SWEETNESS! Men’s Basketball Outlasts Oregon in Double-OT, 86-73

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PITTSBURGH, Pa. — It took 50 minutes, but the Creighton men’s basketball team is returning to the Sweet 16 for the third time in four seasons after a hard-fought 86-73 double-overtime win over Oregon on Saturday, March 23rd in Pittsburgh, Pa. With the win, Creighton (25-9) advances to next Friday’s Regional Semifinal in Detroit, Mich. against Tennessee.

Down 62-58 with under 30 seconds remaining, the Bluejays rally to force overtime began with a pair of free throws from Baylor Scheierman. A missed front end by the Ducks opened the door and Scheierman took full advantage, knocking down a pull-up jumper with 9.0 seconds remaining to knot the game at 62-62. Oregon had a shot to claim the win, but came up just short as the game moved to an extra five minutes.

In the first overtime Oregon denied Bluejay fans as the Ducks got a game-tying three-pointer from Jermaine Couisnard with 16 seconds remaining and Trey Alexander’s attempt to knock down a buzzer beater fell off the rim.

In the second overtime the Bluejays left no doubt, scoring the first 15 points. Steven Ashworth and Alexander each had five points in the second overtime, ignited by a three-pointer from Ashworth, followed by a trey from Ryan Kalkbrenner to make it 77-71 with 3:09 remaining. A tip-dunk from freshman reserve Jasen Green, his first slam of his collegiate career, put the Jays up eight and on their way to the Regional round. Creighton went on to extend its lead to 86-71, not allowing Oregon to score until 34 seconds remained in the second overtime.

The first half featured six ties and two lead changes as neither team was able to put together an extended scoring run. Just two days after scoring 40 points, Couisnard picked up two early fouls and was sent to the bench. He went to work after checking back in, scoring 15 points to lead all players in the first half. The Ducks led 32-30 with 1:46 to play in the opening stanza  before CU closed the half with trifectas from Scheierman and  Ashworth to take a 36-34 lead into the break.

Kalkbrenner led CU with 12 points and seven rebounds at the break, while Alexander and Scheierman each added eight points and Green and Scheierman hauled in six rebounds. Creighton launched 23 three-pointers in the first half, making six, after shooting 10-of-17 from downtown in Thursday’s win vs. Akron.

Each of Oregon’s (24-12) first 26 points after halftime were scored by either Couisnard or N’Faly Dante.  The Ducks used a 9-0 run to take its biggest lead at 58-52 on a trey by Couisnard before Ashworth broke the drought with a three-ball after a Bluejay timeout, starting a 6-0 Creighton run as Kalkbrenner contributed two free throws and Mason Miller knotted the game with 1-of-2 from the line.

Cousinard finished with 32 points and eight rebounds, but shot just 13-for-33 to get there. Dante continued his dominance in March with 28 points and 20 rebounds. His 20 rebounds were one shy of his career-high done in the season-opener vs. Georgia. The Ducks shot 31-of-77 from the floor (40.3 percent) and made 7-of-21 three-pointers (33.3 percent).

Ashworth finished with 21 points and four assists and Kalkbrenner added 19 points, 14 rebounds and five swats. Alexander turned in 20 points, seven rebounds and five assists and Scheierman 18 points, nine rebounds and five assists as both men played all 50 minutes. The Jays shot 38.7 percent (29-75), made 15-of-39 three-pointers, and shot 13-of-14 at the line. CU won the rebound battle 48-43 and won despite being outscored 40-18 in the paint.

