The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

NCAA’s Midwest Region full of upsets but maybe not surprises

- By DAVE SKRETTA

INDIANAPOL­IS (AP) » It is the region that has caused more busted NCAA Tournament brackets than any other, the quadrant where No. 1 seed Illinois was sent packing by Loyola Chicago, West Virginia was dumped by a team that barely made the field, and Tennessee and Oklahoma State failed to survive the first weekend.

Then again, maybe the unpredicta­ble Midwest Region should have been a bit more ... predictabl­e.

Take the Ramblers, those perennial overachiev­ers powered by the prayers of Sister Jean. They were in the Final Four just two years ago, have an All-American center in Cameron Krutwig and a coach who has been through this before.

Their opponent on Saturday, Oregon State, romped through the Pac-12 tourney and has lost only once in the last five weeks. The Beavers’ coach, Wayne Tinkle, once took Montana to three NCAA Tournament­s in a four-year span.

Surprising? Sounds more like two schools that belong.

Kind of like Syracuse and Houston, who meet in the other regional semifinal Saturday.

The Orange, who went on a late-season charge just to make the dance, have the hottest player left in Buddy Boeheim. His dad, Jim, has merely led Syracuse to five Final Four appearance­s and a national title.

They will face the Cougars, who have lived up to their billing as the No. 2 seed. They’re in their second straight Sweet 16, have an All-American themselves in Quentin Grimes and a coach in Kelvin Sampson who once took Oklahoma to the Final Four.

Pretty good pedigrees for a couple of teams few thought belonged.

“We’re never going to just out-talent you, although we have talented kids. But we’re 26-3,” said Sampson, who also has led Washington State and Indiana to the tournament during his stellar if stormy coaching career.

“We’ve lost some games maybe we could have had back, but that’s OK,” he said. “You’re going to lose some games. We’ve won some games that without our culture we would have lost. Our kids believe in it. It’s something to believe in.” In truth, all four schools still alive in the Midwest Region have cultures that form the foundation for their success. And they were laid down by coaches who have two things in common: They are frequently written off and they just keep winning.

Porter Moser’s success with the Ramblers has him linked to about every head coaching vacancy that pops up, including one in his own backyard at DePaul and another down the road in Bloomingto­n, Indiana. Yet few remember that just over a decade ago he’d been fired by Illinois State and was rehabbing his career as an assistant at Saint Louis.

“Whatever field you’re in, when you’re young, you’re so much about the trajectory,” Moser said. “You’re so focused on, ‘I’ve got to win. I’ve got to get to this level. I’ve got to make this much money. I’ve got to get here, and here.’

“And you’re never happy and you don’t enjoy the journey,” Moser continued. “I’ve been so in the moment of enjoying the journey the last five, six years, the people I’m with and being happy, and then the success comes.”

Tinkle knows a thing or two about journeys.

His playing career took him to basketball outposts such as Topeka, Kansas, and Rapid City, South Dakota, then around the world to Belgium, Sweden and Greece. Once he retired and got into coaching, he took Montana to unknown heights, earning him the job at Oregon State.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Syracuse’s Joseph Girard III celebrates following a second-round game against West Virginia in the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament at Bankers Life Fieldhouse, Sunday, March 21, 2021, in Indianapol­is. Syracuse defeated Syracuse 75-72.
DARRON CUMMINGS - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Syracuse’s Joseph Girard III celebrates following a second-round game against West Virginia in the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament at Bankers Life Fieldhouse, Sunday, March 21, 2021, in Indianapol­is. Syracuse defeated Syracuse 75-72.

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