Times-Herald (Vallejo)

They turn back clock with Purdue vs. NC State

Battle presents classic matchup of two big men

- By Eddie Pells

GLENDALE, ARIZ. >> The opener at the Final Four on Saturday might feel like a trip through a time machine.

Yes, those are Purdue and North Carolina State — one program here for the first time since 1980, the other trying to write a 21stcentur­y version of college basketball's greatest story ever told.

And yes, those are 7-foot-4 Zach Edey and 6-9 D.J. Burns Jr. — a touch less than 600 pounds of big men patrolling the paint and dictating a style that has been out of fashion for a decade or more.

Whoever wins will face either UConn or Alabama for the title on Monday. Win or lose, both programs already know this will go down as one of their best seasons ever.

NC STATE REBOOT >> In a matchup filled with fascinatin­g subplots, the most tantalizin­g is the Wolfpack.

Back in 1983, North Carolina State needed to win three games in the ACC Tournament simply to qualify for the NCAAs. Then, Jim Valvano and his “Cardiac Pack” won six games over three weeks — including two one-point wins and another in double overtime — before closing it out against Houston's Phi Slama Jama team with Lorenzo Charles' last-second stuff off Dereck Whittenbur­g's airball for the title.

The scene of Valvano running around the court looking for someone to hug is, at its core, what turned the tournament into what we now call “March Madness.”

This year, NC State fans are placing souvenirs at Valvano's grave back in Raleigh, while Burns and Co. have taken the program on an equally unbelievab­le ride. A team on a four-game losing streak and going nowhere heading into this year's ACC Tournament has gone undefeated in a string of nine straight win-or-your-season-is-done games.

BIG MAN BURNS >> Part of what makes NC State so different is its smiling big man, Burns. He is, in some eyes, the 2024 version of two-time NBA AllStar Zach Randolph — a big man who can carve out space inside but can also spin and move and make plays under the basket.

But Burns has not shot a 3-pointer this year and though he can create from the perimeter — setting picks, cutting inside and making passes — that is not where he does the bulk of his damage.

Purdue coach Matt Painter said he sees Burns more as a forward, but “you see guys like him play at (center) a lot because coaches are trying to get their best players on the floor.”

It's likely he'll find himself paired up plenty against Edey in what's shaping up as a titanic matchup — one in which staying out of foul trouble will be a key goal.

BIG MAN EDEY >> Edey is an old-school, classic post player, and Purdue likes to play inside-out, the way a team might have in, say, 1990, before analytics and the 3-pointer took over the game. After losing in the Sweet 16 to the Boilermake­rs, Gonzaga coach Mark Few aptly called dealing with Edey a “pick your poison” conundrum.

If teams sag down, Edey can kick it out to Braden Smith, Lance Jones or another Purdue guard on a team that is second in the country in 3-point shooting at 40.6%. If they play single coverage, Edey can go to work in the paint. He's the nation's leading scorer with 25 points a game and the second-leading rebounder at 12.2.

On Friday, Edey became the first player since another great post man, Ralph Sampson, to go back-to-back as AP Player of the Year.

Watching all this from afar — and with a smile — is Russ Turner, the 6-7 coach of UC Irvine, a program that lives near the top of the Big West Conference. In the mid-2010s, Turner brought 7-6 center Mamadou N'Diaye to the program. The coach has never shied away from building around 7-footers.

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