New York Post

PUT THEIR DUKES UP

JMU fights past Wisconsin

- By JARED SCHWARTZ jschwartz@nypost.com

James Madison didn’t care.

The No. 12-seeded Dukes didn’t care about Wisconsin being a No. 5 seed. Didn’t care about the Badgers’ pedigree in the NCAA Tournament. Certainly didn’t care about being, on paper, underdogs.

They haven’t lost since Jan.

27. And in their minds, they were the favorites.

James Madison came out swinging and punched Wisconsin in the mouth from the opening whistle, and the Badgers could barely muster any counterpun­ch. The Dukes showed the much higher-ranked Badgers no respect, hounding every dribble and shot without any fear en route to an emphatic 72-61 first-round win Friday night at Barclays Center.

They never trailed, embarrassi­ng Wisconsin the entire way.

“I’m proud of them, but not surprised,” James Madison head coach Mark Byington said. “We heard things about our schedule not being tough and who we are, [but] we knew we belonged.”

It marked James Madison’s first win in the main field of the NCAA Tournament since 1983 (they won a First Four game in 2013). The Dukes will next face No. 4 Duke in the second round on Sunday after the Blue Devils beat Vermont.

James Madison’s defense quickly had the Badgers shell-shocked, forcing them to commit 19 turnovers — a whopping 13 of them in the first half. James Madison enjoyed a 28-10 advantage in points off turnovers.

The Sun Belt champions were picked by 45.7 percent of brackets to pull off the firstround upset — according to NCAA.com — and became the secondmost popular double-digit seed in the field to reach the Sweet 16. Dukes forward T.J. Bickerstaf­f, Cavaliers coach J.B.’s nephew, said it was a “really good” matchup for his team.

Clearly, they knew something. The Dukes — who entered with a 31-3 record and 13-game win streak (the longest current streak in the nation) — enjoyed a well-rounded scoring effort, with Terrence Edwards Jr. leading the way with 14 points. Bickerstaf­f and Julien Wooden chipped in 12 apiece.

“We’re not scared of the competitio­n,” Bickerstaf­f said. “We proved that over and over again with different experience­s, because we’ve been through it all.”

 ?? N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg ?? EYES ON THE PRIZE: T.J. Bickerstaf­f goes up for two of his 12 points in Friday night’s NCAA Tournament win against Wisconsin at Barclays Center.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg EYES ON THE PRIZE: T.J. Bickerstaf­f goes up for two of his 12 points in Friday night’s NCAA Tournament win against Wisconsin at Barclays Center.

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