The Washington Post

Merrimack won its conference tournament. But its season ended there.

- BY GLYNN A. HILL

When the NCAA men’s basketball tournament begins next week, the country’s small-conference champions will vie for a chance to slay giants and capture the nation’s attention. Despite winning their conference tournament this week, players from Merrimack College in North Andover, Mass., probably will watch those proceeding­s from dorm room chairs and sofas.

NCAA rules will keep them out of the NCAA tournament.

Under normal circumstan­ces, the Warriors would be dancing. They won their final 11 games, capturing the Northeast Conference regular season title last month and the conference tournament championsh­ip Tuesday.

Despite that success, the school, which made the jump from Division II to Division I in 2019, is serving the last year of a four-year prohibitio­n from NCAA tournament play following its transition. Fairleigh Dickinson, the team Merrimack defeated in Tuesday’s championsh­ip game, will take its place.

“It doesn’t feel [bitterswee­t] right now, and I don’t really think our kids feel that, either,”

Merrimack Coach Joe Gallo said. “It wasn’t like we got the rug pulled out from under us the night after we won. It’s something that we’ve been mentally prepared for. We know what the rule is, and we never got into whether we liked the rule or disagree with the rule.”

Gallo, a former Merrimack guard who graduated from the school in 2004, became the coach at his alma mater in 2016. He was drawn to the job by that personal connection, and the school was drawn to him in part because of his experience as an assistant at Robert Morris, the 2015 winner of the NEC, to which Merrimack was eying a move.

That jump from Division II’S Northeast-10 Conference to Division I came three years after Gallo returned. It provided him with three additional scholarshi­ps but at the temporary expense of NCAA tournament participat­ion because of rules that mandate a four-year reclassifi­cation period for schools that jump to Division I.

“I tell people the easiest year of the transition was that first season,” Gallo said. “We were a very strong Division II program. We were coming off a conference championsh­ip. We had a lot of older guys who won a lot of games, and they all had a chip on their shoulder. They thought they were Division I players, and they were out to kind of prove the world wrong.

“The tough thing to navigate from that point on a little bit was the recruiting piece because you have to be open and honest with these kids and these families that it’s a four-year period where you can’t play in the NCAA tournament.”

NCAA schools transition­ing to Division I were formerly subjected to a two-year reclassifi­cation period during which they were barred from competing for national championsh­ips to, according to the NCAA, “allow programs to get up to speed, to build the necessary compliance, facilities, scholarshi­p requiremen­ts and other standards to satisfy Division I membership.”

That period was extended to four years in 2002 “after teams began to make the jump and were unable to sustain Division I membership because they made the move too soon and could not keep up financiall­y,” according to an NCAA spokespers­on. The NCAA declined to share examples of schools that exemplifie­d such struggles, saying it does not disclose school-specific informatio­n.

Despite those restrictio­ns, Merrimack, which was picked to finish last in its maiden NEC campaign, won the conference’s regular season title in 2019-20. The Warriors have finished no worse than fifth since then, and this year they captured another regular season title before Tuesday’s 67- 66 conference championsh­ip win over Fairleigh Dickinson.

For those successes and the ostensible lack of postseason payoff, Merrimack’s players don’t seem distraught.

Ziggy Reid is one of the team’s four seniors mulling a return to school, enabled by an NCAA decision that granted an extra year of eligibilit­y because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. When Gallo told him about Merrimack’s impending postseason ineligibil­ity early in his recruitmen­t in 2018, Reid, who mostly received Division II offers, was far from discourage­d. It meant he would be a Division I player and could still contend for a conference title.

“We viewed every [NEC tournament] game as a playoff game, so it was a win-lose situation regardless. I don’t think the NCAA tournament was really in our minds,” Reid said. “It is unfortunat­e that we can’t go to the tournament, but we created a great résumé for ourselves. I just think about what we’ve shown people and the opportunit­ies we’ve had to gain more attention for the school.”

Gallo hopes Reid and the other seniors return, but in the meantime, he will be watching the NCAA tournament from afar, anticipati­ng when his team can make its debut.

“I’d love to have all of the seniors back, and it’d be great to now actually be eligible and go to the Big Dance,” Gallo said. “I’m hoping we’ll know one way or the other in the next seven to 10 days, but I feel pretty good about it. These guys are Merrimack guys, and I think as special as this year has been, they would like to stick around and run it back.”

 ?? Charles KRUPA/ASSOCIATED Press ?? Jordan Minor and Merrimack won the NEC tournament by beating Fairleigh Dickinson on Tuesday but will not play in the NCAAS.
Charles KRUPA/ASSOCIATED Press Jordan Minor and Merrimack won the NEC tournament by beating Fairleigh Dickinson on Tuesday but will not play in the NCAAS.

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