one, that it’s already a given, and they want to be in and out (of college basketball) as fast as they can, this culture doesn’t fit that.”

Virginia coach Tony Bennett feels the same way. Bennett’s system — defensive-oriented, slower tempo — isn’t for everyone, and doesn’t necessaril­y attract top NBA prospects. Utilizing the redshirt year allows players to adjust to Virginia’s defensive system, a necessity in Charlottes­ville.

“I think if you aren’t able to get a lot of one-and-dones, or the extreme top

10 or top 20 guys year in and year out, I think the best way to do it at a school like Virginia is getting guys who mature in the system,” Bennett says.

That’s been a formula for Bennett most his career, from his playing days at Wisconsin Green Bay — where he played for his father, legendary coach Dick Bennett — to his coaching stops at Wisconsin, Washington State and now Virginia. He likes to reference a saying from Notre Dame’s Mike Brey: “Get old, stay old.”

The Cavaliers have quite a bit of youth themselves this year, from sophomore leading scorer Kyle Guy to sophomore guard Ty Jerome, who has handed out a team-best 130 assists. But Bennett describes redshirt senior guard Devon Hall (12.0 ppg, 3.2 apg) and senior forward Isaiah Wilkins, the

2018 ACC Defensive Player of the Year, as “rock solid,” and integral to the Cavaliers’ success.

Get old, stay old, win titles. That’s path Virginia and Villanova hope to follow this postseason.

 ?? DANNY WILD/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Jalen Brunson (1) won a title his freshman year at Villanova, now he’s competing for another.
DANNY WILD/USA TODAY SPORTS Jalen Brunson (1) won a title his freshman year at Villanova, now he’s competing for another.
 ?? NICOLE SWEET/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Jack Salt is one of the veterans on Virginia’s roster.
NICOLE SWEET/USA TODAY SPORTS Jack Salt is one of the veterans on Virginia’s roster.
 ?? DAVID BUTLER II/USA TODAY SPORTS ??
DAVID BUTLER II/USA TODAY SPORTS

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