The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Oakland is why you don’t limit tournament access

Greg Sankey’s tourney wishes notwithsta­nding, March Madness needs Cinderella stories.

- Billy Witz l c. 2024 New York Times

SEC Commission­er Greg Sankey is the ultimate soft power player. He does not produce pithy soundbites. He rarely raises his voice. Instead, he speaks opaquely, often requiring something like a college sports Kremlinolo­gist to interpret his intentions.

He has been at it for long enough — he’s been commission­er since 2015 — that he is well-practiced at throwing his weight around: kicking off a realignmen­t wave by poaching Oklahoma and Texas, coauthorin­g a rewrite of the NCAA constituti­on and scoffing out of existence the possibilit­y that the SEC would be shut out of the College Football Playoff last season.

Recently, he teamed up with Big Ten Commission­er Tony Petitti to leverage a deal that will award their conference­s about 60% of the TV revenue for the 12-team College Football Playoff that begins this fall, leaving crumbs for everyone else.

So, when Sankey told ESPN this month that it was time to rethink the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, the parsing began.

“We are giving away highly competitiv­e opportunit­ies for automatic qualifiers” from smaller leagues, Sankey said. “I think that pressure is going to rise as we have more competitiv­e basketball leagues at the top end because of expansion.”

The takeaway: So long Cinderella. Give me a 17-15 LSU or 18-14 Minnesota.

Expansion of the tournament — from 68 teams to 80, 96 or even 128, as some reports have suggested — has been a popular topic as the tournament moves into its second week. The change would drive up TV rights fees, and potentiall­y ace smaller schools out of the action.

Cinderella came this year ... for a time

The most powerful counterpoi­nt to the expansion plan came Thursday night. It was delivered by Oakland University, a commuter school north of Detroit, which knocked Kentucky out of the tournament with a hail of 3-pointers by Jack Gohlke.

If there were an avatar for the soul of March Madness, consider Oakland’s Golden Grizzlies, whose coach, Greg Kampe, is in his 40th season. And consider Gohlke, who spent the past five seasons at Division II Hillsdale College in Michigan.

Nobody shot more 3-pointers in Division I basketball this season than Gohlke, and nobody has made more after he bombed in 16 in two tournament games.

Stories like the Golden Grizzlies, who moved to Division I in 1997, “1000%, they’re the essence of the tournament,” Gohlke said. “Historical­ly, you always have those high seeds that go on to win the tournament. But you see the runs to the Final Four, the Elite Eight, the Sweet 16 — those are the runs that people remember, like Saint Peter’s getting to the Elite Eight. I don’t think we should lose that.”

Teams like Oakland provided some juice on an otherwise lackluster first weekend of the tournament. Eight double-digit seeds won in the first round, but just one remains alive: No. 11 seed North Carolina State (which beat Oakland in overtime in the second round) in the South Region.

Disparity still exists

To understand the chasm between programs like Oakland’s and Kentucky’s, consider the newest measure that separates the haves and have-nots: NIL funds.

Oakland is just starting a collective that Kampe said had raised about $28,000 for his entire roster. He expects to need about 10 times that amount to keep his best player, Trey Townsend, whose parents also were athletes at the school. Across the court, Kentucky’s team managers — the team managers — recently announced a sponsorshi­p agreement that’s probably worth that much. (Freshman guard D.J. Wagner has deals with Nike, Drake and an exotic car club.)

Football drives conference realignmen­t and so many other decisions in college sports because of the billions of dollars it generates. But in football there is no room for small schools like Oakland, even with an expansion of the playoffs to 12 teams. Appalachia­n State isn’t knocking off Georgia in a sport where size, strength and depth make it an unfair fight.

Some believe that restrictin­g access for the little schools that could — such as George Mason, VCU, Davidson and Saint Peter’s — would strip March Madness of its magic.

“You know, we’re what makes this tournament, the little guy,” Kampe said Wednesday, noting that it was the 70th anniversar­y of Jimmy Chitwood’s game-winning shot memorializ­ed in the film “Hoosiers.”

