This is the Wildcats' second straight trip to the Sweet 16 and
fourth since 2016. The last time they played in San Antonio,
they beat Michigan in the 2018 national champion game.
The Wildcats (28-7) are coming off a 71-61 second-round victory
over Ohio State on Sunday. Collin Gillespie paced Villanova with
20 points while Jermaine Sanders added 17 points, but it was the
defense that made the difference down the stretch.
Up just two points, the Wildcats pulled away by holding Ohio
State to just one field goal over the last five minutes.
"We continued to do what we do," Gillespie said. "(Ohio State)
was in a stretch where they were making shot after shot. We just
said ‘attitude' to one another and came together at the
defensive end. We just tried to get stops and make the right
play."
The key to Villanova's late-season success started with a
record-breaking early season loss on its most recent trip to
Texas -- a 57-36 setback to Baylor on Dec. 12 in Waco. It set a
dubious mark for the fewest points scored in Wright's 21-year
tenure as coach of the Wildcats.
Villanova subsequently dropped a Big East road game at Creighton
by 20 points before turning things around. The Wildcats
eventually finished second in the conference in the regular
season and won the Big East tournament. Villanova enters
Thursday's game on a seven-game winning streak.
Michigan (19-14) heads to the Sweet 16 after beating
third-seeded Tennessee 76-68 on Saturday in Indianapolis. Hunter
Dickinson racked up a 27-point, 11-rebound double-double and Eli
Brooks added 23 points to lead the Wolverines.
The duo of Brooks and Dickinson outscored the entire Tennessee
roster in the second half, 33-31. Michigan held the Volunteers
to 2 of 18 shooting from beyond the arc and didn't allow a
3-pointer in the second half.
"There wasn't really any doubt that this team is special,"
Brooks said. "That starts with our coach believing in us and
just the group of guys that are in the locker room. We have a
good group of guys that have the same drive, the same passion.
And that's a credit to Juwan (Howard), the coaching staff,
finding those guys out there that you like to be around."
Michigan was in dire straits toward the end of the Big Ten
campaign, losing four of its final eight regular-season games
and then bowing out to Indiana in the first round of the
conference tournament.
The Wolverines also had a stretch of games that were affected by
COVID-19, played multiple games without Dickinson, and were
without suspended coach Juwan Howard for five contests.
But when it has counted the most, Michigan has come together.
"Making it to the Sweet 16 is, as literal as it is, is sweet
because nobody believed in us," Dickinson said. "Everybody
thought we shouldn't be in the tournament. And now people that
were hating on us are going home and about to watch us (this)
week."
--By Steve Habel, Field Level Media
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