The Sun (San Bernardino)

ELITE MEMORIES

Trojans’ NCAA Tournament run evokes reflection for 2001 team that made run to the regional final

- By Adam Grosbard agrosbard@scng.com @adamgrosba­rd on Twitter

INDIANAPOL­IS » After two decades, the memories of the games are foggy. Players from USC’s 2000-01 Elite Eight run haven’t seen the highlights in years, so the details tend to escape them. Instead, it’s the surroundin­g moments that stick out.

Like after the season-ending loss to Duke. The Trojans had an early-morning flight home to LAX the next day. Mixed in with the grogginess of travel was the joy at USC’s first Elite Eight run in 47 years and the disappoint­ment of it all coming to an end.

So the players and coaches were not prepared for what was waiting for them in the terminal. Hundreds of USC fans were waiting at the gate, erupting in cheers to celebrate the accomplish­ments of the wide-eyed team.

“We thought we were just coming home, gonna grab our bags and just get back to school,” guard Jeff Trepagnier recalled this week. “They just was cheering us, just going down the line high-fiving and hugs and celebratin­g. It was a

celebratio­n. It was sort of like our victory parade.”

“We had no idea that people were even watching us in L.A.,” forward Sam Clancy added. “Everybody was completely shocked. It was great to see that the city had really backed us.”

Twenty years later, USC men’s basketball is on the precipice of returning to that stage. A rematch with Pac12 rival Oregon is all that stands between the Trojans and their first trip to the Elite Eight since ‘01.

And as the predecesso­rs see it, that’s far from the only similarity between the teams.

An improvised dance

Much like this year’s Trojans, there were no grand expectatio­ns for the 200001 team. USC had not gone to the NCAA Tournament the previous three seasons, and even head coach Henry Bibby wasn’t sure what he had with that roster.

“We never thought (the Elite Eight) would be anything that we could reach in my estimation,” Bibby recounted. “But we got good at the right time.”

The 2001 team wasn’t a motley collection of transfers and underclass­men like 2021. It was largely a group of juniors and seniors who had played and grown together for years. They went from a miserable losing season in 1998 to two middling

years to the sudden renaissanc­e of a 24-10 record.

The players credit Bibby for the swagger they played with that year.

“We had NBA sets, we practiced like NBA. So I think it all started with him, and he instilled a confidence that we could beat any team,” said Clancy, the leading scorer on that squad. “We were always thinking we could win any game.”

“Henry Bibby always told us that winning teams have the players that are winners, and that’s what the scouts look for,” added forward David Blu (formerly Bluthentha­l).

Bibby won three national championsh­ips as a player under John Wooden at UCLA and an NBA title as a rookie with the New York Knicks. But he calls USC’s Elite Eight run the peak of his basketball career, seeing the group jell for the common cause.

Bibby sees parallels between his roster and the present iteration of the Trojans. He compares Tahj Eaddy to Brandon Granville for their ability to spark USC. Evan and Isaiah Mobley are likened to Clancy and Brian Scalabrine for their ability to impact the game from the post. And Drew Peterson is similar to Trepagnier as a versatile guard who doesn’t fit easily into any position.

Both teams entered the tournament as No. 6 seeds seeking respect. When the Trojans took a tour of Manhattan between weekends 20 years ago, strangers would come up and tell them that they stood no

chance against Kentucky, a Sweet 16 game USC would win 80-76.

Back in 2001, the hot sneakers everyone wanted were the Nike Shox. Prior to March, the USC players went to Bibby to get the Trojans’ apparel provider to supply them with the shoe.

The message from Nike: It’s not worth it for us to give you the Shox unless you make the Sweet 16.

“We didn’t need any extra motivation, but once you get disrespect­ed like that, you’re like, ‘OK, I see how they really think about us,’ ” Clancy said animatedly. “You watch the Kentucky game, we got the Shox on, fresh after being disrespect­ed by Nike and the whole of New York City.”

Things haven’t changed much since then according to Desmon Farmer, a freshman in 2001 and a graduate assistant for USC in 2021.

“Coming into the Kansas game (Monday), CBS commentato­rs were saying they were picking Kansas because our team is not discipline­d,” Farmer said. “They just see us as a football school.”

The web between the two teams runs deep. Clancy was USC’s last All-American before star freshman Evan Mobley. Blu played high school ball with current Trojan assistant Jason Hart. Trepagnier works for the Compton Magic, the AAU program that helped mold the Mobley brothers.

It adds to their excitement watching this team make its own March run. Clancy relishes watching the Mobleys dominate the post, while

Trepagnier stayed on his feet in his living room throughout the win over Kansas.

It brings back memories, watching this team win the way the 2001 group did — with suffocatin­g defense and a free, uninhibite­d offense.

“That was the same thing, guys were on the same page, we felt like we could win every game we played,” Farmer says. “And with that type of energy, you see success.”

Time is a flat circle

As they milled around the LAX terminal 20 years ago, feeling more like Beatles than Trojans, Bibby was struck by a sense that everyone — from the players to the fans to athletic director Mike Garrett — had bought into his vision for USC.

“It was like, ‘Whoa, is this ‘SC? Are we football or basketball?’ ” he recounted. “I said to (assistant coach Dave Miller), ‘I can’t wait to get back here next year.’ He said, ‘Coach, this doesn’t happen often. You don’t know about next year, so let’s enjoy this right now.’ ”

The next year, USC reached the tournament but did not win a game. Two years after that, all the players had moved on and Bibby was out as coach. The end came as suddenly as the success had.

That’s what the former Trojans want this year’s team to understand. The job isn’t done, so don’t let off the brakes now.

“People think I’m crazy, but I feel like we should make it to the Final Four,” Clancy said.

HEMISFAIR REGION At Alamodome Regional Semifinals Sunday’s games

MERCADO REGION At Alamodome Regional Semifinals Today’s games

 ?? RUSTY KENNEDY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? USC’s Brian Scalabrine, left, and Duke’s Carlos Boozer scramble for the ball during the NCAA East Regional final in 2001. USC lost 79-69.
RUSTY KENNEDY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS USC’s Brian Scalabrine, left, and Duke’s Carlos Boozer scramble for the ball during the NCAA East Regional final in 2001. USC lost 79-69.
 ?? USC ATHLETICS ?? Point guard Brandon Granville, with head coach Henry Bibby, was one of the key players for the Trojans during their run to the Elite Eight in the 2001 NCAA Tournament.
USC ATHLETICS Point guard Brandon Granville, with head coach Henry Bibby, was one of the key players for the Trojans during their run to the Elite Eight in the 2001 NCAA Tournament.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States