New York Post

HERE COMES ZION!

With Zion leading way, this will be must-see TV ACC’s Duke, Virginia and UNC snag No. 1 seeds

- By HOWIE KUSSOY hkussoy@nypost.com

eyes, especially Knicks fans’, will be glued to Duke’s freshman phenom

The NCAA Tournament has it all. Magic. Mayhem. Buzzer-beaters. Busted brackets. Cinderella­s. Legends. Triumph. Heartbreak.

There is nothing like the Big Dance — but even it has never seen the likes of Zion Williamson.

As a r unning, jumping, shoe-exploding YouTube clip, Duke’s 6-foot7, 285-pound superstar freshman accomplish­ed the rare feat of turning regular-season games into must-see events. Now, the soon-to-be No. 1 pick in the NBA draft brings his historical­ly unique blend of strength, speed, athleticis­m and f inesse to college basketball’s biggest stage for the first and only time making the No. 1 overall seed Blue Devils the clear favorite — and b i g ge s t f avo r i t e since Kentucky entered undefeated in 2015 — to cut down the nets at the Final Four in Minneapoli­s.

Following his infamous late-season knee sprain and six-game absence — during which Duke went 3-3 — Williamson erased any concern with his electric, record-setting return in the Blue Devils’ (29-5) run to the ACC Tournament title, and managed to create even more anticipati­on for the NCAA Tournament’s main attraction.

When Williamson went down, some argued the imminent multi-millionair­e should sit until NBA commission­er Adam Silver calls his name. Clearly, some forgot that there is nothing like the NCAA Tournament.

“When you’re a l i tt l e kid watching Duke on TV cut down championsh­ip nets, and you say you want to be a part of it, you say it as a little kid, but when you actually grow up and get to be a part of it, I mean that’s why we come to Duke, win championsh­ips and try to get banners,” Williamson said Saturday night. “Why would I pass up on this experience?”

Why would anyone pass up playing on the most talented team in the nation, part of a phenomenal freshmen-led group — also featuring the projected No. 2 pick (RJ Barrett), plus another top-five prospect (Cam Reddish) — and perhaps the best defense Mi k e K r z y z e ws k i has sported in four decades at Duke?

Should the Blue Devils win their sixth national championsh­ip — and first since 2015 — Krzyzewski, 72, would become the oldest coach in history to win the title, besting Jim Calhoun’s 2011 run, at 68.

If Duke falls short — like 11 of the past 14 top overall seeds, and each of the past five — the ACC could still be kings of college basketball again. Virginia (293) and North Carolina (27-6) also earned 1-seeds, marking the second time in the NCAA Tournament history that one conference claimed three top seeds. The Big East previously did it in 2009, with a trio of teams no longer part of the league (UConn, Pittsburgh and Louisville), none of which advanced to the national title game.

While Roy Williams hopes to take the high-powered Tar Heels offense to a third national championsh­ip game in four years — setting up a potential first-ever NCAA Tournament meeting between Duke and North Carolina — the Cavaliers will attempt to avenge the biggest upset the event has ever witnessed, and reach the Final Four for the f irst time since 1984.

Backed a gai n by t he nat i on’s top defense — and the best offense of the unbelievab­ly successful, and unbelievab­ly disappoint­ing Tony Bennett era — Virginia is a top-seed for the fourth time in six years, but forever stained with the humiliatio­n of being the first 1-seed ever to lose to a 16-seed (UMBC) last year.

“I think we know what we have to do to be successful,” Bennett said this weekend. “But we also realize that we’re susceptibl­e as every team is in this tournament and sometimes that’s as valuable to know instead of thinking you’re invincible.”

Top-seed Gonzaga (30-3) — the lone team to beat Duke at full strength — learned it wasn’t invincible, entering with its 21-game win streak snapped. No. 2 seed Michigan State (28-6) is looks the part after winning the Big Ten regular-season and postseason titles, while fellow 2-seed Kentucky (27-6) is a contender again. Houston (31-3), a 3-seed and AAC regular-season champ, has to prove it isn’t a pretender.

And after losing four stars to the NBA, defending national champion and 6-seed, Villanova (25-9) follows its latest Big East title, and could become t he f irst back-to-back champion in a dozen years. A third title in four years would also make the Wildcats the first to do so since John Wooden’s UCLA dynasty.

Crazier things have happened. UMBC and LoyolaChic­ago — the sixth straight year a sevenseed or lower reached the Final Four — are reminders.

No matter that neither is back. The NCAA To u r n a men t has it all.

 ?? Getty Images (2); AP ?? A-C-WHEEE! Zion Williamson stars for the top-seeded Blue Devils, who have company with fellow ACC stalwar ts North Carolina and Virginia, coached by Roy Williams and Tony Bennett (bottom right).
Getty Images (2); AP A-C-WHEEE! Zion Williamson stars for the top-seeded Blue Devils, who have company with fellow ACC stalwar ts North Carolina and Virginia, coached by Roy Williams and Tony Bennett (bottom right).
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