He mentioned Townsend, Blake Lampman and Gohlke.

“They could be Jimmy Chitwood tomorrow night,” he said. “Don’t take that away from us.”

Kampe, 68, grew up in Defiance, Ohio, which seems fitting. He was intractabl­e enough that Lampman, a fourth-year junior, remembers a teammate being punished for wearing different colored socks to practice. This season, D.Q. Cole, a junior college transfer, practiced in Jolly Rancher socks.

Nobody paid much attention to Cole’s socks when, with Oakland clinging to a 75-74 lead, he knocked in a corner 3-pointer with 29 seconds left, stumbling back into the Oakland bench.

Across the court, among the Oakland fans, Lisa Gohlke was dissolving into a puddle of tears. Earlier in the day, she had shown her son a good-luck video from her students at Greenland Elementary near their home in Pewaukee, Wisconsin.

The night before, she and her husband, Dave, a leadership adviser for a technology consultant, told Jack what parents say to their children when they don’t want to place their own anxieties on them: Have fun!

“I’m not here to have fun,” Jack told them. “I have work to do.”

Social media’s blaze, and backing up the talk

At halftime, when he’d made seven 3-pointers, they marveled at the way he was blazing across social media. “They’re saying he looks 28,” his father said.

“Forty,” corrected his sister Jennifer.

They were among the few who understood how he’d come to the moment. Hillsdale was the only scholarshi­p offer he had received out of high school, but he was so skinny that he was redshirted his first season. He played three minutes per game the next year. And eight minutes the next.

“You’ve got to do a little introspect­ion at that point, too,” Gohlke said. “I knew what I could be. But I also knew I wasn’t good enough. I wasn’t mad at my coaches; I wasn’t mad at anyone for not playing me. I knew I had to get better.”

And so he got stronger. He got quicker. And he put up shot after shot. He graduated last year with an accounting degree and wanted to use his last year of eligibilit­y to get a master’s in business administra­tion, which Hillsdale didn’t offer.

Oakland was the only offer he had — and it came with a green light.

In the game’s final seconds, Gohlke stood at the top of the key next to Kentucky freshman guard Rob Dillingham, who’s a projected first round pick in June’s draft, during a break. They shared a smile.

It had not gone unnoticed when Gohlke opined that Oakland had better shooters than Kentucky, which led the nation in 3-point shooting percentage. Dillingham had reminded him of that before the game, telling Gohlke he’d better prove it.

“Fair enough,” he said. “I was talking a little bit.”

At the end, Dillingham gave Gohlke props.

“He was saying, ‘Respect, you made it happen,’” Gohlke said. “I said I wish I was in your shoes going into the NBA draft.”

The shoes he was standing in, provided only for this tournament, weren’t bad. Glass slippers that fit just right.

 ?? PHOTOS BY MATT FREED/AP ?? No one other than Oakland fans and hardcore college basketball junkies knew about the Golden Grizzlies’ Jack Gohlke before the NCAA Tournament. But Gohlke gave his Horizon League school a moment in the spotlight when he torched Rob Dillingham and SEC blue blood Kentucky for 32 points and 10 3-pointers in a first-round shocker.
PHOTOS BY MATT FREED/AP No one other than Oakland fans and hardcore college basketball junkies knew about the Golden Grizzlies’ Jack Gohlke before the NCAA Tournament. But Gohlke gave his Horizon League school a moment in the spotlight when he torched Rob Dillingham and SEC blue blood Kentucky for 32 points and 10 3-pointers in a first-round shocker.
 ?? ?? Oakland coach Greg Kampe has toiled mostly in anonymity for 40 years at the school. But he and his program had a Cinderella moment when the Golden Grizzlies stunned John Calipari and Kentucky.
Oakland coach Greg Kampe has toiled mostly in anonymity for 40 years at the school. But he and his program had a Cinderella moment when the Golden Grizzlies stunned John Calipari and Kentucky.

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