The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sycamores want to keep magic alive in NIT

Indiana State having most success since 1979 with Larry Bird.

- By Michael Marot

INDIANAPOL­IS — Indiana State coach Josh Schertz left the measuring tape at home Monday.

In the midst of a 31-win season that included a Missouri Valley Conference regular-season title and the school’s first AP Top 25 appearance in 45 years, Schertz found it unnecessar­y to show his players that the free throw line, the rim or even the 3-point line at Hinkle Fieldhouse were any different from what they have at home.

No, reaching the NIT semifinals is not a surprising “Hoosiers” experience. It’s what Indiana State expected to do after being left out of the NCAA Tournament.

“We talked about going into our preparatio­n that week between the MVC Tournament and the NCAA Selection Show, where we didn’t know if we were going to be in (the NCAA Tournament), and we said we were going to be prepared to try to prove the committee right, hopefully, by being in the tournament and advancing or preparing to prove the committee wrong,” Schertz said Monday. “Turns out we had to prepare to prove the committee wrong.”

The Sycamores (31-6) have spent all season proving people wrong. In the MVC preseason poll, they were picked fourth. When they were written off after falling into an 18-point, second-half deficit in the MVC title game, the Sycamores valiantly fought back before losing 84-80 to Drake. And when the NCAA selection committee ignored them, Indiana State didn’t fret.

The Sycamores decided to chase history. Beating Utah (22-14) in tonight’s semifinal would tie Indiana State’s longest postseason winning streak in its Division I era, matching the four wins from 1979 when the unbeaten Sycamores marched to the national championsh­ip game with Larry Bird. Schertz said Bird has followed the tourney run but isn’t sure if he will return for this week’s games.

Beating Utah and either Georgia or Seton Hall in Thursday’s championsh­ip game would match the program’s single-season school record for victories and bring the school its first postseason crown since the 1950 NAIA championsh­ip.

And with just 85 miles separating NIT host Butler University from Bird’s statue outside ISU’s Hulman Center in Terre Haute, the last mid-major team still playing is expected to have a decided home-court advantage.

The Sycamores don’t look like any of the other men’s teams that survived March. The others are power-conference schools. Indiana State starts four guards, leads the nation in 3-pointers made (403), has just two players topping 6 feet 8 and boasts one of college basketball’s most unusual and intriguing stars, sophomore center Robbie Avila.

The goggle-wearing, 3-point shooting Avila (6-10, 240 pounds) has become a star on and off the court, with social media followers nicknaming him everything from “Cream Abdul-Jabbar” to “Milk Chamberlai­n” to “Larry Blurred” to “Steph Blurry.”

Avila, a first-team All-MVC selection who averages 17.3 points, 6.5 rebounds and 4.1 assists, said it all began after a Thanksgivi­ng tournament in Las Vegas before hitting a fever pitch when Indiana State began reemerging on the national map in January and February.

“My favorite nickname has been ‘Robwave,’ which comes after my favorite rapper. To have a similar name as him has been a lot of fun,” he said, referring to the singer Rod Wave. “I’m just grateful to get all this attention.”

 ?? JOSEPH C. GARZA/THE TRIBUNE-STAR VIA AP ?? Robbie Avila, the big man with a thousand nicknames, has powered 31-win Indiana State to the NIT semifinals, where the Sycamores will meet Utah tonight in Indianapol­is.
JOSEPH C. GARZA/THE TRIBUNE-STAR VIA AP Robbie Avila, the big man with a thousand nicknames, has powered 31-win Indiana State to the NIT semifinals, where the Sycamores will meet Utah tonight in Indianapol­is.

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