Below is a great article from Philly.com on how Jay Wright treated the Final Four as a business trip, keeping players away from all distractions, so that they could ensure maximum focus throughout the final days of the tournament. You can read the article in full here.
When Jay Wright
arrived in Detroit for his first Final Four as Villanova coach in 2009, he
wanted his players, coaches and support staff to enjoy the experience. But when
the Wildcats went out for their national semifinal game that weekend against
North Carolina, he knew that plan had major flaws.
"It was about 10
minutes into the game and I knew," Wright recalled last week. "You
could just see the focus in Carolina. You could see our guys were just playing
a game. I knew I didn't get these guys ready.
"Obviously, [Tar
Heels coach Roy Williams] had been there many times. They were ready. They were
playing on a completely different level than we were. We were there to play a
fun game in front of a big crowd. So that's when I knew."
So seven years later,
when the Wildcats arrived in Houston last Wednesday for the 2016 Final Four, it
was strictly a business trip. The key words were "focused" and
"dialed in" and "attitude." His players were pretty much
kept apart from their families. The entire team met together, ate together,
hung together, thinking only "next game," one of the coach's favorite
expressions.
Then late Monday
night, while wading through about six inches of streamers and confetti that had
fallen from the rafters of cavernous NRG Stadium celebrating the Wildcats'
national championship, Wright, his players, everyone involved with his program
and 'Nova Nation discovered that only winning made the Final Four an enjoyable
experience.
The team that Wright
built, nurtured, prodded, cajoled, hollered at, and eventually hugged rose to
the top of the college basketball mountain against the same team that taught
its coach a lesson in 2009.
The Wildcats kept
their focus after giving up a 10-point lead on an incredible tying three-point
shot by North Carolina's Marcus Paige and topped it with one of their own: Kris
Jenkins' 24-foot three-pointer at the buzzer that gave the program its second
national championship, 77-74, over the Tar Heels.
Wright kept his own
steely focus - "coach mode," he called it - even as delirium reigned
all around him. He thought the officials might put a few tenths of a second on
the clock after the big shot.
"I'm the
adult," he said. "I've got all these 18- to 22-year-olds around me.
They're going to go crazy and I'm going to have to get them gathered and we're
going to have to defend a play with .7 seconds [left]. That's what I was
thinking."
He still seemed
stunned while addressing reporters about 90 minutes later.
"You dream that
this happens, you don't know what it's going to feel like, how you're going to
handle it," he said. "It is really surreal. I don't have a plan for
what to do. I was prepared if we lost how to keep these guys' heads up [but] I
didn't have a plan for this because we always say, 'Hey, whatever happens,
we'll deal with it, but let's concentrate on the game.'
"I think that's
the best thing we did in the tournament. For three weeks, we really stayed
focused on basketball. We felt guilty by keeping them sequestered. My wife
[Patti] even apologized to their families [Sunday] night, and they actually
told her, 'We're all in. We support it.' Then Patti came and told me that,
which made me feel better."
Through the
tournament's six games, the Wildcats competed at a level significantly higher
than what took them to their third consecutive Big East regular-season
championship.
It all came down to
the work in practice that Wright demands of the players.
"Coach puts us in
the most difficult situations in practice every day," junior swing-man Josh
Hart said. "So it's just that experience, that decision-making, being able
to go in there and make the right play. The repetition that Coach puts us in
really helps us learn."
That practice work
directly led to a national championship. With 4.7 seconds left, Ryan
Arcidiacono took an inbounds pass, dribbled into the frontcourt and flipped the
ball to Jenkins for the game-winning basket.
"We work on that
play every single day in practice," Arcidiacono said. "It's not about
me taking the right shot. It's about me making the right read. I think I just
did that."
"It's like a
dream right now, doesn't even seem real," Wright said. "First thing I
thought of: That was an incredible college final. I watch them all on TV.
That's what I'm still thinking about, that I'm so lucky to be a part of
it."
Or maybe Villanova is
the lucky one to have Wright.
Read more at
http://www.philly.com/philly/sports/colleges/villanova/20160406__Nova_s_winning_approach__All_business_under_Wright.html#TM7AfqebUGeYl7rV.99
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