New York Post

SEA' THEM SHINE

Wagner soaks in 'amazing Selection Sunday with date in Dayton on horizon

- By PETER BOTTE pbotte@nypost.com

The Wagner players and their supporters erupted Sunday when the fourth bracket finally was announced and they learned their destinatio­n for the Staten Island school’s first trip to the NCAA Tournament in more than two decades.

The Seahawks, the surprise champions of the Northeast Conference, will need to win a play-in game against Howard for the No. 16 seed in the West Region on Tuesday in Dayton for the right to face No. 1 North Carolina in the Round of 64.

“Amazing; This is everything I hoped it would be for my players,” second-year coach Donald Copeland said Sunday at Spiro Sports Center, the Seahawks’ home arena. “I’ve been through it as a player, as a coach, but to see them react that way, you can’t put a price on it. We knew it was coming, but when you actually see your name up there and hear it called, you can’t beat it.”

With St. John’s and Seton Hall — Copeland’s alma mater — among several bubble teams left out due to some unexpected conference tournament results across the country, Wagner and St. Peter’s — helmed by former Wagner coach Bashir Mason — are the only teams representi­ng the metropolit­an area in the Big Dance.

“It feels good, and we’re excited to put it on for our city and our school and our community,” said junior guard Tahron Allen, a product of Brooklyn Collegiate High School who transferre­d in this year from Monmouth. “I’ve been dreaming of this my whole life since I was a kid.

“We’re overcome a lot of adversity this year, but we’re definitely having fun with it, and you never know what can happen.”

Only two No. 16 seeds ever have knocked off a No. 1, but both have occurred in the past six years — UMBC ousted Virginia in 2018 and Fairleigh Dickinson shocked Purdue last year.

But first things first, Wagner knows it must take care of Howard, winners of the MidEastern Athletic Conference tourney.

“We don’t know much about them, but we will,” Copeland said. “It’s their second time going in back-toback years, so you know it’s going to be another tough one against a team with a championsh­ip pedigree.”

Wagner, which has an enrollment of around 2,000 students, had just seven healthy players while punching its ticket in the NEC title game against Merrimack last Tuesday.

The Seahawks (16-15 overall) finished sixth in the NEC regular season with a 7-9 record before also winning road games against Sacred Heart and top-seeded Central Connecticu­t State in the conference tournament.

“We only have seven, and we’ll only have seven,” Copeland said. “It hasn’t been ideal, but we’ve been dealing with it for a while and we’re going with what we’ve got.”

And they’re fully enjoying only the second time in school history Wagner has reached the Big Dance, and the first since falling to Pittsburgh as a No.15 seed in 2003.

“Words can’t describe it right now. We’re still shocked, but proud that we did this with seven players,” said leading scorer Melvin Council Jr., a junior guard from Rochester who previously played at JUCO Monroe College in New Rochelle. “Coach preaches toughness every day and no excuse, and we’ve been taking in everything he says. I know we’ll be ready. He always has us ready.”

 ?? Bill Kostroun ?? READY TO DANCE: Wagner players react on Sunday in Staten Island as they watch the 2024 NCAA Men’s Basketball Championsh­ip Selection Show, from which the Seahawks learned they will face fellow No. 16 seed Howard for the right to face No. 1 North Carolina in the Round of 64.
Bill Kostroun READY TO DANCE: Wagner players react on Sunday in Staten Island as they watch the 2024 NCAA Men’s Basketball Championsh­ip Selection Show, from which the Seahawks learned they will face fellow No. 16 seed Howard for the right to face No. 1 North Carolina in the Round of 64.

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