BLOOMINGTON —
Tom Crean watched the television in utter amazement Sunday.
Two years ago, his Hoosiers weren't even eligible for the NIT. Now, they're the No. 1 seed in the East Region of the NCAA tournament.
And while they won't be taking the easy road to the Final Four, playing regional round games in their home state, the Big Ten champs might have the next best thing -- playing to a national fan base, renewed motivation to prove the doubters wrong and adding another list to their milestone list.
"Another major accomplishment," Crean said after watching the NCAA tournament selection show. "To think of where we were 24 months ago, when we were five or six wins short of postseason eligibility to today, it's just amazing."
It's the first time since 1993 - and only the third time in school history - that Indiana has gone into the tourney with a No. 1 seed.
Still, the draw won't go over well in a Hoosier State that expected to see Indiana playing twice at Lucas Oil Stadium, not even 2 miles from where the selection committee spent the last four days trying to sort out this 68-team tourney field after one of the craziest college basketball seasons.
Indiana spent more weeks at No. 1 than any other team and won its first Big Ten outright championship since 1993 when a buzzer-beating tip from Michigan rolled off the rim in last Sunday's conference finale.
Most Hoosiers fans figured that win clinched the No. 1 seed in the Midwest, which almost certainly would have meant playing games in Dayton, about 170 miles from campus, and Indy, about 60 miles from campus.
But three losses in six games - including Indiana's most lopsided loss all season in Saturday's Big Ten semifinals - changed the whole equation.
Louisville, which won the Big East tourney Saturday night, wound up No. 1 in the Midwest while Indiana was sent East.
It's not all bad. The draw in the East looks more favorable for the Hoosiers, and they're still going to play their second- and third-round games in Dayton anyway. Best of all, they won't have to see Wisconsin unless both reach the championship game. The Badgers have won 12 straight over the Hoosiers (27-6).
Indiana will open the tourney against the winner of the Long Island-Brooklyn-James Madison opening-round game. If they win that, they'll face either eighth-seeded North Carolina State or ninth-seeded Temple. And some players have pointed to the road win over North Carolina State in November 2011 as the start of Indiana's remarkable resurgence following three straight losing seasons and an NCAA scandal that left the program in tatters.
After that, Crean could be looking at possible regional final games against his former school, Marquette, or a potential rematch with Butler, who handed Indiana its first loss of the season in December. Those games would be in Washington, not far from Victor Oladipo's hometown and not far from a prominent basketball fan that Oladipo met when he was in high school, President Barack Obama.
"To be honest with you, I didn't even know Indiana was in our region," Bulldogs coach Brad Stevens said. "I've just been looking at the four schools in our pod."
But the Hoosiers know it will take more than an executive order to get to Atlanta.
"If we don't win in Ohio, then there is no D.C. to worry about," Oladipo said.
This year's celebration was far more subdued than last year's, which players and coaches watched on a temporary big-screen television set up inside the new addition at the football stadium. This time, they kept the party private.
Crean said he urged players to relax, be themselves and enjoy the show.
"It was kind of neat figuring out where we were going instead of watching the show and not knowing if it was an in-or-out type of thing," sophomore center Cody Zeller said.
Now comes the hard part, getting back to work and fixing what's gone wrong over these past few weeks.
Neither Crean nor his players would identify specifically what has gone wrong lately.
"It's unfortunate we lost the other day, we didn't want to do that. We've got to get things fixed," Oladipo said. "We've got to get back to playing Indiana basketball the right way, keeping our edge and staying together."
An extra day's rest could actually be of more benefit to the Hoosiers than going through Indianapolis.
Certainly, it's been a grind.
The Hoosiers were ranked No. 1 in the preseason and have spent the whole year ranked in the top five. They took shot after shot in the toughest league in the country and the winning formula against them has been to get physical and slow the pace.
This week's new wrinkle is that they won't know who they will play until Wednesday night.
