Final Four home cooking is rare
Since 1952, when the Final Four started being staged at one site, only three teams have gotten to play the event when it’s staged in their hometown.
Louisville lost to West Virginia in a national semifinal at Freedom Hall in 1959.
UCLA played in the 1968 and 1972 Final Fours at the Sports Arena in Los Angeles. Granted, it was the home gym of arch-rival Southern California, but the games were still played in the Bruins’ quaint hometown of 2.8 million residents at the time.
This week, Butler gets to play at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, which is seven miles from campus.
Other teams have been close to home for the Final Four.
Kansas played in the 1952, 1953, 1957 and 1988 national title games in Kansas City, Mo., which is 42 miles from Lawrence.
Kentucky played in the 1958 national title game in Louisville, which is 80 miles from Lexington.
Cincinnati played in the 1962 and 1963 national title games in Louisville, which is 105 miles away.
Kansas State played at the 1964 Final Four in Kansas City, which is 120 miles from Manhattan.
North Carolina State won its 1974 national title in Greensboro, which is 80 miles from Raleigh.
In 1950, CCNY won the national title in Madison Square Garden III, but back then there were only eight teams in the entire NCAA Tournament field.
- With its enrollment of 3,899 undergraduate students (4,200 total), Butler is the smallest school to reach the Final Four since St. Bonaventure in 1970. Broken Arrow and Tulsa Union High School have larger enrollments than Butler. The University of Tulsa, with its undergrad enrollment of 2,800 (and 4,200 total), nearly joined the Final Four’s small-school elite in 2000, losing to North Carolina 59-55 in the South Regional final in Austin.
- The seats at Victory Field, stretching from first base and curling around to third base, spell out “GO DAWG” for the Butler Bulldogs. Victory Field is home of the Pittsburgh Pirates’ Triple-A affiliate Indianapolis Indians and a facility that was studied in the design of Bricktown Ballpark.
- The term “Final Four” did not appear in an NCAA publication until 1975 and the organization registered a trademark for the term in 1981.
- Local economist said having a team from Indianapolis in this week’s Final Four potentially could cost the host city 10-15 percent ($5-7.5 million) in revenue. Hotels and restaurants could take a hit because West Virginia and Michigan State are less than a seven-hour drive away and Duke is 10 hours.
“The whole key to economic impact is getting people to stay overnight. Once that goes away, then you lose that hotel stay, you lose that dinner and breakfast exposure,” Daniel Rascher told the Indianapolis Star. He is president of California-based SportsEconomics, which has studied the economic impact of four Final Four tournaments.
The proximity of Michigan State and West Virginia could decrease revenues another 5-10 percent on top of Butler.
Thunder fills a void
One year ago this same weekend: Oklahoma was getting ready to take on Syracuse in a Friday night Sweet 16 game at Memphis; Oklahoma State’s season had ended five days earlier; the Thunder lost at Toronto to fall to 20-52 on the season.
This year: OU finished with nine straight losses and its worst record in 30 years; OSU lost its NCAA opening-round game; the Thunder is 43-27 and a half-hour away from playing the NBA’s best team in the Los Angeles Lakers.
Imagine how dull the final Friday in March would have been without the Thunder.
The Thunder has been around just 20 months, yet at times it’s difficult to imagine our sports lives without the franchise. Last season was intriguing because it was the Thunder’s first year. This season, the team’s somewhat unfathomable success has captured our attention.
Barring a late collapse, the Thunder is headed for the playoffs, perhaps against the defending world champion Lakers.
Locals already have put away their NCAA brackets for this year and are merely casual observers of the tournament. Meanwhile, local interest in the Thunder is anything but casual.
The Thunder will have our full attention at least through April and possibly into May. It’s only Year Two, but already our sports lives have grown accustomed to the rumble of the Thunder.
Chat Recap: John Rohde
Ford Center: Some off-day tidbits
WATCHING HISTORY — ALMOST
Northern Iowa players were still in the Ford Center when No. 1-seeded Kansas was struggling against No. 16-seeded Lehigh late Thursday. At one point, the Jayhawks trailed 12-4 and eventually went on to a 90-74 victory.
The Panthers remained in the arena for the first half before returning to their hotel.
“We just wanted it to kind of be a close game, I guess,” UNI forward Adam Koch said. “It was fun to be able to watch it. I wouldn’t say were were pulling for (Lehigh). It’s exciting to get the opportunity to play Kansas, but at the same time, it would have been a pretty historical upset if Lehigh would have pulled it out.”
No. 1 seeds are 104-0 all-time against No. 16 seeds (since 1985).
DON’T LOOK AT ME
When asked who Fredette reminds them off, KSU’s Pullen looked at teammate Curtis Kelly, who plays forward.
“I don’t know. You guard the guards,” Kelley said, looking back at Pullen and drawing laughter. “What are you looking at me for?”
Pullen compared Fredette to Washington State guard Klay Thompson, who had 22 points earlier this season against the Wildcats.
