Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Dukes have tournament confidence

Dambrot believes seven teams can emerge with title

- By Ben Gottschalk

Before the season, Duquesne was picked to finish last in the Atlantic 10. But for fans who haven’t been paying attention, it may be a surprise to learn Duquesne is one of the top teams in the conference and has a real shot at making a deep run in the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament.

Along with posting a 20win season for just the third time in 42 years, Duquesne has had a season chock- full of broken records, from tying the school record for most home wins in a season (16) to coach Keith Dambrot earning his 500th career win.

A successful regular season in which the Dukes went 20-11 overall record and 10-8 in the conference has helped prove to some fans who were sleeping on Duquesne that this team is better than what was initially thought possible. That this team has blown its preseason expectatio­ns out of the water.

“I think we kind of have proved them wrong,” forward Austin Rotroff said. “I don’t know offhand what our conference record was, but I know that we felt like we could have won more games. There were ones that we lost a lead or something. So those still leave a sour taste in our mouths. We want to show that we are one of the top- tier teams in this league.”

One of the games that left a sour taste: The final regular season game against Fordham. Had they beaten Fordham, the Dukes would have had the opportunit­y to snag the No. 4 seed. But the Dukes lost, and in turn, Duquesne earned the No. 6 seed. Duquesne will have a chance for revenge, as there is a potential meeting between Fordham and Duquesne in the quarterfin­als.

“It’s ironic that we play Fordham again,” Dambrot said. “When you look back at the game, it seemed like a big deal, but it turned out that it’s pretty similar to what we would have got the other way, too.”

Although Dambrot already has it made up in his mind that Duquesne will face Fordham again, first, the Dukes will need to get through 11th-seeded La Salle, which eliminated No. 14 Rhode Island on Tuesday. Duquesne won the only meeting with the Explorers this season, 91-74 on Feb. 22 at Philadelph­ia.

“They’re all the same for us,” Dambrot said before knowing his next opponent. “If you sit there and look at Rhode Island’s games, they’ve been in almost every game. And La Salle has got good pop in the backcourt. They’re a little bit different, both teams, but we pretty much know what they’re going to do.”

“We’re thankful for the bye,” forward Joe Reece said. “I think whether it’s two games or one game, having the ability to just rest and prepare for that game will be helpful.”

Reece had his best gamesof the season against La Salle, scoring a career-high 26 points.

“I got involved very early, and I thank my guards for that,” Reece said. “But these upcoming games, I feel like it’s just a completely new season. It’s a wonderful conference, and everybody’s going to give it their all. ... We’re looking forward to this bigtime opportunit­y.”

But the A-10 championsh­ip is completely different from the regular season. Only four times has a team won four consecutiv­e games to win the championsh­ip (Xavier, 2004 ’06; VCU, 2015; and Saint Louis, 2019) — something Duquesne would have to do to earn the conference’s automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Duquesne has had two four-game win streaks this season, which gives the Dukes hope.

“It’s just a matter of whether we can play four good games,” Dambrot said. “We’re capable of it. We’ve shown that. I don’t think some teams can win four games.”

The A-10 is a wide-open field. Although Duquesne finished as the No. 6 seed, it could play in their favor. Only three of the past 16 regular-season champions have gone on to win the postseason championsh­ip. And eight different schools have won the past 12 A-10 championsh­ips.

“It’s no different from the Big Ten or ACC tournament­s,” Dambrot said. “In the good leagues, there are a lot of teams that could win the tournament. I think there’s probably seven teams that could win the A-10 tournament.”

Although this Duquesne squad does not feature a single player who has played in the A-10 tournament, the Dukes are still confident.

“We need to just focus on a new season,” Rotroff said. “Everybody’s 0-0 coming into this week, and it’s one and done. We self-reflected a lot, but we’ve got business to take care of.”

Because people counted out the Dukes before the season even started, it makes their trip through the A-10 tournament a bit easier. When you’ve already exceeded every expectatio­n, there isn’t as much pressure to succeed. At least not the same sort of pressure.

“I think every time you’re in a one-and-done situation, whether you’re the best team or the worst team, there’s still pressure,” Dambrot said. “I’m sure these guys feel pressure about winning in the tournament, but I think everybody’s got pressure. It’s just who handles pressure. Just trying to be as evenkeeled and make sure the equilibriu­m is nice and steady.”

Regardless of what the expectatio­ns for the Dukes may be, Dambrot is confident in Duquesne’s ability to make a deep run.

“With the new format, it’s not that difficult with the day off in between,” Dambrot said. “It’s not like playing four or five games in a row. It’s two games, then sit, then two games. I think as the tournament goes on, we have a little bit of an advantage because we have pretty good depth. I don’t know if it helps you early in the tournament, but it helps you later in the tournament because we can play 10 or 11 guys.”

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