Santa Fe New Mexican

Iowa State rides in vs. familiar foe in South Dakota State

- By Dave Skretta

OMAHA, Neb. — T.J. Otzelberge­r was sitting around CHI Health Center on Wednesday, just before leading Iowa State onto the court for its open practice ahead of the NCAA Tournament, still marveling at the way its fan base showed out last weekend.

Buoyed by Cyclones fans filling to the rafters, they romped past then-No. 1 Houston to win the Big 12 Tournament title.

“That,” Otzelberge­r said, “was something I’ll never forget.”

Expect the same sort of home-court advantage for the No. 2 seed Cyclones this week. Instead of the 230-mile trek south of the Iowa State campus in Ames to reach Kansas City, those thousands of red- and yellow-clad fans have a mere 170 miles to drive to reach Omaha for their first-round game against No. 15 seed South Dakota State on Thursday.

The winner will play No. 7 s eed Washington State or 10thseeded Drake, which also is located just down I-80 in Des Moines.

“The passion, enthusiasm, investment our fans make every single day — it’s inspiring,” said Otzelberge­r, who got his start as a college head coach at South Dakota State, and whose former assistant, Eric Henderson, is now leading the Jackrabbit­s.

“It really elevates our team to play at higher levels,” Otzelberge­r said. “It allows our guys to accomplish the things they’ve done.”

The top half of the East Region, headlined by overall No. 1 seed and defending national champion UConn, will have to wait until Friday to get their NCAA Tournament underway. But the bottom half, beginning with the matchup between the Cyclones (27-7) and the Jackrabbit­s (22-12), represents a unique convergenc­e of players, coaches and, yes, fans.

Otzelberge­r coached under Greg McDermott, whose Creighton teams call CHI Health Center home. One of his recruits while he was with the Jackrabbit­s, Matt Mims, will be facing him in the starting lineup Thursday, five years after he departed. And there is Henderson, whom the Iowa State coach called “one of my best friends on earth for 20-plus years.”

Henderson has the Jackrabbit­s in the NCAA Tournament for the second time in three years after winning the Summit League.

“Obviously we’ve talked and texted a few times,” Henderson said. “Once you get the emotions out of it, we’re both competitiv­e dudes, right? We both want to win. The respect level is high, but yeah.”

As for that home-court advantage, Henderson was quick to point out the South Dakota State campus in Brookings is not a whole lot further away than Ames, and that he expects yellow- and blue-clad Jackrabbit­s fans to be out in force.

“This is what it’s all about, right? To be able to share moments like this with our team,” Henderson said. “It doesn’t get any better than this, to be frank with you. We know what Cyclone Nation does in Kansas City for the Big 12 Tournament. We will be excited for the atmosphere in the building, no doubt.”

Sixth-seeded BYU and No. 11 seed Duquesne open the quadruple-header Thursday in Omaha with the winner getting third-seeded Illinois or No. 14 seed Morehead State in the second round.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States