“He has a real mentality to score the ball,” Pullen said of Fredette, who had 37 points in a double-overtime victory over Florida in Thursday’s tournament opener. “Klay is probably the only person we faced that really used screens like that. (Oklahoma State’s) James Anderson is a flat-out scorer.”
MARTIN REACHES OUT
When BYU coach Dave Rose was diagnosed with pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor cancer last summer, one of the first people in the coaching profession to call him was Kansas State’s Frank Martin.
Martin, who had pancreatitis (the swelling of the pancreas) a few years ago which for a couple of weeks was feared to be pancreatic cancer, admitted it hit home when he learned of Rose’s disease.
“I’m laying in the hospital bed, and I looked at my phone and searched to see what it is, and I found out, I believe, it’s 4 percent of the people diagnosed with pancreatic cancer survive it,” Martin said. “I lived with that fear for 10 days, but the good man upstairs didn’t give me that disease. When I heard coach Rose was battling that, it kind of hits close to home, someone you know actually is going through it.”
Rose, however, has had clear cancer scans since the fall and has been able to keep coaching. “His was a tumor that I believe happens to 2 percent of the people who have pancreatic cancer that can actually get cut out,” Martin said. “God is good to good people. I’m sure he’s taking care of him.”
FLY SWATTER
Kansas center Cole Aldrich is running away with the school’s single-season blocked shots record. The junior center has 123 rejections this season including his five-block performance against Lehigh. Aldrich is also third on the school list with 94 blocks last year.
UNFAMILIAR FOE
Today’s meeting is the second time Kansas and Northern Iowa have met in men’s basketball. KU knocked off UNI 94-60 in 1973 at Allen Fieldhouse.
NO DEJA VU, SAYS KU
Farokhmanesh hit a deep 3-pointer to give the Panthers a 69-66 first-round win over UNLV.
Kansas forward Marcus Morris is hoping he doesn’t see anything like that when the Jayhawks face UNI.
“That was a big-time shot,” Morris said. “He’s a big-time player to shoot it from that deep. Hopefully it won’t come down to that with us because he’s a clutch player and he did it once so he can do it again.”
SCOREBOARD WATCHIN’
Tyshawn Taylor isn’t surprised by what he’s seen in the first two days of the tournament.
The Kansas guard has watched No. 3 seeded Georgetown and No. 4 seed Vanderbilt fall and he doesn’t want to see the same happen to the top-seeded Jayhawks.
“I’m not surprised at all because it’s March,” Taylor said. “Everybody who is playing deserves to be here. I’m not expecting anybody to lay down.”
Compiled by Brandon Chatmon, Jake Trotter and John Rohde
John Rohde’s NCAA Men’s Bracket
Click the image to view John’s men’s bracket.

Questions that need answering
Opening tip is still three hours away here in the Ford Center. Some questions need to be answered from teams competing in the first round of the NCAA Tournament:
- Who will score more points today, Brigham’s Young junior guard Jimmer Fredette or Lehigh freshman guard C.J. McCollum? Speaking of Fredette, the BYU record for most points in an NCAA game is 37 by Danny Ainge in 1981 against UCLA.
- Exactly how good is Northern Iowa’s defense? Will the UNI-UNLV game be in the 40′s or 50′s?
- Who is keeping BYU’s stats? Can a team really shoot that well — 78.6 percent from the free-throw line (first nationally); 83.0 points (second); 17.8-point margin of victory (second); 41.9 percent from 3-point range (third); and 48.6 percent from the field (13th nationally)?
- How does today’s Florida team compare now its national championship teams in 2006 and 2007?
- North Texas has won 11 straight and Kansas State has lost three of its last five, yet no one gives the Mean Green a chance in blazes of winning.
- Why would the No. 15 seed (North Texas) have to travel only roughly half the distance (150 miles to 300 miles) as the No. 2 seed (Kansas State)? Isn’t there a rule a lower-seeded team should have such a travel advantage against the higher-seeded team? Actually, there is. From the NCAA’s own principles and procedures to bracketing: “To recognize the demonstrated quality of such teams, the committee shall not place teams seeded on the first five lines at a potential ‘home-crowd disadvantage’ in the first round.”
- Kansas is No. 1 in all the important categories, but is this the week the Jayhawks finally reach their full potential? They’ve won 32 times, yet have played up to their capabilities an average of roughly 15 minutes per game. What’s that mean? That means KU has the greatest margin for error of any team in the country, a terrific recipe for success when you have to go on a six-game winning streak to win your second national title in three seasons.
- Finally, you had to love how Lehigh answered all their Wednesday questions about playing the No. 1 overall seed in Kansas. No bulletin board material here. Nothing but respect. You might say they were great answers:
C.J. McCollum: “(KU reserve guard Brady) Morningstar is a great player. Kansas is a great team.”
Marquis Hall: “We’re looking forward to the challenge of playing a great team like Kansas.”
Hall: “You know, we’ve played some pretty good teams as far as Richmond and things like that. Kansas is so deep, we probably haven’t seen a team exactly like them.”
