Wapakoneta Daily News

Johnson, Mcilroy seek better play as Masters draws near

- Ap sports WRITER By doug FERGUSON Ap GOLF WRITER

PHILADELPH­IA — The last time Drexel basketball made more than local headlines, TMZ was on the scene because Philadelph­ia 76ers star Ben Simmons and model Kendall Jenner were in the bleachers for a game on the West Philadelph­ia campus.

Maybe real basketball junkies remember when Zach Spiker’s 2018 team rallied from a 34-point, first-half deficit to stun Delaware in the biggest comeback in Division I men’s basketball history.

The rest of Drexel’s tradition doesn’t have a whole of March Madness in it. Spiker, though, had to cut off a suggestion that he took over a program in 2016 devoid of much hoops history, noting the Dragons did represent the North Atlantic Conference in the NCAA tournament three straight years.

“Timeout. Timeout,” Spiker said by phone. “We won three straight titles from ‘94 to ‘96. I mean, we beat Memphis in the tournament, you know?”

Long the outsider in Philadelph­ia’s rich basketball scene, the Dragons snapped that 25-year streak with a Colonial Athletic Associatio­n tournament championsh­ip that earned them the No. 16 seed and a game against No. 1 Illinois on Friday.

Drexel is back in the bracket — and some long-forgotten teams have tagged along.

Remember Appalachia­n State? The Mountainee­rs have only two previous NCAA appearance­s — under coaches Bobby Cremins (1979) and Buzz Peterson (2000) — and ended a 21-year skid.

Oral Roberts is part of March Madness for the first time since 2008, Cleveland State returned for the first time since 2009, and

Morehead State snapped a drought that dates to 2011. UC Santa Barbara made consecutiv­e NCAA tournament­s as a No. 15 seed in 2010 and 2011 and is back as a 12 seed. Georgia Tech is back for the first time since 2010.

Those are drops in the 3-point basket compared to Rutgers making the field for the first time in 30 years.

One piece of advice seems universal: Enjoy the moment, and that applies as well to the two tourney newcomers (Grand Canyon and Hartford).

“At the high-major level, guys just want to get to the NBA. At our level, guys just want to play in the NCAA tournament,” Appalachia­n State coach Dustin Kerns said. “And there is an element now of, ‘Hey, how can I get the

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — The road to the Masters is starting to fill up with some high-powered cars.

Consider the three weeks on Florida swing.

PGA champion Collin Morikawa’s pure iron play led to his first World Golf Championsh­ip title. U.S. Open champion Bryson Dechambeau brought the World Long Drive atmosphere to the sixth tee at Bay Hill, and he also made a few big putts on his way to the win at the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al. And then Justin Thomas had as good a weekend as anyone who ever won The Players Championsh­ip at the TPC Sawgrass.

The streak last the

likely ends at the Honda Classic because no one from the top 10 in the world is playing.

Still, it’s enough to whet the appetite for Augusta National, which is just over three weeks away.

Just not for everyone. Rory Mcilroy had his highest score since the summer of 2019 and missed the cut at The Players Championsh­ip, his second weekend off in four weeks. He said he would head home and start the process of “Bryson cleansing,” which amounts to trying to stop swinging out of his shoes.

Dustin Johnson has made it to the weekend, but he keeps finishing in time for lunch. The No. 1 player in the world, who picked up his 25th victory worldwide in Saudi Arabia just six weeks ago, has finished a combined 36 shots out of the lead in his last two events.

“I’ve got a little ways to go,” Johnson said on a conference call Tuesday for the Masters. “Obviously, the game is not quite in the form that I would like it to be in right now, but I’ve got plenty of time to get it back in order leading up to Augusta.”

Yes, there is plenty of time for Johnson and Mcilroy, not to mention Xander Schauffele, who went from mediocre at Concession to missing the cut at Sawgrass. Schauffele had made 22 straight cuts until The Players, so that gets attention.

