East Preview: Virginia Tech eager to build on its momentum

Updated Mar. 17, 2022 5:29 p.m. ET
Associated Press

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Virginia Tech has been playing do-or-die games for the last week and believes it can use that experience to make a deep NCAA Tournament run.

The 11th-seeded Hokies (23-12) face No. 6 seed Texas (21-11) in an East Region first-round game Friday afternoon. The other East game has No. 3 seed Purdue (27-7) facing No. 14 seed Yale (19-11).

“We’re one of the hottest teams in the country, and we do want to continue to play that way,” Virginia Tech guard Storm Murphy said.

The

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Oregon State finished the 2020-21 regular season at 14-12 and had no chance at earning an NCAA bid until it won the

“I watched them a lot, watched them a lot this summer and the zone that they employed,” Virginia Tech coach Michael Young said. “They got on a roll, and there’s no coming off.”

Virginia Tech is following a similar path.

suggests the Hokies wouldn’t have been invited without earning the ACC’s automatic bid. They were one spot ahead of Notre Dame, which got the last at-large spot.

“It’s just a constant battle to prove who we are, what we’re about,” Virginia Tech forward Justyn Mutts said. “We’re all up for the challenge. We’ve got nothing but fighters on our team.”

Virginia Tech nearly went one-and-done in the ACC Tournament, but Lester Maddox hit a season-saving 3-pointer at the buzzer in a

The Hokies essentially had their backs against the wall ever since late January when they were 10-10 with a 2-7 ACC record. Virginia Tech is 13-2 since.

“We kind of dug ourselves a hole,” Mutts said. “It’s crazy to see the disrespect people were putting on us. Nobody believed in us anymore.”

Now the Hokies face a Texas team that’s on a three-game skid, though two of those losses were to NCAA Tournament No. 1 seeds

“They’ve been in this survive-and-advance mode for four games now,” Texas coach Chris Beard said. “It will be interesting to see how our guys respond because this is the first time we’ve been in survive-and-advance mode.”

PATIENCE PAYS OFF FOR YALE

The wait is finally over for Yale.

Yale won the Ivy League’s regular-season title in 2020 before the NCAA halted the postseason due to the pandemic. The Bulldogs didn’t play at all last season as the Ivy League shut down athletic activities.

The Bulldogs lost two of their top three scorers from that 2019-20 team as Paul Atkinson Jr. transferred to Notre Dame and Jordan Bruner left for Alabama. But plenty of other players stuck around.

“Yale is where I want to be, where I started,” guard Azar Swain said.

Although the Bulldogs weren’t playing last season, they still found ways to build unity.

Yale coach James Jones had several NBA coaches and executives speak to his team. The Bulldogs also had discussions on various social justice issues.

“It was a way of staying together,” Yale coach James Jones said. “But we always had an eye on the opportunity to play again, and I will tell you that our first practice in September, I will never forget as long as I’m allowed to live, the smile on (forward) EJ Jarvis’ face when we had our first practice, the excitement that we had getting back on the court and being able to do what we do. It was tremendous.

“Sometimes something has to be taken away from you for you to realize how much you enjoy it to miss it.”

ROOTING FOR EX-TEAMMATE

Yale’s players continue to cheer for Atkinson, the 2019-20 Ivy League co-player of the year. They were watching

Swain said he sent Atkinson a congratulatory text Thursday.

“I was actually in the weight room doing some late-night recovery, rehab work and was watching on the TV,” Yale guard Jalen Gabbidon said. “When it happened, I literally, like, screamed in the hotel.”

SEEKING REDEMPTION

Texas and Purdue both lost to double-digit seeds in the first round of last year’s NCAA Tournament.

Purdue used that loss as incentive. Senior forward Trevion Williams says the Boilermakers watched film of the North Texas game “pretty much all summer.”

“It still motivates us to this day,” Williams said.

It’s different for Texas, which has a much different team this year. Beard, who took over as coach after

“We can’t dwell on the past,” said Andrew Jones, one of two Texas starters who played in the Abilene Christian game. “We’ve got a new coaching staff, an entirely new team. So we’re just focused on this moment right now.”

CAUGHT BY SURPRISE

Beard expressed surprise when he discovered the carpet in the media room was black. He remembered the NCAA Tournament always having blue carpet and even used it as a motivational ploy.

“I’ve been talking to our guys all year long about the blue carpet,” Beard quipped. “We have a piece of blue carpet in the locker room. I get the guys to dream about the blue carpet. We’ve got some guys who’ve never played in this tournament. We show up here a few minutes ago and it’s black carpet. As a coach, you try to have a little credibility with your team. I’m going to try to explain to the players that I haven’t lost my mind, it’s normally blue carpet.”

MATCHUP NIGHTMARE

The tallest player in Yale’s rotation is 6-foot-8. That creates quite the dilemma as the Bulldogs prepare for

“I got a dump truck, and I brought it to practice, and I put it in the middle of the floor, and I tried to get the guys to move the dump truck with it in park,” Jones joked.

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