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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted at 3:49 p.m., Monday, March 30, 2009

NCAA: Villanova, coach Wright hope to create own history

By Andy Gardiner
USA TODAY

VILLANOVA TIDBITS

Nickname: Wildcats

Location: Villanova, Pa.

Enrollment: 6,663 undergrads

NCAA basketball championships: One, 1985. Villanova was an eighth seed, the lowest to win the title since seeding began in 1979. The title game against Georgetown is the second-highest rated ever, garnering a 33 share (one in three TV sets in use in the USA was tuned to that game).

Coach: Jay Wright is in his eighth season at Villanova after seven seasons at Hofstra. He is 300-175 (.632) as a head coach. Wright was an assistant at 'Nova from 1987-92 under Rollie Massimino. Wright is trying to become the 24th coach to land the title in his first Final Four appearance. The Bucknell alum (Class of 1983) is the first from that school to coach in the national semifinals since Alvin "Doggie" Julian (Class of '23) with Holy Cross in 1947 and '48. Julian's team won the title in 1947.

Record: 30-7, 13-5 in Big East. This is the winningest season in school history.

Path to the Final Four: Beat No. 14 American 80-67, No. 6 UCLA 89-69, No. 2 Duke 77-54, No. 1 Pittsburgh 78-76.

Did you know?

* Villanova's NCAA tournament history goes as far back as the event itself. The Wildcats played in the first, in 1939, losing to Ohio State in the national semifinals. Only eight teams were in that tournament, all by invitation.

* The school has four Final Four appearances, each with a different head coach (Alex Severance in 1939, Jack Kraft in 1971, Massimino in 1985 and now Wright).

* The Wildcats' first and only title came 24 years ago. The biggest gap between a school's first and second titles belongs to Kansas. The Jayhawks broke through in 1952 but had to wait 35 years, until 1988, to win it all again.

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This is the second time in NCAA tournament history that three coaches arrive at the Final Four with previous national championships in hand. Villanova's Jay Wright knows full well who's holding the empty bucket.

"This is definitely like one of those pictures you look at and choose who doesn't belong here," Wright said. "I'm the new guy on the block."

Jim Calhoun of Connecticut, Roy Williams of North Carolina and Tom Izzo of Michigan State have won a collective four titles since 1999 and coached in 15 Final Fours. Wright has Villanova in the semifinals for the first time since the Wildcats won the 1985 championship under Rollie Massimino.

"I love Jay's team this year. They play hard," Izzo said. "Jay will be in line for a few more Final Fours before his career is over. And he's a good guy. Sometimes it's a hard combination these days."

Wright's reputation as one of Division I's brightest young coaches has been burnished by Villanova's advance through this year's tournament. The third-seeded Wildcats trailed American by 14 points in the second half in the opening round before winning 80-67. Then they throttled UCLA (89-69) and Duke (77-54) before edging Pittsburgh 78-76 in the tournament's signature game thus far.

That game produced eight ties and 13 lead changes in the second half alone and ended on Scottie Reynolds' floater from the lane with 0.5 seconds remaining.

ESPN analyst and former Vermont coach Tom Brennan went against Wright for seven years when Wright was at Hofstra. Brennan said this Villanova team is a perfect reflection of its coach.

"He's ultra-competitive, and he has them playing without fear because he coaches without fear," Brennan said. "He's a great communicator, he looks like George Clooney. He was a star in making from the minute I first met him."

Wright is in his seventh season at Villanova after seven years at Hofstra. He grew up in suburban Philadelphia dreaming of playing for the Wildcats. His talent level led him to Bucknell, but after coaching stints at Division III Rochester (N.Y.) and Drexel, he joined Massimino for seven years, five at Villanova and two at UNLV.

"Wanting to have played at Villanova and not being good enough makes you appreciate every day that you through this as opposed to maybe having been a player at Villanova and that's all you know," Wright said. "I know how hard I worked. I know how important it was to me.

"I never take any of this for granted. And I make sure our players understand how fortunate they are to be here, every day."

Wright wasn't an overnight success at Villanova, going a combined 52-46 and missing the NCAA tournament his first three seasons.

"Our first three years were wild," he said. "And when you look back on it now, you say it made you stronger. At the time, you definitely think you're spinning your wheels."

The Wildcats began a streak of five consecutive NCAA trips in 2004-05. They are 11-4 under Wright in the tournament in that span.

"I think Jay defined his career a long time before this but this is a special, special time for his kids, for Villanova University," Calhoun said. "Postseason play has become the ultimate judgment of success and failure in this business. Jay certainly has succeeded now … and he'll be looked at a little bit differently, as well he should be."

One of Wright's goals has been to bring the Villanova basketball family closer, to reach out to former players and coaches to share in the program he has built.

"I'm so happy for all the players, that's what I feel great about," he said. "They're way happier than me. That's what it's all about, delivering for them."

Wright's success has thrown him into the conversation for coaching vacancies at high-profile schools Kentucky and Arizona.

"It's a crazy business we're in, and you have to deal with it this time of year," he said of the speculation. "Someone mentions your name, you're flattered. You're crazy if you don't say that, or not being truthful.

"But I don't want my name mentioned anywhere. I love Villanova. I don't want to be anywhere else. I feel very, very fortunate to be in this position."