Full circle: Villanova leaders got Final Four taste in 2018
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Jermaine Samuels and Collin Gillespie were both on the floor for the final seconds of Villanova’s national championship game victory four years ago. They were true freshmen on a title team with five NBA-bound players.
Now they are fifth-year seniors leading the Wildcats, who are in another NCAA Final Four after
“It’s crazy how things have come full circle,” Samuels said. “Back then, it was amazing to watch those guys from the sidelines. I had front-row tickets to some of the greatest Villanova basketball players to ever put on the jersey.”
for the third time in the past six NCAA tourneys — they also won it all in 2016. They play in the first national semifinal game Saturday at the Superdome in New Orleans against Big 12 champion Kansas, the only No. 1 seed left in this year’s tourney.
When Villanova won the 2018 title at the Alamodome, the roster included All-America guard Jalen Brunson, Mikal Bridges, Final Four MVP Donte DiVincenzo, Eric Paschall and Omari Spellman, all NBA draft picks. Phil Booth played professionally overseas.
“You take all those experiences with you, and you try to emulate them and be them, and do the things they do and put the work in like they put in and just pray that it works out for you,” Samuels said.
“Those guys taught us a lot. … They’re a big part of the reason that we are the way that we are today,” Gillespie said. “We learned a ton from those guys. Now we play for those guys.”
Brunson, now with the Dallas Mavericks, said he spoke with Gillespie on Sunday, the day after Nova beat Houston 50-44. The Mavs guard also made sure to mention fifth-year forward Dhami Cosby-Roundtree, who played in all 40 games as a true freshman in 2017-18, but sat out last season and hasn't played since December because of multiple surgeries on his legs.
“The whole team is family. But those three in particular, playing with them, I’m really proud of them. They’re special. From a class that really, honestly, besides us, the team, no one really believed in them,” Brunson said after
Leading scorer Gillespie (15.6 points per game) and top rebounder Samuels (6.5 per game) are both graduate students and fourth-year starters for coach Jay Wright after the extra season of eligibility all players got because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Samuels played only 98 seconds combined in two late-game appearances in the 2018 Final Four. He entered the semifinal win over Kansas with 1:28 left, and was only in for the final 10 seconds of the 79-62 victory over Michigan in the title game.
In this NCAA Tournament, Samuels is shooting 63% (26 of 41) while averaging 17½ points and 8½ rebounds a game.
Gillespie played more than Samuels in that 2018 Final Four, with eight minutes in the semifinal and then 16 in the championship game when he had four points — on 4 of 4 free throws — and five rebounds.
While he is shooting only 33% this postseason, 10 of his 15 made field goals are 3-pointers. His only basket against Houston came when, after a timeout and the Cougars within two, he stepped just inside the arc and hit a long jumper with 5:02 left.
Wright likes how the former and current players stay in touch with each other.
“I know Jalen, Mikal and the guys are really proud of Jermaine’s development and Collin’s development and the way they lead this program,” he said.
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AP Sports Writer Schuyler Dixon contributed to this report.
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