NOTES: Trey Alexander started his eighth NCAA Tournament game, extending a program record … The game was Creighton’s 100th in a row to be televised … Oregon has won 20+ games in 14 straight seasons, while Creighton has done it 13 of the past 14 campaigns … Creighton made a three-pointer for the 1,019th straight game … Baylor Scheierman reached 350 career three-pointers with a triple late in the first half …  Creighton has now attempted 995 three-pointers this season, breaking the previous record of 961 done over the course of 35 games in 2018-19 … Ryan Kalkbrenner recorded his 300th career blocked shot … Ryan Kalkbrenner had his eighth double-double of the year and 16th of the season … The following Creighton career NCAA Tournament records were broken on Saturday. Ryan Kalkbrenner (140) broke Doug McDermott’s (129) record for points, Baylor Scheierman (17) set the mark for made three-pointers, passing the mark of 16 held by Ethan Wragge and Kyle Korver … Greg McDermott‘s 325 victories are Creighton are second-most in program history behind Dana Altman’s 327. Altman is the Oregon head coach … Creighton improved to 20-25 all-time in the NCAA Tournament, and 4-10 in its second NCAA Tournament game of an appearance … Creighton is now 3-1 as a No. 3 seed and 2-2 against a No. 11 seed … Greg McDermott is now 11-8 as Creighton’s head coach in the NCAA Tournament, and 19-12 in the postseason. All other CU coaches are 8-17 in the NCAA Tournament and 17-29 in the postseason … Creighton has won multiple games in the postseason for the fourth time in its last five trips … Creighton’s 25 wins are its most in one season since 2016-17, and just the seventh time in program history with 25 or more victories … Ryan Kalkbrenner played in his eighth career NCAA Tournament win, extending his own program record.



 

Saturday, March 23, 2024

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

PPG Paints Arena

Creighton Bluejays

Media Conference

 

Creighton – 86, Oregon – 73

MODERATOR: Now we’ll start with an opening statement from Creighton’s head coach, Greg McDermott.

GREG McDERMOTT: As I told the team, epic game. Not sure I’ve been part of one quite like it in 35 years, and obviously Oregon has had a hell of a year. What Dana has done to navigate all the injuries and get the team to this point where, you know, they’re a point away from advancing into the Sweet 16. It was anybody’s game. Baylor made two veteran, veteran plays at the end of regulation, recognizing in transition down four, just get downhill, put your head down. Then we executed the press and got it in the guys’ hands, we wanted it to be and we got the foul right away. And Baylor works on that little loader mid fade away all the time and he knocks it down to get it to overtime. And then to regroup after the big shot that Couisnard hit, that was a tough shot. Baylor was right there to tie it at 71, to regroup and get ourselves ready for the second over time. Really proud of our guys. They’ve stuck with each other all year, and these four have been a rock. They’ve been absolutely a joy to coach. They don’t care who gets the credit. They share the basketball. They play in an unselfish way. And I can’t say enough about Jasen Green and his impact on the game. He wasn’t playing a lot, coming off an injury that he had, but he stayed ready, and he kept working. And whether he was on the scout team or playing a little off the bench, he was always willing to do whatever he had to do to help the team. So I couldn’t be more proud of him and the impact that he had in this game. He deserved a night like this for how selfless he’s been and his approach to this team.

MODERATOR: Questions for student-athletes.

Q. Baylor, just what was going through your mind at the end of the game? You’re down four, your season is on the line. What was going through your head?

BAYLOR SCHEIERMAN: Like Mac said, we were able to make him take a tough shot and I got the rebound quick and I knew we had some numbers. And like Mac said, we were down four and so wasn’t going to be able to get it all back at once and there was time left on the clock. So just decided to try to get downhill, get a foul and go to the free throw line.

And then the second play, we do have a play for a three, and they kind of took away the first option and Kalk came and set a great ball screen and then rolled and sealed his guy. And like Mac said, that’s a shot that I work on a lot. And the guys had the confidence in me to give me the ball there at the end. And so did the coaches and I’m just happy I could deliver for them.

Q. Greg, Dante’s free throws with about 34 seconds left in the second OT period were the first and only baskets that Oregon managed. You outscored them 15 to 2 in that final crucial five-minute second OT. How were you able to limit them offensively and just dominate that critical stretch?

GREG McDERMOTT: Switched our ball screen coverage later in the end of regulation and into the overtimes. So we were a little bit more aggressive. Tried to make Couisnard give it up. We don’t do it a lot but we practice it a fair amount, and our guys executed it when we needed to. He was on a roll and he was killing us, and I think that adjustment and their execution was able to knock them out of the rhythm they were in offensively.

Q. Ryan, you were going against a dominant center today who finished with 20 and 20. Can you speak on that performance against him and how challenging that was?

RYAN KALKBRENNER: Yeah. He obviously is a really, really good player. Tried to make things tough on him a little bit when he caught it in the post. But I think where he got us most is I’m going over to block a shot and he’s going in and getting the rebound. That’s just a tough situation for our guards to be in because he’s so big. So credit to him for putting himself in position getting those rebounds and put-backs. But I think when he had the ball on the block and back-down situations, I let him get a few easy ones but for the most part did a solid job. Yeah, this time of year, just survive and advance. If a guy has a good performance on you and you still get the win, just move on to the next one.

