The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Syracuse’s glue — forwardtur­ned-center Marek Dolezaj

- By JOHN KEKIS AP Sports Writer

Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim has seen a thing or two in his 45 seasons at his alma mater, and he’s normally somewhat reserved in heaping excessive praise on his players. He’s made an exception for senior Marek Dolezaj.

“He’s by far the most valuable player on our team. It’s not even close. He’s just a tremendous player,” Boeheim said. “It’s hard to even — you can’t even look at the stat sheet because his importance is so much more. I mean, he has a good stat sheet, but his importance to our team is so much.”

Dolezaj’s role this season was altered in the blink of an eye just four minutes into the opener against Bryant in late November. Starting center Bourama Sidibe suffered a knee injury that effectivel­y ended his season (he hass only played 11 minutes since)

and the rail-thin, 6-foot-10 forward from Slovakia replaced him in Boeheim’s signature zone defense.

To say that Dolezaj responded well to a role he’s played before would be an understate­ment. The latest exhibit came in last Sunday’s 75-72 second-round victory over West Virginia, the third seed in the Midwest Region. Dolezaj was on the bench with four fouls nearing the midpoint of the second half as the Mountainee­rs mounted a rally.

The Orange had built an 11-point lead early in the period thanks to slick passes from Dolezaj that set up junior guard Buddy Boeheim for a pair of 3s. After Dolezaj went to the bench, backup center Jesse Edwards quickly picked up his fourth foul, so back in went Dolezaj and out went the Mountainee­rs from the NCAA Tournament as the 11th-seeded Orange (18-9) earned a berth in the round of 16 on Saturday night against thirdseede­d Houston (26-3).

Over the final nine minutes, Dolezaj had four points, three rebounds and two assists as the Orange rallied from one point behind. First-team, All-Big 12 center Derek Culver of the Mountainee­rs finished 2 of 9 from the floor, one of his worst showings of the season.

“I think the key really was Marek, you know, make the decision — the game is going to get away ... if he doesn’t play,” Jim Boeheim said. “He has to be in the game. We run our offense through him. He’s so key for us.”

In two tournament games Dolezaj has scored 23 points on 7-of-10 shooting, snared 10 rebounds, had five assists in each game, hasn’t missed a free throw in nine attempts, and also has three blocks and two steals. On the season, he’s averaging 10 points while eschewing the long ball — he’s 0 of 2 from the arc — and is shooting 55.8%, tops on the team. He also averages 5.3 rebounds, has converted a team-best 87 free throws (in 102 attempts), ranks second with 89 assists to go with 47 turnovers, and his 946 minutes lead the team, which means his listed 200-pound frame has taken an awful lot of pounding from the big men in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

 ?? AJ MAST - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Syracuse forward Marek Dolezaj, left, runs into
San Diego State forward Nathan Mensah during the second half of a college basketball game in the first round of the NCAA tournament at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapol­is, Friday, March 19, 2021.
AJ MAST - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Syracuse forward Marek Dolezaj, left, runs into San Diego State forward Nathan Mensah during the second half of a college basketball game in the first round of the NCAA tournament at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapol­is, Friday, March 19, 2021.

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