Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Taking on a friend, mentor “I hope I don’t nod off on the bench.”

- MATT VELAZQUEZ BOB DONNAN

GREENVILLE, S.C. When the bracket was unveiled to show the possibilit­y of a second-round game between Marquette and Duke in the NCAA Tournament, the possible matchup of Steve Wojciechow­ski against his former coach and mentor, Mike Krzyzewski, naturally became a talking point around the country.

What’s been less talked about, though, is that Wojciechow­ski’s Golden Eagles will first have to play against another coach who has played a mentoring role in his life. That coach is South Carolina’s Frank Martin.

“From afar I always respected him,” Martin said, mentioning how he always enjoyed watching Wojciechow­ski as a player at Duke. “And then the first day he got put on the road as an assistant by Coach K, him, Hugs ( Bob Huggins) and I were at the same event and Andy Kennedy, all four of us, out recruiting. We spent the whole day together and just conversati­ons on the first day on the road. We kind of hit it off.”

After that, Martin and Wojciechow­ski started building both a profession­al relationsh­ip and friendship. They shared scouting reports and batted ideas back and forth. Martin says when Wojciechow­ski got hired at Marquette in 2014, they talked about Martin’s first season at Kansas State and some of the challenges he faced and experience­s he had there.

Part of those discussion­s included the fact Wojciechow­ski needed to hire a director of sports medicine for his staff. There happened to be someone at Kansas State who certainly was qualified — athletic trainer Brandon Yoder.

“That’s probably when we spent the most time as far as personally speaking about things,” Martin said regarding his conversati­ons with Wojciechow­ski. “And he hired Brandon Yoder, a dear friend, who is an unbelievab­le trainer. And I think who Brandon has been for Wojo and their program has created unbelievab­le trust towards me and us.”

Since then, Wojciechow­ski and Martin have watched each other’s team from a distance, not knowing they were on a collision course for the first weekend of the NCAA Tournament with each in his first trip with his respective team.

“Well, it’s really been fun for me to study South Carolina, obviously,” Wojciechow­ski said. “I have utmost respect for Frank Martin, and in learning more about them, they play exactly like a Frank Martin team, what you would expect them to play — they play incredibly hard.”

Rowsey rematch: South Carolina spent the past week watching film on Marquette and going over scouting reports for the Golden Eagles’ players. They didn’t need to spend as much time on Andrew Rowsey.

“I didn’t have to say a word to our players,” Martin said. “Our guys, they remember.”

What they remember is Rowsey going off for 30 points, including 6 threepoint­ers, against the Gamecocks on Nov. 26, 2014, when Rowsey was a sophomore at UNC-Asheville. It was one of many standout performanc­es for Rowsey, who turned his knack for scoring into an opportunit­y to transfer to Marquette and play at a higher level.

In his first year playing with the Golden Eagles, the redshirt junior has adjusted well to the higher competitio­n. A late-season addition to the starting lineup, Rowsey is averaging 11.5 points per game while shooting 45.4% on three-pointers and finishing the season with the best assist-toturnover ratio (1.8) of any of Marquette’s primary ball-handlers.

“He’s got that confidence going,” Martin said. “He’s aggressive. He’s got that unbelievab­le knack to get to the foul line with his shot fakes.”

Rowsey, who expects to have plenty of friends and family at Bon Secours Wellness Arena, which is about five hours away from his hometown of Lexington, Va., and about an hour away from Asheville, also remembers the 2014 game against South Carolina. However, he’s not looking to totally duplicate what happened.

“I played against them my sophomore year and did pretty well against them but we lost,” he said. “So hopefully we’ll try to switch that and win the game this year.”

 ?? / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Marquette guard Andrew Rowsey torched South Carolina in 2014, scoring 30 points in a game while at UNC-Asheville.
/ USA TODAY SPORTS Marquette guard Andrew Rowsey torched South Carolina in 2014, scoring 30 points in a game while at UNC-Asheville.

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