The Denver Post

Buffs look to make most of tournament

- By Pat Rooney

DAYTON, OHIO >> Tristan da Silva still was just beginning a collegiate career full of promise when Colorado last joined the Big Dance. It was a much different world.

COVID had seriously altered the 2020-21 season, with canceled and postponed games making the schedule a jumbled mess of fits and starts while eliminatin­g fans from the stands. As for da Silva, he was a true freshman recently arrived from Germany without ever having visited the CU campus before joining the Buffaloes.

Da Silva was one of the last reserves off the bench for that team. That certainly won’t be the case on Wednesday.

In the three years since, da Silva has forged a career that will leave its mark in CU men’s basketball history. Yet it’s a career he’s intent on prolonging as long as possible as the Buffs get set for a battle against Boise State in the NCAA First Four in Dayton.

“I remember it being a lot of fun playing that Georgetown game (in the first round), even the Florida State game (in the second round), just being a part of it, being a part of something bigger,” da Silva said.

The Buffs are making the sixth NCAA Tournament in 14 seasons under head coach Tad Boyle, a figure that would be at seven if not for the cancellati­on of the 2020 tournament. It is, by far, a level of sustained success unmatched in program history, and yet that postseason history also is marked by disappoint­ment and frustratio­n.

Perhaps the most glaring omission in the history of the Boyle-era Buffs is the lack of an appearance in the second weekend of the tournament. Only two of the previous five Boyle-led tournament teams advanced out of the first round.

Both of those teams lost in the second round, and CU’S narrow inclusion in the 68-team field and designatio­n in the First Four bracket puts an extra challenge in the path to finally reaching the Sweet 16.

Da Silva and Luke O’brien got on the floor during garbage time of CU’S 2021 firstround rout of Georgetown, with da Silva also coming off the bench for 10 minutes in the second-round loss against Florida State. Center Eddie Lampkin Jr. boasts CU’S most significan­t NCAA Tournament experience, as he enjoyed one of the best games of his career for TCU in a 2022 secondroun­d overtime loss against Arizona, going 8-for-9 with 20 points and a career-high 14 rebounds.

It’s not a wealth of tournament experience for the

Cartier 5-7 0-0 12, Scott 9-13 5-7 23, Clifford 7-12 2-3 17, Stevens 2-5 0-0 5, Strong 1-3 0-0 2, Lake 2-4 0-0 5, Palmer 0-1 0-0 0, Jackson 0-0 0-0 0, Kya.evans 0-1 1-2 1, Mbemba 0-1 0-0 0, Kyl.evans 0-0 0-0 0, Payne 0-0 2-2 2, Murphy 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 26-47 10-14 67.

Buffs, but the impact of tournament experience is debatable. The two Boyleled teams that reached the second round (2012, 2021) had little to no tournament experience compared to the three teams that lost in the first round (2013, 2014, 2016).

“I think there’s something to it. You’d rather have experience than not. There’s no doubt about it,” Boyle said. “There’s no teacher in life like experience.”

CU faces a Boise State squad that has been battle-tested in a deep Mountain West Conference, which sent a league-record six teams into the 68team tournament field. The Broncos went 6-5 against the other MWC tournament teams, including a two-game sweep of San Diego State and road wins against Nevada and New Mexico.

The Broncos also posted a nonconfere­nce win against Saint Mary’s, which received a No. 5 seed in the tournament.

As for the Buffs, despite the loss against Oregon in the Pac-12 title game, Boyle believes the eight-game win streak that preceded that defeat and put CU in position to earn an NCAA berth showcased a team playing its best basketball of the season.

Now the challenge is to sustain that peak in the postseason.

“When you finish the season winning eight of nine games, you’ve achieved that goal,” Boyle said about peaking in March. “Now, the fact of the matter is, here’s the final part of the season. This is the tournament that you literally — there’s 365 days in a year, and in 364 of them you’re preparing for this day. Get your named called. Get your seed. Get your opponent. Figure out where you’re going, when you’re playing. That’s what you coach for. That’s what you play for.”

 ?? JEFF DEAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Virginia guard Reece Beekman, center right, shoots against Colorado State’s Joe Palmer (20) during the first half in Dayton, Ohio on Tuesday.
JEFF DEAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Virginia guard Reece Beekman, center right, shoots against Colorado State’s Joe Palmer (20) during the first half in Dayton, Ohio on Tuesday.
 ?? AARON ONTIVEROZ — THE DENVER POST ?? Tristan da Silva (23) of the Colorado Buffaloes runs in transition ahead of Isaac Jones (13) of the Washington State Cougars at T-mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on Friday.
AARON ONTIVEROZ — THE DENVER POST Tristan da Silva (23) of the Colorado Buffaloes runs in transition ahead of Isaac Jones (13) of the Washington State Cougars at T-mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on Friday.

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