George Mason enjoys spotlight while others hide
INDIANAPOLIS – In a small college gym about 5 minutes from where he grew up, backup guard Jordan Carter sweated through practice, the next step on the road to a place he never imagined he would reach.
He is two wins away from becoming a national champ. In front of his parents. In his hometown. For, of all schools, George Mason.
“I stopped pinching myself after we beat UConn,” Carter said of last weekend’s regional final. “It’s reality now.”
America’s favorite underdog and the other teams – UCLA, LSU and Florida – were all in town Thursday to begin preparations for one of the most intriguing Final Fours in memory.
The Patriots remain the underdogs – not the 150-to-1 long shot they were when the tournament began, but still 7-to-2. By now, though, they’re used to it.
They relish it.
Of the four teams, they were the only ones to open their practice to the media and coach Jim Larranaga soaked it in, working his team through its paces, then regaling writers with his stories.
Is this team nervous on basketball’s biggest stage?
“The whole idea is to stay upbeat, positive, totally committed to what we want to do and what we want to accomplish, but just to do it in a relaxed atmosphere,” Larranaga said. “It’s not to feel like ‘Oh my goodness, we’re here now at the Final Four.’ “
As if to accentuate that point, Larranaga turned the end of practice into a farce, having his student managers run gassers while the players looked on and laughed. They were in trouble for not knowing how to turn off the scoreboard buzzer when it went off in the middle of the workout at the tiny Marian College arena.
It made for a great photo op.
“The buzzer had a brain of its own,” manager Hasan Al-Shingieti said. “Coach got a little mad.”
The next step for George Mason (27-7) is Saturday’s semifinal against Florida (31-6).
In a different year, against a different team, the Gators could be the inspirational story of this Final Four – their four sophomores, all roommates, getting on a roll at precisely the right time to make a trip to Indy.
Billy Donovan’s Florida team comes in this time as a favorite, listed at 2-to-1 in Las Vegas, to bring the first basketball title back to Gainesville. The Gators may be favorites with the oddsmakers, but probably not in the hearts of most casual observers.
“It’s an inspiring thing to see a George Mason out there doing it, that playing together as a team can accomplish great feats,” Donovan said. “That’s a positive thing that they can impact people’s lives.”
In contrast to the George Mason experience, the Gators ran a tight ship – practicing at home, boarding a charter flight, busing to their hotel and being quickly shuffled up to their rooms without interviews.
UCLA (31-6) and LSU (27-8) also practiced in private – more “power” teams that could have made the underdog role their own in a different season.