Q. Steven, what allowed you to get three more there in the overtime periods and how much did Shelstad being out allow — did it compromise their defense at all and allow you to get open more?

STEVEN ASHWORTH: Yeah. I think with him being out it could have potentially offered up a few more looks. He did a really good job understanding his role in the scout. But really later in the second half and into the over time, Trey and Baylor did a really good job of getting penetration into the middle and really kicking the ball out and I was able to lose my man a few times, and the shot went in. A few of them didn’t, but at the same time just had to keep shooting, and luckily a few of them dropped.

Q. Trey, couldn’t help but notice that you guys were really loose going into the second overtime. You were looking at your crowd, you’re laughing. It’s like a tight, tense game and you guys just seemed like you were having fun. Why was that the approach to the second overtime?

TREY ALEXANDER: It’s what it’s meant to be, is for us to be in this situation. We know that. Me and my teammates always try to find the fun in everything. So this situation we kind of live for. It’s the fun of the game, and I think that for me, even though my shots weren’t falling, I knew that Baylor was going to step up, I knew Steven was going to step up. So I tried to do whatever I could to get those guys in situations to be successful. It was a great team win. We had some big plays down the stretch from different guys and I think that’s what this team is all about is having every man step up in a different situation.

We just knew that we were ready for the second OT. We do this all the time in situations in practice. So we were ready. We knew we were probably more winded than them and we felt like they were walking the ball up the court and things like that and they were still able to push it going into the second OT. So we were just still trying to play our game.

Q. Ryan, you don’t shoot a whole lot of threes. You nailed a pretty big one in that second OT. Can you break down that play, that sequence? What did you see out there that made you decide to toss that one up from deep?

RYAN KALKBRENNER: Well, Mac told me to make 100 after practice and 100 before practice, the two practices we had before we came here. So that helped prepare me. But, no, Mac’s always giving me the green light. I work on that shot a lot, even though I don’t shoot it a ton during the game, I got confidence in myself to take that shot. And I know that’s probably the number one shot Mac wanted on that possession. (Laughs). But, no, I just work on it, so I’m confident in taking that whenever it’s a close game. Saw I had a little bit of space and let it fly.

Q. Guys, you were 30 seconds away in regulation from having your season ended. What does it feel like to now know that you’ll be playing next week in Detroit?

TREY ALEXANDER: Yeah, it’s a great feeling. I know I speak for everybody up here. We love this group of guys. We love rocking and rolling together. We love everything that comes with the road trips and us just being able to have another week with each other. So we’re going to cherish them. We’re going to try to stay in the moment and just continue to love each other and continue to play at a level that we feel like we can play at. And from there we’ll just kind of let the dominoes fall where they do.

Q. Jasen was like baby Rodman out there. What did you think of his performance the way he came out and started crashing the glass, drawing fouls, and obviously your reaction to just the monster dunk in overtime?

BAYLOR SCHEIERMAN: Like Coach said, he’s been a great teammate all year, even though he got that injury at the worst time and it kind of derailed some of his playing time early, but he stuck with it and did whatever we asked him to do, and for him to have that moment on that stage, like Trey said, we’re so happy for one another when one of us makes a great play. And for Jasen to make that put back dunk there at the end and a bunch of other plays that he made, it’s just great to see. And all of us are really proud of him. And like I said, he deserves that.

MODERATOR: Thank you. Questions for coach McDermott.

Q. Greg, two-parter. Have you ever seen a duo do what Couisnard and Dante did in that they never left the floor in the second half in overtime and they scored all 39 of their points? The second part of it, when that could discourage a team, how did your team show the medal and your players show the medal to not let that be discouraging when two guys are having that kind of performance?

GREG McDERMOTT: I’ve had three guys play 50 minutes so I’ve seen it a lot on our roster being out there a lot. Couisnard was terrific. He got 32, but it was on 33 shots. And I felt like, to Ryan’s point, Dante is so physical on the back side on the rebounds when we come with help. We just didn’t have an answer for him to try to get him off.

