"A journey of 1,000 miles begins with a single step," said Confucius.
"We're going to take them one game at a time," said Cremins.
No one is likely to mistake Charleston's head basketball coach for Confucius, but Bobby Cremins is leaning on a clich? seemingly as old as that Chinese philosopher as his team prepares for a journey he hopes will end Monday night with the Cougars winning a Southern Conference Tournament Championship.
That first step, their first game, comes at 7:30 p.m. at the North Charleston Coliseum when the No. 6 seed Cougars (14-16) take on No. 11 seed The Citadel (6-23) in a first-round matchup.
The winner moves on to face No. 3 seed Georgia Southern at 9:15 p.m. Saturday.
"Everybody knows we're capable of playing well and everybody knows we're capable of not playing so well," Cremins said. "We played so well last year and it was such an exciting tournament for us. But that was an entirely different team. We're not looking at four games in four days. We're looking at one game at a time."
Even so, the bracket couldn't possibly set up better for a run by the Cougars.
Top-seeded Davidson, unbeaten in the conference, is on the other side of the bracket, so the Cougars wouldn't have to play them until the championship game.
Charleston has already beaten The Citadel twice by convincing margins.
The Cougars split with the remaining four teams on their side of the bracket, so no one looms as unbeatable.
What Cremins is hoping his team realizes is that it's also far from unbeatable, even tonight against a Bulldogs team that was 1-19 in league play.
"I still have nightmares of the Western Carolina game and all the turnovers," Cremins said. "And I know what (the Bulldogs) are thinking. They're thinking upset. And if we're not ready to play, we will be upset. If we take The Citadel lightly, we'll be in serious trouble. We better be ready to play our best basketball. This is do or die now."
That much seems to have sunken in with the Cougars.
"Guys are starting to realize it's now or never," said junior forward Jermaine Johnson. "Now it's either win or go home. Nobody really wants the season to end right now. We feel like we're not done yet."
The Cougars are latching on to their improving performance in their last two games, a 91-86 victory over Georgia Southern and a 77-59 victory over Furman, as evidence that the team is finally starting to put it all together.
"The pieces are starting to come together, but it's not complete," said sophomore guard Tony White Jr. "But these last two games have given us a little bit of momentum going into the tournament, and that's exactly what we wanted."
The Cougars also are drawing motivation from the words of The Post and Courier columnist Ken Burger, who gave Charleston little or no chance to make a run in this week's tournament.
"We're going to dedicate every win to Ken Burger," Johnson said.
"We're going to take them one game at a time," said Cremins.
No one is likely to mistake Charleston's head basketball coach for Confucius, but Bobby Cremins is leaning on a clich? seemingly as old as that Chinese philosopher as his team prepares for a journey he hopes will end Monday night with the Cougars winning a Southern Conference Tournament Championship.
That first step, their first game, comes at 7:30 p.m. at the North Charleston Coliseum when the No. 6 seed Cougars (14-16) take on No. 11 seed The Citadel (6-23) in a first-round matchup.
The winner moves on to face No. 3 seed Georgia Southern at 9:15 p.m. Saturday.
"Everybody knows we're capable of playing well and everybody knows we're capable of not playing so well," Cremins said. "We played so well last year and it was such an exciting tournament for us. But that was an entirely different team. We're not looking at four games in four days. We're looking at one game at a time."
Even so, the bracket couldn't possibly set up better for a run by the Cougars.
Top-seeded Davidson, unbeaten in the conference, is on the other side of the bracket, so the Cougars wouldn't have to play them until the championship game.
Charleston has already beaten The Citadel twice by convincing margins.
The Cougars split with the remaining four teams on their side of the bracket, so no one looms as unbeatable.
What Cremins is hoping his team realizes is that it's also far from unbeatable, even tonight against a Bulldogs team that was 1-19 in league play.
"I still have nightmares of the Western Carolina game and all the turnovers," Cremins said. "And I know what (the Bulldogs) are thinking. They're thinking upset. And if we're not ready to play, we will be upset. If we take The Citadel lightly, we'll be in serious trouble. We better be ready to play our best basketball. This is do or die now."
That much seems to have sunken in with the Cougars.
"Guys are starting to realize it's now or never," said junior forward Jermaine Johnson. "Now it's either win or go home. Nobody really wants the season to end right now. We feel like we're not done yet."
The Cougars are latching on to their improving performance in their last two games, a 91-86 victory over Georgia Southern and a 77-59 victory over Furman, as evidence that the team is finally starting to put it all together.
"The pieces are starting to come together, but it's not complete," said sophomore guard Tony White Jr. "But these last two games have given us a little bit of momentum going into the tournament, and that's exactly what we wanted."
The Cougars also are drawing motivation from the words of The Post and Courier columnist Ken Burger, who gave Charleston little or no chance to make a run in this week's tournament.
"We're going to dedicate every win to Ken Burger," Johnson said.