Judging from Internet comments and message boards, losing to one of the worst teams in the Atlantic 10 has generated some doom and gloom among University of Dayton basketball fans, which comes as no surprise.
The NCAA tournament is the ultimate goal, of course, and making the field has become increasingly harder for teams outside the six power conferences. While 12 teams outside of those conferences received at-large bids in 2004, only four have gotten in the last two years.
And while the Flyers haven?t done irreparable harm to their NCAA chances, they have made it harder on themselves. But UD coach Brian Gregory refuses to worry about how one game may have impacted his team?s postseason fate.
?It?s difficult because every single game seems like a do-or-die game, and you can?t coach that way and you can?t play that way. The season is too long,? he said. ?We really concentrate on the process of getting better and playing our best basketball at the end of the year. If you do that, everything else takes care of itself.?
The Flyers (14-5, 3-2 A-10) were able to recover from a pair of league road losses last year to sub-.500 teams ? 12-18 UMass and 11-20 Charlotte ? and still make the NCAA tourney. But Gregory knows his team can?t play as it did in a 60-59 defeat at Saint Joseph?s on Saturday, Jan. 23, if it wants to beat Rhode Island (15-3, 3-2) tonight.
The Rams, who have made back-to-back NIT trips, are rated 18th nationally in the RPI, and they?re 3-0 against power conferences. Their only losses were to Temple at home and Xavier and VCU on the road.
Gregory is eager to see how resilient his team can be.
?Everything is about responding,? he said. ?That?s the great thing about this sport. If you take a smack to the head, you?ve got to respond to it.?
The NCAA tournament is the ultimate goal, of course, and making the field has become increasingly harder for teams outside the six power conferences. While 12 teams outside of those conferences received at-large bids in 2004, only four have gotten in the last two years.
And while the Flyers haven?t done irreparable harm to their NCAA chances, they have made it harder on themselves. But UD coach Brian Gregory refuses to worry about how one game may have impacted his team?s postseason fate.
?It?s difficult because every single game seems like a do-or-die game, and you can?t coach that way and you can?t play that way. The season is too long,? he said. ?We really concentrate on the process of getting better and playing our best basketball at the end of the year. If you do that, everything else takes care of itself.?
The Flyers (14-5, 3-2 A-10) were able to recover from a pair of league road losses last year to sub-.500 teams ? 12-18 UMass and 11-20 Charlotte ? and still make the NCAA tourney. But Gregory knows his team can?t play as it did in a 60-59 defeat at Saint Joseph?s on Saturday, Jan. 23, if it wants to beat Rhode Island (15-3, 3-2) tonight.
The Rams, who have made back-to-back NIT trips, are rated 18th nationally in the RPI, and they?re 3-0 against power conferences. Their only losses were to Temple at home and Xavier and VCU on the road.
Gregory is eager to see how resilient his team can be.
?Everything is about responding,? he said. ?That?s the great thing about this sport. If you take a smack to the head, you?ve got to respond to it.?