But they’re two terrific players. We knew they were going to be hard to stop, and fortunately we made one more play than they did. But there was a lot of big plays by both teams, and Couisnard certainly made a bunch of them, as did Dante. But we had our fair share as well.

Q. How much was it to limit everybody else besides Dante and Couisnard, what they could do, because they didn’t get much help from the other guys?

GREG McDERMOTT: Not many other guys took shots. But we had a plan for personnel. Some guys were going under, some guys were going over. And for the most part, we followed that plan. I thought we made some mistakes on Couisnard the first half in particular and to Kalkbrenner’s point, he got caught a couple times with Dante where he got — Dante was able to get an angle and when he gets an angle, it’s over. But some of the shots he made over him. That’s two really good big guys going at it and Ryan made a couple on the block and Dante made a few on the block that are really hard plays but they look easy because those two are so talented.

Q. Kind of asked the guys this about coming out loose in the second overtime. Looked like they were having fun before the thing got tipped up. Before winning the second overtime, you and Dana looked at each other in disbelief. What was it like to coach that game even though it was really stressful?

GREG McDERMOTT: We caught each other’s eye at that point. It was just an incredible game. Baylor making the big plays at the end of regulation and Jermaine making the play at the end of the first overtime to send it to second overtime. And Trey gets a great look on the baseline after he fumbled it. He makes that shot 19 out of 20 times. But he misses it. So I think we were both in disbelief about what was transpiring in front of our eyes.

I know I’m really proud of our team for the way they competed and I’m pretty certain Dana feels the same.

Q. Coach, this is your third Sweet 16 appearance now in the last four years. What is it about this group that is special and makes them different from the previous ones?

GREG McDERMOTT: I mean they’re all special in their own way. Sometimes in sport, the hardest thing to do is what you’re expected to do, and last year’s group had huge preseason expectations on them, and we went through a terrible stretch where we lost six in a row and we were able to kind of rebound from it and get ourselves back in the tournament and get to the Elite Eight. This group has had that on their shoulders from the start. And when Trey and Kalk made the decision to come back after going through the draft process and Baylor deciding to come back for his fifth year, they had this in mind. This is what they were shooting for is to get back and have another opportunity to try to get to another Elite Eight. And we put ourselves in that position.

This team has just been — and I’ve said it before to our local media. They’ve been an absolute joy to coach. And what you saw going into that second overtime, them being loose and them having fun, they love the game. They love each other. It’s obvious when you watch them interact on or off the basketball floor. They are the first ones to celebrate their teammates’ success and they’re the first one to rally to a teammate when he makes a play that he didn’t like. And it’s just been an absolute blast to be part of.

Selfishly, I’m obviously excited that I get to coach them at least another week.

Q. Greg, we spent the last two days asking a lot about you and Dana and this matchup. How does it feel to get this one? Does this make up for the over and back and with them joining the BIG TEN and going to Nebraska every other year, I know he’s been avoiding playing you for personal reasons, but would you be open to doing this voluntarily and not forced in the postseason?

GREG McDERMOTT: Yeah, everybody in Omaha cheers for Dana, and they always will. He’s been there 14 years, so you people in Eugene understand why everybody cheers for him. He’s a stand-up guy. He’s about the right stuff in coaching, and we both preferred not to have this game against each other. We’d have both rather played somebody else. But one had to win, one had to lose, and like I said, it was an epic game. And they had a tremendous year, and while I know he’s going to be really disappointed in the loss, I’m pretty certain that Friday he’ll be cheering for the Bluejays just like I would have been cheering for Oregon had they won.

Q. Coach, double overtime game and it’s a little past 12:50 am local time right now. Can you just sort of speak to your team’s conditioning and if that posed any challenges playing that late into the night?

GREG McDERMOTT: You know, I can’t remember which overtime I talked to them and said we’re built for this. You know, we play fast. We’re on the attack, and we’re ready for that. And our strength coach, Jeremy Anderson, our athletic training, Ben McNair, do a great job of managing their minutes and their bodies and how much we do during a week of practice in preparation for the game to make sure that they’re ready.

Double overtime on this stage, the last game of the night, we got a couple lucky bounces there. I lost my mom this year. I’m pretty sure she helped with a couple bounces tonight.

MODERATOR: Thanks, Coach.