It’s not the same as it was two years ago heading into the Mas

NBA?’ But we told them when we got here, ‘Hey listen, App State has been to the NCAA Tournament. This program has been twice. So if we can go before, we can do it again.’”

For every mid-major dreaming of blossoming into the next Gonzaga -- or pulling off a UMBC -- the reality is most of these onebracket wonder programs fall back into obscurity and won’t pop up on Selection Sunday for years or decades to come.

That won’t stop the fun this weekend.

Look at Drexel. The Dragons aren’t part of Philadelph­ia’s famed Big 5 — Villanova, Penn, La Salle, Temple and Saint Joseph’s comprise the city’s 65-year-old rivalry series — and let former coach Bruiser Flint stick around for a 15year run without an NCAA tournament appearance.

So when the Dragons clinched a berth in the face of the pandemic, the school partied like it was 2019. The Dragons returned to campus with a police escort and students lined sidewalks cheering them on. Drexel put up a big screen outdoors and threw a watch party with music, giveaways, and fire pits for the selection show.

“Even though it’s a pandemic, we want our guys to have an experience, and have a moment,” Spiker said. “By doing little things like that, we’re able to do that.”

Most of these teams weren’t in the NCAA mix last season when the tournament was canceled because of the pandemic. Rutgers, though, went 20-11 and seemed a safe bet to make the 2020 field before it was waved off the court moments before its Big Ten Tournament opener. The Scarlet Knights, who received a No. 10 seed, pushed forward this season with Ron

Harper Jr., Geo Baker and Jacob Young to go 15-11 and end the drought.

“None of us were alive,” guard Paul Mulcahy said. “But there’s also been a lot of people who have supported the program for 30 years through the ups and downs. I’m just really happy for those people, that they finally get to experience this as well.”

Rutgers had a taste of March success in the 1970s under coach Tom Young when they played in four tournament­s from 1975-1983 and reached the 1976 Final Four.

The playing field between perennial power programs with their Hall of Fame coaches and one-anddone first-rounders and everyone else was somewhat flattened this season. In other cases, it was finding the right coach.

Before Dennis Gates was hired in 2019, Cleveland State’s program had endured five straight seasons of at least 21 losses. The Horizon League champs went 19-7 and might lean on their postseason past when they play secondseed­ed Houston.

In 2009, the Vikings knocked off No. 4 seed Wake Forest in the first round. In 1986, they stunned Bob Knight’s Indiana team and made it to the Sweet 16 before losing to Navy on a last-second shot by David Robinson.

“It’s a glimpse of hope,” Gates said of his team’s tourney berth. “It’s a glimpse of excitement and building and innovation. I think it will carry and be talked about for a long period of time.”

College athletics is big business and the boon from making the tournament often goes well beyond more invested fans in office pools.

The repetition of school names on the ticker and social media — and maybe a stunning upset or two on national television like Florida Gulf Coast’s “Dunk City” Sweet 16 run in 2013 — has often led to increased interest among potential students and donors to dip into those deep pockets to spruce up athletic facilities or other buildings on campus.

“It’s the schools that aren’t in it every year that get the notoriety every time the teams that are in the tournament (are listed),” Spiker said. “Our name comes up there for the past week, whether it’s on ESPN, CBS, Fox Sports - people talk about it: ‘Drexel’s in.’ People start to look up Drexel.”

For all the expectatio­ns that a tournament berth and a week of exposure will do wonders for a program, the reality is most never sustain that success.

Saint Joseph’s was the talk of college basketball in 2003-04 when it opened the season with 27 straight wins, reached No. 1 in the AP poll and was a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament for the first time. Coach Phil Martelli never found the next Jameer Nelson or Delonte West and was fired in 2019 with just one tournament win in three appearance­s over his final 15 seasons.

“We’ve got to continue to get the right pieces, the right people,” said Kerns, the App State coach. “And I think that our staff has tried to research some programs that have been to the NCAA Tournament and then maybe haven’t capitalize­d on it in recruiting.”

The recruits the schools did find were talented enough this year to get unheralded teams to March.

The trick is doing it again.

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