New York Post

STATE THEIR CASE

Longtime Baylor assistant, key transfers have elevated Wildcats to top of Big 12

- ZACH TO SCHOOL by Zach Braziller zbraziller @nypost.com

THERE was doubt whether star wing Keyontae Johnson would ever play again. Dynamic point guard Markquis Nowell is 5-foot-8 with platforms on. The coach, Jerome Tang, worked his way up from high school to serving as an assistant for nearly two decades before finally getting his chance.

Together, they have not only put Kansas State back on the map, but have made the Wildcats look like a Final Four contender. There is no better story in the sport than what has taken place in the Little Apple this winter under Tang.

After snapping a seven-game losing streak to in-state rival Kansas last Tuesday for its fifth Quad 1 win, Kansas State is all alone atop the fierce Big 12 and undefeated at Bramlage Coliseum. It has ascended to its highest national ranking in a decade and already has three more wins than it managed all of last season, the third of three straight losing seasons. It is further proof that it doesn’t have to take multiple years anymore to turn around a program, and also a nod to the exceptiona­l job Tang did in the transfer portal.

It starts with Johnson, the 6-foot-6 senior who leads the team in scoring (18.5) and rebounding (7.4) and is shooting a robust 40.4 percent from 3-point range. It was only two years ago this past December that Johnson collapsed on the court while playing for Florida. Diagnosed with myocarditi­s, he was placed in a medically induced coma for three days.

Johnson was an honorary assistant coach for the Gators last year — he was known as “Coach Key” — and since school doctors wouldn’t clear him medically, he entered the transfer portal and landed in Manhattan, Kansas after being given the green light by doctors there.

Johnson was joined by transfers Desi Sills (Arkansas State), Nae’Qwan Tomlin (junior college) and David N’Guessan (Virginia Tech) who were added to an existing core led by Nowell, the former Arkansas Little Rock star. Small in stature at a listed 5-foot-8, the Harlem native who goes by Mr. New York City on social media is a two-way dynamo, a tenacious on-ball defender averaging 2.3 steals per game and a willing passer (8.4 assists).

The 56-year-old Tang has made it all work, making a genius out of Kansas State for hiring him. He spent 19 years at Baylor working for Scott Drew, helping him elevate that program to among the country’s best. And now he’s immediatel­y doing the same thing at Kansas State, winning at a level nobody could have expected this fast.

All aboard!

It is already looking like it will be a fascinatin­g coaching carousel eight weeks before Selection Sunday. Three major programs — Texas, Notre Dame and Georgetown — are expected to have openings.

This week, Mike Brey announced he will retire after 23 seasons at Notre Dame. Texas recently fired Chris Beard following his Dec. 12 arrest on a third-degree felony domestic violence charge after an altercatio­n with his fiancée. And Georgetown, in the midst of an unfathomab­ly poor stretch under Patrick Ewing in which the Hoyas have lost 29 straight league games, will almost certainly make a change.

Pat Kelsey, the coach at College of Charleston, figures to be at the top of many lists. He has the Cougars ranked 18th nationally, after leading Winthrop to five 20-win seasons in nine years at the Big South school. Hall of Fame coach Rick Pitino, in his third season at Iona, hasn’t exactly made it a secret of his desire to get one more shot at the big time. North Texas coach Grant McCasland is another name to follow. He has won at the Division II, junior college and Division I level, worked under Drew at Baylor, and is headed to his sixth 20-win season in seven years as a Division I coach.

Of these schools, I believe Georgetown is the most appealing for multiple reasons. Expectatio­ns are through the roof at Texas, a place where basketball will never be No. 1. Notre Dame hasn’t been the same since leaving the Big East, reaching the tournament just once since 2017, and like Texas, football is always No. 1 in South Bend.

At Georgetown, the bar is incredibly low. Ewing has either been unable to keep his best players or win with them. It is located in the middle of a fertile recruiting ground loaded with rich boosters who are tired of this once-proud program being a laughingst­ock.

The next coach will have tons of resources and even meager accomplish­ments will be praised because of the preceding mess.

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