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NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship: Second Round – Oregon vs Creighton

Sunday, March 24, 2024

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

PPG Paints Arena

Oregon Ducks

Coach Dana Altman

N’Faly Dante

Jermaine Couisnard

Media Conference

 

Creighton – 86, Oregon – 73

MODERATOR: We’ll start with an opening statement from Oregon’s head coach, Dana Altman.

DANA ALTMAN: Well, it was a heck of a game, and we had our opportunities, and we just — we made more mistakes than they did. It was a great effort, especially by my two seniors, Jermaine and Dante. Played their tails off. And we just had our opportunities and made some critical mistakes and didn’t finish it in regulation and got ourselves back into it in the first overtime, and then second overtime they popped a couple threes there to start it, and we just couldn’t get a basket.

Creighton’s got a really good team. Those guys have been together. They’re really well coached, and Greg does a tremendous job. Thought it was a heck of a game, and we made some critical mistakes, and it cost us.

Q. Dante, to play the final 38-plus minutes, to play 48 minutes tonight and have a career high in scoring, I realize this is after a loss, but how do you feel like you played, and that’s probably the best game of your career? And I realize it’s disappointing and a loss, but how do you feel about that performance, because that was — that’s hard to find.

N’FALY DANTE: Well, I don’t know if it’s the best game of my career because we didn’t win. I wish I could make that last free throw, that could be the game, but that’s on me. There’s a lot of things I could do to help my team, but I didn’t.

Q. For both you guys, just I know the loss hurts. Can you just describe the emotions of these last couple weeks and the ride that this has been?

JADRIAN TRACEY: It’s been a great ride and a great journey with these guys. We all bought in at the end of the season and really stayed connected. Dante is going to be hard on himself about that, but it was great working with him. He did a lot of things to keep us in that game, and we had our chances, but they played well.

N’FALY DANTE: It would have been great. We stuck together and we was there for each other. I think it was great.

Q. You guys didn’t get to the line at all. Dante, your free throw there at the end of regulation was like the first one of the game. What was it about their defense that was sort of allowing getting stops without getting in foul trouble?

N’FALY DANTE: Well, I don’t know. I really don’t know. We just didn’t do everything we were supposed to do, to be honest. I don’t know what to even say. I mean this one just hurts.

Q. When Jackson went out there in definitely the second overtime, I think a little bit into the first, what impact did that have on your all’s defense, particularly as Ashworth was able to get free for some threes in the overtime periods? How did Jackson being out affect the defense?

JADRIAN TRACEY: I mean, I’m not too sure. We had our chances, like I said. We just made some mistakes. He guarded all night very well, and yeah, it would have been great to have him out there, too.

Q. N’Faly, what was it like battling Kalkbrenner tonight? You guys were epic up against each other. Can you just say something about that?

N’FALY DANTE: This is basketball, man. Just gotta play basketball. I mean, he’s a very good player. I don’t know. He’s a really good player, so it’s a little tougher.

Q. N’Faly, can you speak about playing with Couisnard what it’s been like and just the run that he had today a couple days ago and the last couple weeks?

N’FALY DANTE: Been great. It’s great to play with every single one of them, and they have me become a better player. I think every single one of them and my teammates deserve better than. I think we should win this one. It is what it is. But it’s great. I’m going to miss it. It just hurts, man.

MODERATOR: All right. Thank you.

Q. Dana, you’ve coached for a long time. What your two seniors did from the second half on, not leaving the floor, Dante for the eight minutes even in the first half, so 38-10 unanswered, all 39 points second half and overtimes. How do you even put into words what you just got out of those two?

DANA ALTMAN: They played their tails off. Absolutely no doubt about it. Dante, 28 and 20, and Jermaine, we needed some more contributions from some other guys. Jackson going down with I think four minutes in the game left, he’s got a knee sprain. And I hope it’s not serious, but he couldn’t move. And we thought about putting him back in, but he just wasn’t moving. And I didn’t want to take a chance if it’s partially torn or something. I didn’t want to take a chance.

So that hurt a little bit with ball handling. Jermaine had to do even more, and we just made some critical mistakes. Up four, you can’t foul in transition and give them two free throws. And then Dante just missed a big free throw. That’s my fault. I had a freshman throwing the ball in. And I’m as much to blame as anybody. I made some coaching mistakes, and I’m going to have to live with that, because those two guys, last — everybody talks about the last couple weeks like that’s the only time those two guys played. I mean, they’ve been playing their tails off all year. We’ve been riding them all year. So it was special to watch those two guys. Just — we had our chance. Like I said, we had our chance. We just made some critical mistakes there in regulation. And that’s on me.

