Bucknell coach played late role in 2005 Kansas stunner

A glimpse at how top 8 seeds have fared in first-round games since the NCAA tournament expanded in 1985. West Virginia enters as a 4-seed, a slot that has won 80 percent of its matchups against No. 13s

 

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Even after 12 years and countless retellings, Bucknell’s John Griffin gets a jolt from describing how the Bison toppled Kansas in the NCAA tournament.

“A good memory to rehash,” he said.

Now an assistant at his alma mater, Griffin is preparing a new batch of underdogs to face West Virginia during Thursday’s 4-versus-13 NCAA opener.

Among the small-conference teams aiming to play big this week, Bucknell hopes to bust brackets like it did in that enduring 2005 first-round game. Griffin was a freshman guard the night Chris McNaughton’s banked-in hook shot put 14th-seeded Bucknell ahead 64-63 with 10.5 seconds left.

The 6-foot Griffin subsequently boxed out 6-9 Jayhawks star Wayne Simien to grab a defensive rebound with 3.5 seconds left, only to miss the front end of a one-and-one.

“I didn’t feel the pressure that some might think, but I rushed it,” said Griffin, an 84-percent foul shooter that season. “Next thing you know, I’m sitting on the bench praying that Wayne Simien’s final shot doesn’t go in.

“Inevitably, I knew Kansas was going to get a look, because they were incredibly well coached. I was just hoping it didn’t go in.”

In a conclusion that continues to surface on top-10 lists of March upsets, Simien was short on a turnaround jumper at the buzzer and the Jayhawks bowed to a program funding only six scholarships at the time.

First-round results by seed

No. 1 seed  128-0  vs. No. 16  (100 winning percentage)
No. 2 seed  120-8  vs. No. 15  (93.75% winning percentage)
No. 3 seed  107-21  vs. No. 14  (83.59 winning percentage)
No. 4 seed  102-26  vs. No. 13  (79.69 winning percentage)
No. 5 seed  82-46  vs. No. 12  (64.06 winning percentage)
No. 6 seed  82-46  vs. No. 11  (64.06 winning percentage)
No. 7 seed  78-50  vs. No. 10  (60.94 winning percentage)
No. 8 seed  65-63  vs. No. 9  (50.78 winning percentage)

Though Bucknell knocked off eighth-seeded Arkansas in 2006, the victory over Kansas changed the direction of the program, It also bound the players as forever teammates.

“We have a group text and it’s guy 1 through 14 on that team,” Griffin said. “We text each there every week, and anything that will bring up an old memory leads to like two hours of conversation.”

More than 30-somethings reliving glory days, the 2005 miracle-makers share in-depth breakdowns on current Bucknell opponents.

“Everyone is very locked in to the matchups,” Griffin said. “You’d be surprised how deeply they go into size, speed, style of play.

“I didn’t get many positives about our matchups against ‘Press Virginia’ though. Holy smokes.”

Griffin suspected the Mountaineers deserved better than a 4-seed because of their second-place finish in the Big 12’s regular season and tournament. “Plus, they beat Kansas by 17 at home,” he said, “and should’ve beaten them on the road.”

While both teams enter Thursday’s game with 26-8 records, West Virginia is a 14-point favorite — almost the exact same spread for the Kansas game in 2005.

“That Kansas upset is unique. It has taken on a life of its own,” Griffin said. “And our kids now are excited for the opportunity because of that history. They want to write their own story.”

 

In 2105 Bucknell celebrated the 10th anniversary of upsetting Kansas. Current Bisons assistant John Griffin (far left of the postgame mob) was a freshman that season.




More Sports

High School Sports
Wheeling Central Catholic hands Williamstown first loss, 8-6
The Maroon Knights rallied back from a four-run deficit to collect their eighth consecutive victory.
April 16, 2024 - 12:11 am
High School Sports
Morgantown scores six in 1st, rides Wisman's one-hitter to 8-0 win against University
Mohigans' sophomore Madison Wisman allowed her team to flip the script against UHS, which won an earlier matchup this season against Morgantown by the exact score it suffered a loss by on Monday.
April 15, 2024 - 9:57 pm
Sports
For wideouts coach Bilal Marshall, self-improvement means as much as growth from players
Marshall enters his second season with this title at West Virginia and has a better idea of how what does and doesn't work this time around.
April 15, 2024 - 4:07 pm
WVU Sports
3 Guys Before The Game - Spring Smorgasboard (Episode 546)
Mountaineer baseball performances lifts them into the national rankings.
April 15, 2024 - 3:39 pm