The Punxsutawney Spirit

Purdue faces the ghost of a shocking March Madness loss. Virginia has some advice on how to move on

- By Aaron Beard AP Basketball Writer

Purdue had just fallen unexpected­ly in the Big Ten Tournament last week and Braden Smith sat down alongside star Zach Edey and coach Matt Painter to meet reporters.

It took three questions to conjure a March Madness specter: the Boilermake­rs’ improbable loss as a No. 1 seed to 16th-seeded Fairleigh Dickinson in last year’s NCAA Tournament.

“I don’t think we’re really worried about what happened last year,” Smith said matter-of-factly.

Yes, Purdue has looked like a title contender all season and owns another 1-seed as the NCAAs begin this week. Yet one bad night at the worst possible time hangs over a program that has had multiple March Madness stumbles.

Only one other program knows that ignominy: Virginia, which fell to UMBC in the first-ever 16-vs-1 upset in 2018. Yet those Cavaliers regrouped to win the national championsh­ip the following season, offering a roadmap for the Boilermake­rs’ potential path to redemption and proof it can be done.

“’They weren’t the first to do it, so it’s not the worst thing in the world — it’s the second-worst thing in the world,” said former Virginia star Ty Jerome, now with the NBA’s Cleveland Cavaliers. “To go through that together and bounce back together ... it’s definitely going to make them stronger. I hope they’ve talked about it.

“That’s the best way to move forward, is to embrace it, to talk about it and let it fuel you.”

Like Virginia five years ago, Purdue has heard steady questions, references and taunts. In preseason. Amid wins and losses. They'll pick up in intensity this week; that's what happens when you are on the wrong side of a 150-2 all-time ledger for No. 1 seeds against No. 16 seeds.

“Every arena we went to, we heard chants of ‘FDU! FDU!’ throughout the whole game,” reserve forward Camden Heide said, “so we’ve kind of heard it ever since we lost.”

But the moment is here, the chance to shut it all down. The Boilermake­rs (29-4) headline the Midwest Region, led by a reigning national player of the year in the 7-foot-4 Edey — who was named an unanimous Associated Press firstteam All-American for the second straight season on Tuesday.

Yet Friday’s first-round match-up against the Montana State-Grambling winner also feels like returning to a crime scene for a program facing longstandi­ng pressure to reach its first Final Four since 1980. It illustrate­s why the Boilermake­rs’ challenge differs from that of No. 1 overall tournament seed and reigning national champion Connecticu­t, or fellow top regional seeds Houston and North Carolina with recent Final Four trips.

“We’ve embraced it for 12 months,” Painter said, adding: “A lot of times, that’s the best medicine, is to be able to sit in that adversity. But you can’t fix something if you don’t own it. And I think from a staff standpoint, we own it and our players own it.”

The Virginia parallels are strong. Both opened the folllowing seasons highly ranked and won early season marquee tournament­s (Purdue with the Maui Invitation­al, Virginia with the Battle 4 Atlantis in the Bahamas).

Each won its conference regular-season race (Virginia tied UNC in the Atlantic Coast Conference) before a semifinal loss in the league tournament. They entered the NCAA tourney with matching 1-seeds and 29-win totals.

They also toted along the burden of recent postseason losses beyond the most incomprehe­nsible of upsets. And there was something deeper, the stomach-dropping lurch that comes when a Final Four dream is crashing in the opening game, regarded as a formality for title contenders. Virginia coach Tony Bennett recalled hearing that Purdue was in trouble last March.

For Bennett, that story started with trying to rebuild his players’ confidence. He told them everyone – family, friends, critics – would watch their response, and they had the opportunit­y to weave their own incredible comeback tale.

Still, the UMBC wound was slow to heal.

Eventual Final Four most outstandin­g player Kyle Guy was open about battling anxiety and shared that the team heard death threats. Jerome described “shock and trauma” upon returning to the team hotel, and that sitting with the embarrassm­ent was “like rock bottom.”

“I couldn’t tell you two weeks, I couldn’t tell you two years because we were all dealing with it in different ways up until we won it the following year, to be honest,” Jerome told the AP.

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