I don’t want to take nothing away from Creighton. They’re a really good team, and they know what they want, and they’ve played together and their execution of stuff. But our guys battled. We tried to guard. And rebounding, you know, I was a little disappointed there. I thought we could have rebounded the ball a little better. And that was basically the difference in the game. They had 21 second-chance points. We had 14. And it was 14 to 2 at half. So that was a big difference.

Q. You kind of touched on it there, but can you just explain the importance that Dante and Couisnard have meant for this program the whole year and just kind of building what you want for next season?

DANA ALTMAN: Well, when you coach, you admire guys that fight through adversity, that love the game and fight through adversity. And both those guys had some knee problems throughout their career, and they just kept battling, and they played through it and rehabbed, get back.

You know, I felt bad for Dante and Jermaine just to put such a load on them. Just would have been nice to get them some help and prepared our other guys to step up a little bit more. And that’s on me, too. So we really put a lot on Jermaine there late. He had to do everything. When Jackson went down, we had no other ball handlers. And he tried to fight through it. But just came up a little short.

Q. Dana, looking ahead into what you do address in the off season, what is the priority in terms of talent acquisition? Is it center, defense, ball handler? When Nate says he’s coming back, Q says he’s open to it, and I’m sure the three freshmen are in a good spot. That’s a nice nucleus to start with. How do you feel about how it looks on paper right now and what do you feel like you need to address?

DANA ALTMAN: James, this isn’t a good time to talk about that. We got a lot of work to do. It’s a new age. I don’t know who’s coming back, who’s going. You know, my focus was on this team. I owe it to the guys I got. The assistants are working on recruiting some guys, and they put me on the phone with a few, but I recruited these guys, and they deserve my full attention, and now I’ll stay up all night thinking about where we’re going to go next year and how we’re going to figure things out. But you lose two kids like that, holy cow, I mean, we rode those two guys so hard. We’re going to have to have some of those young guys step up. They’re going to have to make some big dang jumps. That’s for sure.

Q. What’s this year been like for you and the way it ended, I know, tonight, but the last couple weeks and how it ended, how satisfying, how would you describe this year for you?

DANA ALTMAN: You know, up and down. I was so excited at the start of the year. We had so many guys, and I thought, man, depth is going to be our calling card. And then I thought we got Nate and Keeshawn back there and Nate goes down and Keeshawn dislocates that ankle. And then our depth goes. So it’s been a roller coaster. I was so excited all summer and in the fall watching the guys. We got Dante and Nate. We got two seven-footers. We got K.J. at 6’10”. We got Bam and Kario, good athletes. And Mookie is going to get back. Jesse was shooting the ball good. Had quick guards in Keeshawn and Jackson. So as a coach you get really excited, you know. Then they start dropping a little bit and you’re like, oh, now what do we do? And Dante’s got knee surgery and out ten weeks. And you guys that watched the game tonight, you’re like what did you do in those ten weeks?

But the other guys stepped up and played okay. And so there was a lot of up and down, but I loved working with this group. They were really good. I don’t think they knew how to take me. The trust level, you know, I’d bite them a little bit and they’d think it’s personal. I’m just trying to get them to play a little harder. So I got a lot of work to do, got a lot of work to do with guys.

But I want to make clear. They’re a good group, and I’m more mad at myself than I am at them. And I couldn’t be any prouder of Dante and Jermaine and what they meant to this program and this team and their toughness, you know. I mean they were dead tired and they were just — they were grinding. You know, they didn’t want the season to end. That’s a quality that you just — as a coach, you just love. But I wish Creighton all the best. I hope they get to the Final Four. It would be great for that program. I’d love to see it. They’ll swing away. They got a lot of shooters, and they hit some big threes tonight. And we just lost them a couple times, and it cost us.

But, again, I wish them all the best. We made mistakes; they didn’t. And they found a way to get us, and it will be a long off season, but we’ll figure out a way to try to put a team together and be ready to go next year.

MODERATOR: Thanks, Coach.


FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports

142604-1-2377 2024-03-24 05:15:00 GMT

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