Early Madness kicks in
Associated Press
FORT MYERS, FLA.
For teams that got a coveted spot in the NCAA Tournament, finding out where and who they’re playing was not the end of selection-night drama.
It was only the beginning. And that’s especially true for eight teams that are opening-round bound.
Scenes like one at Florida Gulf Coast were playing out at plenty of schools Sunday night. It was nearly 10 p.m. and people in three different offices at FGCU are calling the school’s top donors, asking if they want to be part of the team’s travel party for tonight’s game against Fairleigh Dickinson in Dayton.
If those fans were willing, they could have a seat on the charter and stay in the team hotel for as long as the trip lasts.
Meanwhile, in another office, Billy Blood — the Chief Financial Officer for FGCU athletics — is simultaneously working his office phone, his cellphone and emails, trying to actually secure that plane and those hotel rooms. He’s exhausted; his tie is loosened, he’s rubbing his eyes and he has no idea how long any of this will take.
“Details,” he groans, to no one in particular.
He wasn’t complaining, and no one else at the other schools facing opening-round games — FDU, Vanderbilt, Wichita State, Michigan, Tulsa, Holy Cross and Southern — likely were either. They play tonight or Wednesday, while the rest of the field of 68 starts Thursday or Friday.
“Quick, whirlwind here,” said Vanderbilt coach Kevin Stallings, whose Commodores play Wichita State in the second game tonight. “That’s a quick turnaround time to get yourself ready and get travel arrangements and practice and preparation and all the things you need to do. It’s the fastest night of the year in college basketball if you make the tournament.”
It was also going to be a late night for everyone involved.
There’s scouting reports to prepare, tickets to deal with, hotel room lists, meals to order, practices to schedule, contingency plans made in case your team wins, contingency plans made in case your team loses, along with arrangements for the band, cheerleaders, fans, managers and administrators.
Most of the 68 teams in the tournament knew, or had at least a reasonably strong sense, that they were getting in before seeing their names on the CBS bracket (or the version that leaked on the Internet during the selection show broadcast). But without the pertinent details — date, site, opponent — not much could be done on a logistical front until Sunday night.
“We went through this three years ago,” said Ken Kavanagh, FGCU’s athletic director, referring to when the Eagles became national sweethearts with their “Dunk City” run to the Sweet 16 as a No. 15 seed in 2013. “So most of us understand what happens.”
The tournament awaits.
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