Home sweet home
SAN ANTONIO – Some Texas A&M students wore paper bags over their heads during Acie Law’s freshman season, embarrassed to be rooting for a team that didn’t win a conference game.
Now, Aggies fans are decked out in maroon shirts, eager to be part of what Law and his teammates are doing.
For Memphis (32-3), the No. 2 seed in the NCAA South Regional, that means again playing in front of a partisan crowd despite having a better seed.
“I would have never imagined playing in San Antonio with the Sweet 16 with the opportunity to go to the Elite Eight after what I experienced my freshman year,” Law said Wednesday. “Coach came in and he changed all our mindsets. He told us we were going to win, and not take as long as people thought.”
That’s exactly what the Aggies have done under Billy Gillispie, going from that 0-16 record in the Big 12 to the NCAA round of 16 and a school-record 27 victories only three seasons after the lackluster season.
Texas A&M won’t be far from home tonight for its first regional semifinal game since 1980. The game will be in the Alamodome, only about a 2 1/2-hour drive from campus.
When the Aggies finished their open practice, the players greeted and shook hands with fans, many who chanted Law’s name.
A crowd of more than 30,000 is expected tonight, mostly in A&M colors. If the Aggies (27-6) win, there might not be another color visible for the regional final this weekend – much like when Texas won a regional final in the same building four years ago.
“It may be able to help you get over a couple of tough spots in the games, but it won’t be the ultimate determining factor,” Gillispie said. “We learned that last weekend, and everybody is coming here for a reason. Everyone is coming here to win.”
Memphis hasn’t been to the Final Four since 1985, when its NCAA run included four straight victories in Texas. The Tigers’ 24-game winning streak is the nation’s longest, the last loss Dec. 20 at Arizona before their undefeated run through Conference USA.
The Aggies were in the same position for their second-round game last weekend as Memphis is now. They had to beat Louisville at Rupp Arena in downtown Lexington, just more than an hour-long drive from the Cardinals’ campus.
“To do that, they deserve the opportunity to play near home,” coach John Calipari said. “It’s a disadvantage (for us).”
Beside the setting, Calipari sees other similarities to UCLA last year and the Aggies – who rank second nationally in field-goal percentage defense (37.3 percent) and allow less than 60 points a game when their physical play.
“If you’re not sturdy, you’re going to be pushed into the cheerleaders and you’re going to have a pompom in your hand pretty fast,” Calipari said.
When Calipari questioned his play during this year’s NCAA opener against North Texas, Dorsey promised his coach, “I’m going to get us there, we’re going to get to the Final Four.”
To get to Atlanta the Tigers first have to win twice in San Antonio. No. 1 seed Ohio State and Tennessee play in the other game tonight.