Hall: “For me, you know, I’m not just happy to be here. I’m looking forward to the challenge of playing a great team in Kansas.”
Coach Brett Reed: “… You look no further than one of the top programs in the country in Kansas. If we look back beyond Thursday night, whether it’s the 30 wins, the rich tradition and history, we may be setting a trap for ourselves to try to find one gleaning example when they have so much history and so much — so many accomplishments in their back pocket as well.”
Reed: “It’s not going to be one player that’s ever going to beat Kansas or a No. 1 seed. It’s going to be a collection of individuals who are playing to the best of their ability defensively.”
Reed: “They definitely are a complete team … Looking at it, it’s really hard to find a lot of weaknesses. There’s a reason why they’re so well-respected nationally both by the media and by coaches and put them in a No. 1 seed.”
Reed: “They’re extremely well-coached (Bill Self). They have a leader in their point guard (Sherron Collins), who is tremendous. They have interior presence that is very tough, both offensively and defensively, and they have wings and forward who can no only shoots the basketball but also can drive and create offense for themselves.”
Big 12 Tournament: No. 200 for Self at Kansas
Kansas beat Texas A&M 79-66 in Friday night’s first Big 12 Tournament semifinal, giving Jayhawks coach Bill Self his 200th win at Kansas.
“That’s not a big deal,” said Self, the former Oklahoma State player and Edmond Memorial High School product who got to the milestone 11 games faster than previous coach KU Roy Williams. “But it is nice to get it. We’ve been on a pretty good roll here lately. I’d like to get to (No.) 207. That’d be nice.”
Getting to 207 wins this season would give Self his second national championship in the last three years. Self, who is in his seventh season at the school, is now 200-42 (.826) at KU and.407-147 (.735) in 17 seasons overall that included previous stops at Oral Roberts, Tulsa and Illinois.
On Thursday night, Kansas became the third program in history (Kentucky and North Carolina) to reach 2,000 all-time victories.
Big 12 Tournament: A rivarly is born
Texas leads its all-time series against Baylor 155-79. The Longhorns basically beat the Bears two of every three times they meet. Under such lopsided circumstances, intense rivalries rarely are formed, but Baylor has changed all that in a span of one year.
Texas coach Rick Barnes, who arrived in Austin in 1998, went unbeaten in his first 24 meetings against the Bears. Baylor snapped the streak last March with a victory inside the Ford Center at last year’s Big 12 Tournament. The Bears pushed their winning streak to four straight against the Longhorns with an 86-67 victory in a Thursday night quarterfinal at the Sprint Center.
“When I first got here, you never know what you’re getting yourself into when you come to a program that had been down for so long,” BU senior point guard Tweety Carter said. “I always wanted to be part of something special.”
The game featured three technical fouls and several verbal exchanges between players. The day before the game, Texas forward Damion James had said the game against Baylor was “personal.”
“Anytime you hear a comment like that you’re going to come out with another boost of energy,” Carter said. “We just wanted to come out and show that we belong here.”
Texas will have to wait until next season to snap its losing streak against the Bears. “But you never know,” Carter said. “We might see them again (in the NCAA Tournament).” Not the way the Longhorns are playing, they won’t.
Big 12 Tournament: Day Three
Oklahoma coach Jeff Capel hasn’t been the only Big 12 coach trying to push all the right buttons this season. Texas coach Rick Barnes has been looking for answers since his team’s freefall began in mid-January.
In a span of just seven weeks, the Longhorns went from the nation’s top spot to completely out of the weekly Associated Press rankings.
“We’ve just been so inconsistent, and not just one guy,” Texas coach Rick Barnes said after Thursday night’s 86-67 loss to Baylor in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament. “To be quite frank, I’m baffled that we could go and do what we did today through a five-minute period. I thought we had taken some steps forward, which we seemed to do. Then we’ll take a step backwards.
“If I knew how to fix it, I would. I know what it is, it’s inconsistency. It’s from game to game wondering who is going to do their job, night in, night out.”
Sounds similar to some answers from Capel this season.
Big 12 Tournament: Early numbers against OSU
The sellout crowd of 18,879 inside the Sprint Center for Thursday night’s quarterfinal game between Oklahoma State and Kansas State consisted of roughly 500 OSU fans and approximately 10,000 KSU supporters.
A lopsided advantage in the stands was expected, but some heavily lopsided early numbers on the court have the Cowboys all but eliminated.
KSU jumped out to a 23-8 lead. OSU narrowed its deficit to 27-23, but Obi Muonelo drew his third foul with 8:02 left before halftime. With Muonelo on the bench, the Wildcats closed out the half with a 24-3 run to lead 51-26 at halftime. Jamar Samuels had 21 points (6 of 7 from the field) and nine rebounds — OFF THE BENCH.
Offensively, Big 12 player of the year James Anderson went 1 for 9 from the field.
Speaking of numbers, the Cowboys were a No. 7 or No. 8 seed entering the contest. Depending on the size of the blowout, they don’t figure to slip much. Losing to an opponent still trying to get a No. 1 NCAA seed is no disgrace.