"We've already started working on two teams and we'll have looked at all four teams by tomorrow night," Crean said.
But after spending the past five years trying to rebuild a program that owns five national championship banners, traveling to Washington instead of Indianapolis is no big deal to the Hoosiers.
"We don't worry about it too much," Zeller said. "There are Indiana fans all over the country."
The "Z" Watch
Indiana earns No. 1 seed in East region
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IU still working towards sixth banner
Monday night in Atlanta, Louisville won the school’s first National Championship since the year I was born - 1986. This accomplishment is significant to Indiana basketball fans, because the last two times the Cardinals cut down the nets (1980, 1986), the Hoosiers did it the following year. The stat, of course means nothing, other than both schools had strong programs in the 1980s.
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Zeller declares for NBA
Indiana’s Cody Zeller turned down one chance to play in the NBA. He couldn’t say no twice.
The 7-foot sophomore center who returned to school last fall for one more shot at a national championship announced Wednesday he is leaving college early to enter the NBA draft. The reason was simple. -
Washington shows support for Zeller
Washington residents don’t get to see Tyler Zeller much these days, but for one night, he was back in Indiana.
Zeller, along with his Cleveland Cavaliers teammates played the Indiana Pacers Tuesday night at Bankers Life Fieldhouse, much to the enjoyment of more than a hundred Washington residents that made the two-hour trip to Indianapolis. -
Zeller scores 18, but Pacers beat Cavs 99-94
For the first 43 minutes Tuesday night at Bankers Life Fieldhouse, it looked like a great homecoming for former Washington Hatchet - now Cleveland Cavalier - Tyler Zeller. The final five belonged to the Indiana Pacers.
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Oladipo, Zeller named All-Americans
Statistics through March 17
First Team
Trey Burke, Michigan, 6-0, 190, sophomore, Columbus, Ohio, 19.2 ppg, 3.1 rpg, 6.7 apg, 40.1 3-pt fg pct, 1.6 steals, 35.2 minutes (62 first-team votes, 319 total points)
Otto Porter Jr., Georgetown, 6-8, 205, sophomore, Morley, Mo., 16.3 ppg, 7.4 rpg, 42.7 3 pt-fg pct, 1.9 steals, 35.3 minutes (62, 319)
Victor Oladipo, Indiana, 6-5, 214, junior, Upper Marlboro, Md., 13.6 ppg, 6.4 rpg, 59.9 fg pct, 44.3 3-pt fg pct, 2.2 steals (58, 306)
Doug McDermott, Creighton, 6-8, 225, junior, Ames, Iowa, 23.1 ppg, 7.5 rpg, 56.1 fg pct, 49.7 3-pt fg pct, 86.0 ft pct (44, 279)
Kelly Olynyk, Gonzaga, 7-0, 238, junior, Kamloops, British Columbia, 17.5 ppg, 7.2 rpg, 65.2 fg pct (47, 278) -
Hoosiers look ahead after disappointing finish
Indiana left Washington in a dour mood.
Tom Crean knows his team can't afford to let it linger if it intends to continue chasing another national championship banner. -
Turnovers spell disaster for No. 1 Indiana
Nineteen turnovers. Sixteen baskets. A season-low 50 points.
Top-seed Indiana had no answer for the 2-3 zone of Syracuse, and now the Hoosiers are heading home after a 61-50 loss Thursday night bounced them from the NCAA tournament. -
Indiana can't solve Syracuse zone in Sweet 16
It took winning a national title for Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim to get over a late-shot loss to Indiana the last time the schools faced off in the NCAA tournament.
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Top four seeds left in East Region
Yelps of support and echoing applause greeted the voice booming over the loudspeakers Wednesday at the scheduled start of practice for the East Regional's fourth seed: "Coached by Jim Boeheim, please welcome the Syracuse Orange!"
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Basketball is a king's sport in Indiana
Indiana athletic director Fred Glass must be ready for the game each time he goes out.
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