Vancouver Sun

Irish deliver when the lights are brightest

- TOM COYNE

Notre SOUTH BEND, IND. Dame basketball is doing something its football team hasn’t been able to do in recent years: thrive in big games.

The Fighting Irish (25-9), who this past weekend advanced to the Atlantic Coast Conference title game for the second time in three years, head into the NCAA Tournament as the only team to make it to the Elite Eight each of the past two seasons.

“When the lights have been brightest, we’ve been in a rhythm lately where we just love it, embrace it and deliver in it,” coach Mike Brey said.

“I think it’s gotten to be a little bit of the tradition of the program, where it’s handed down to the younger guys and they’re dragged along by the older guys that have been part of it.

“I really see that with our upperclass­men now. It’s kind of what we do. We deliver when the lights are brightest.”

That wasn’t always the case. In 16 seasons in the Big East, the Irish never advanced to the league tournament championsh­ip game. Before winning six NCAA Tournament games the past two seasons, the Irish had won just six tournament games in nine previous appearance­s under Brey. Before that, Notre Dame hadn’t won a tournament game since 1989.

So six tournament wins in two seasons is a big deal, especially at a university known as a football school.

Irish seniors V. J. Beachem and Steve Vasturia, who were freshmen when the Irish finished 1517 in 2013-14, say the recent tournament success gives the Irish confidence as they prepare to face Princeton (23-6), which has won 19 games in a row, in the opening game Thursday in Buffalo, N.Y.

“We’re a very confident team, whether it be what we’ve done this regular season, or what we’ve done in the post-season in the past,” Beachem said. “We can draw on those experience­s.”

Vasturia said his message to younger players is not to put too much pressure on themselves.

“I think the only thing I would say to them is enjoy it,” he said. “Go out there and have fun.”

Brey said he believes that attitude is key to Notre Dame’s recent success. He said his early Irish teams played with the “weight of the world on our shoulders.”

“I was really tight,” he said. “I don’t think I helped our team sometimes. So as I’ve gotten older, I’ve gotten looser with them. We smile a little bit. We keep them loose.”

 ??  ?? Mike Brey
Mike Brey

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