Miami Herald (Sunday)

Saint Peter’s believes it belongs

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

PHILADELPH­IA

America loves March Madness because America loves an underdog.

One twist: While the run to the cusp of the Final Four by tiny Saint Peter’s has been riveting, it’s also the latest example of how something that once felt like a miracle at the NCAA Tournament might be growing more common in years to come.

The Peacocks, who play No. 8 seed North Carolina on Sunday with a trip to New Orleans on the line, have joined Florida Gulf Coast and Oral Roberts as the third No. 15 seed in a decade to make it to the second weekend of the tournament. Since the bracket expanded to 64 teams in 1985, the 15 seeds have a 14-140 record. Eight of those 14 wins have come since 2012.

Coach Shaheen Holloway’s Peacocks are the first 15 to make it to the Elite Eight. And while America is embracing the Saint Peter’s story — who wouldn’t love a 2,200-student commuter school on a busy street in Jersey City trying to put the screws to Tobacco Road? — the Peacocks themselves are soaking it in without taking that seeding so seriously.

“Some of these guys feel like they belong at schools like that,” said Holloway, whose team started this run with a win over Kentucky and beat Purdue on Friday night.

Four years ago, the unthinkabl­e during March Madness stopped being unthinkabl­e. A 16 seed, UMBC, topped No. 1 Virginia in the first round. This year, three of the four No. 1s were gone after the Sweet 16. Only Kansas, which plays 10th-seeded Miami on Sunday, remains.

Explanatio­ns for everincrea­sing parity in college hoops come from all angles.

Holloway is among those who say the era of the oneand-done, stemming from the rule that allows players to enter the NBA draft after one year of college, might have subtly shifted the advantage to programs that don’t pursue those kind of players and, thus, spend time together building a team.

“You get the Kentuckys of the world with all these great players,” Florida Gulf Coast athletic director Ken Kavanagh said. “Yeah, it worked out well with Carmelo Anthony [at Syracuse in 2003], but other teams, it hasn’t worked out as well because you’re playing older teams, teams that have played together for four years.”

Another factor are the recently liberalize­d transfer rules that allow players to change schools without having to sit out for a year. Some see that as an element that could also degrade team-building.

“It’s kids wanting to get back closer to home who went away,” said Miami coach Jim Larrañaga, who led George Mason to the Final Four as an 11 seed in 2006.

Another part of this evolution comes from the proliferat­ion of AAU and summer leagues that make all players familiar to each other before they ever step onto a college floor. Though their programs could not be more different, Sunday will not mark the first time the players from Saint Peter’s will go against the guys from

North Carolina; the Tar Heels roster includes three McDonald’s All-Americans in Caleb Love, R.J. Davis and Armando Bacot.

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