From Maui to the Caribbean, college hoops' Thanksgiving tournaments a
beloved part of the sport
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[November 25, 2024]
By AARON BEARD
Lea Miller-Tooley hopped off a call to welcome the Baylor women’s
basketball team to the Atlantis resort in the Bahamas, where
80-degree temperatures made it easy for the Bears to settle in on
Paradise Island a week before Thanksgiving.
About 5,000 miles west of the Caribbean nation, similar climes
awaited Maui Invitational men's teams in Hawaii. They’ve often been
greeted with leis, the traditional Hawaiian welcome of friendship.
College basketball teams and fans look forward to this time of the
year. The holiday week tournaments feature buzzworthy matchups and
all-day TV coverage, sure, but there is a familiarity about them as
they help ward off the November chill. For four decades, these
sandy-beach getaways filled with basketball have become a beloved
mainstay of the sport itself.
“When you see (ESPN’s) ‘Feast Week’ of college basketball on TV,
when you see the Battle 4 Atlantis on TV, you know college
basketball is back,” said Miller-Tooley, the founder and organizer
of the Battle 4 Atlantis men's and women's tournaments. “Because
it’s a saturated time of the year with the NFL, college football and
the NBA. But when you see these gorgeous events in these beautiful
places, you realize, ‘Wow, hoops are back, let’s get excited.’”
MTE Madness
The Great Alaska Shootout was the trend-setting multiple-team event
(MTE) nearly five decades ago. The brainchild of late
Alaska-Anchorage coach Bob Rachal sought to raise his program’s
profile by bringing in national-power programs, which could take
advantage of NCAA rules allowing them to exceed the maximum
allotment of regular-season games if they played the three-game
tournament outside the contiguous 48 states.
The first edition, named the Sea Wolf Classic, saw N.C. State beat
Louisville 72-66 for the title on Nov. 26, 1978.
The Maui Invitational followed in November 1984, borne from the buzz
of NAIA program Chaminade’s shocking upset of top-ranked Virginia
and 7-foot-4 star Ralph Sampson in Hawaii two years earlier.
Events kept coming, with warm-weather locales getting in on the
action. The Paradise Jam in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The Cancun
Challenge in Mexico. The Cayman Islands Classic. The Jamaica
Classic. The Myrtle Beach Invitational joining the Charleston
Classic in South Carolina. Numerous tournaments in Florida.
Some events have faded away like the Puerto Rico Tipoff and the
Great Alaska Shootout, the latter in 2017 amid event competition and
schools opting for warm-weather locales.
Atlantis rising
Miller-Tooley’s push to build an MTE for Atlantis began as a
December 2010 doubleheader with Georgia Tech beating Richmond and
Virginia Tech beating Mississippi State in a prove-it moment for a
tournament’s viability. It also required changing NCAA legislation
to permit MTEs in the Bahamas. Approval came in March 2011; the
first eight-team Atlantis men’s tournament followed in November.
That tournament quickly earned marquee status with big-name fields,
with Atlantis champions Villanova (2017) and Virginia (2018) later
winning that season’s NCAA title. Games run in a
ballroom-turned-arena at the resort, where players also check out
massive swimming pools, water slides and inner-tube rapids
surrounded by palm trees and the Atlantic Ocean.
“It’s just the value of getting your passport stamped, that will
never get old,” Miller-Tooley said. “Watching some of these kids,
this may be their first and last time — and staff and families —
that they ever travel outside the United States. … You can see
through these kids’ eyes that it’s really an unbelievable
experience.”
ACC Network analyst Luke Hancock knows that firsthand. His
Louisville team finished second at Atlantis in 2012 and won that
year’s later-vacated NCAA title, with Hancock as the Final Four's
most outstanding player.
“I remember (then-coach Rick Pitino) saying something to the effect
of: ‘Some of you guys might never get this opportunity again. We’re
staying in this unbelievable place, you’re doing it with people you
love,’” Hancock said.
“It was a business trip for us there at Thanksgiving, but he
definitely had a tone of ‘We’ve got to enjoy this as well.’”
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Workers set up banners and signs at Lahaina Civic Center, the venue
for the Maui Invitational, Monday, Nov. 18, 2024, in Lahaina,
Hawaii. The Maui Invitational is back in Lahaina, where eight of the
NCAA's top men's basketball teams will compete in a three-day
tournament. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)
Popular demand
Maui offers similar vibes, though 2024 could be a little different
as Lahaina recovers from deadly 2023 wildfires that forced the
event's relocation last year.
North Carolina assistant coach Sean May played for
the Tar Heels’ Maui winner in 2004 and was part of UNC’s staff for
the 2016 champion, with both teams later winning the NCAA title. May
said “you just feel the peacefulness” of the area — even while
focusing on games — and savors memories of the team taking a boat
out on the Pacific Ocean after title runs under now-retired Hall of
Famer Roy Williams.
“Teams like us, Dukes, UConns – you want to go to
places that are very well-run,” May said. “Maui, Lea Miller with her
group at the Battle 4 Atlantis, that’s what drives teams to come
back because you know you’re going to get standard A-quality of not
only the preparation but the tournament with the way it’s run.
Everything is top-notch. And I think that brings guys back year
after year.”
That’s why Colorado coach Tad Boyle is so excited for the Buffaloes’
first Maui appearance since 2009.
“We’ve been trying to get in the tournament since I got here,” said
Boyle, now in his 15th season.
And of course, that warm-weather setting sure doesn’t hurt.
“If you talk about the Marquettes of the world, St. John’s,
Providence — they don’t want that cold weather,” said NBA and
college TV analyst Terrence Oglesby, who played for Clemson in the
2007 San Juan Invitational in Puerto Rico. “They’re going to have to
deal with that all January and February. You might as well get a
taste of what the sun feels like.”
Packed schedule
The men’s Baha Mar Championship in Nassau, Bahamas, got things
rolling last week with No. 11 Tennessee routing No. 13 Baylor for
the title. The week ahead could boast matchups befitting the Final
Four, with teams having two weeks of action since any opening-night
hiccups.
“It’s a special kickoff to the college basketball season,” Oglesby
said. “It’s just without the rust.”
On the women’s side, Atlantis began its fourth eight-team women’s
tournament Saturday with No. 16 North Carolina and No. 18 Baylor,
while the nearby Baha Mar resort follows with two four-team women’s
brackets that include No. 2 UConn, No. 7 LSU, No. 17 Mississippi and
No. 20 N.C. State.
Then come the men’s headliners.
The Maui Invitational turns 40 as it opens Monday back in Lahaina.
It features second-ranked and two-time reigning national champion
UConn, No. 4 Auburn, No. 5 Iowa State and No. 10 North Carolina.
The Battle 4 Atlantis opens its 13th men’s tournament Wednesday,
topped by No. 3 Gonzaga, No. 16 Indiana and No. 17 Arizona.
Michigan State Hall of Famer Tom Izzo is making his fourth trip to
Maui, where he debuted as Jud Heathcote’s successor at the 1995
tournament. Izzo's Spartans have twice competed at Atlantis, last in
2021.
“They’re important because they give you something in November or
December that is exciting,” Izzo said.
Any drawbacks?
“It’s a 10-hour flight,” he said of Hawaii.
___
AP Sports Writers Pat Graham in Colorado and Larry Lage in Michigan
contributed to this report.
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