Cape Breton Post

Greater appreciati­on

Louisville eager for tourney action after serving 2016 ban

- BY MICHAEL MAROT

Rick Pitino appreciate­s being back in the NCAA Tournament, maybe more than ever.

One year after Louisville opted for a self-imposed postseason ban, the two-time national championsh­ip coach has his second-seeded Cardinals poised to make a potentiall­y deep run.

If sitting out taught the Cardinals anything, it’s that they must take advantage of this opportunit­y.

“The difficult thing about last year was our culture as a basketball team, especially in the humility department, was changed tremendous­ly by Damion Lee and Trey Lewis. That’s what hurts,” Pitino said Thursday in Indianapol­is. “Those guys transferre­d to Louisville to play in the NCAA Tournament and they never got a chance to play. But they did change the culture of our basketball team becoming a very humble group.”

The dings still exist, too. Louisville (24-8) gave up two scholarshi­ps this season, and is still waiting to hear back from the NCAA in regards to its response to alleged recruiting violations that included accusation­s of strippers being hired to win over high-school prospects. The NCAA has not provided a timetable for the response its headquarte­rs, just a short walk from where the Cardinals open tourney play against first-time entrant Jacksonvil­le State (2014) today.

The winner faces seventhsee­ded Michigan or 10thseeded Oklahoma State on Sunday in the second round of the Midwest Regional.

On the court, little has changed.

The Cardinals still like to

press, still score points and can still turn up the tempo as they did in a 77-62 victory over Indiana in their last trip to Bankers Life Fieldhouse in December.

Pitino also continues to see the game through a different set of eyes than some of his coaching colleagues.

“Someone said that we play four, five different defences,” first-year Jacksonvil­le State coach Ray Harper said. “He’s seen some that I don’t even know we do. I didn’t know we played that many. I asked one of my assistants, are we really playing this many zones? So I don’t know. I tell you what I

expect, I expect a team that’s going to come after us right from the get-go.”

Especially if there’s any caged up frustratio­n from last season’s absence.

The real danger for the Ohio Valley Conference champion is that this is when Pitino’s teams thrive. Among active coaches, he’s currently No. 7 with a winning percentage of .740. In March and April, he’s No. 2 at 53-18 (.746).

And these Cardinals are eager to stick around this year after already learning one tough lesson about being a one-and-done team in the

ACC Tournament.

“For us, it showed us the urgency we have to play with because we went up there for one game and had to go back home,” Louisville forward Deng Adel said. “We kind of felt how bad it felt to lose and go home.”

Pitino hopes they’ve figured it out.

“It’s always my favourite time of year,” he said. “When I was in the pros, I missed it terribly. All the guys on the bus in the pros were talking about what team they were picking. You realize it’s Russian roulette because anybody can beat you on any given night.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Louisville head coach Rick Pitino directs his team during the first half of an NCAA basketball game in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in New York on March 9.
AP PHOTO Louisville head coach Rick Pitino directs his team during the first half of an NCAA basketball game in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in New York on March 9.

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