Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Saint Peter’s left with fond memories after historic run

- By Tom Canavan

Saint Peter’s unexpected and uplifting run to the Elite Eight ended with a bus ride back to New Jersey and the unsettling prospect that Shaheen Holloway might have coached his last game for Peacocks.

“To be honest, it was amazing to me,” forward Hassan Drame said in the student center Monday. “Overall, it was an amazing season and something that we’re going to look back on, and forever where we go we have this story to tell people.”

It was a great story. A little Jesuit university in Jersey City, making just its fourth NCAA Tournament appearance and first since 2011. A program that had never won a game in The Show, knocking off perennial powerhouse­s Kentucky and Purdue and a very good Murray State squad to become the first No. 15 seed to reach the Elite Eight.

The feel-good story of the NCAA Tournament ended Sunday as the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference tournament champions were blown out 69-49 by North Carolina in Philadelph­ia.

All the players on the team are eligible to return.

“At this point, we don’t know what the future hold for us,” Drame said. “But, you know, we are always proud to be Peacocks.”

Jersey City is also proud. Mayor Steven Fulop said Monday a parade will be held Friday afternoon to honor the team, and keys to the city will be given out.

The major question mark is Holloway. The 45-yearold coach is a former Seton Hall player. That job opened a week ago when Kevin Willard accepted the top job at Maryland. Willard was making roughly $2.4 million coaching at the Big East Conference school in nearby South Orange.

While his salary at Saint Peter’s has not been disclosed, Holloway is believe to be getting less than $300,000 annually.

“We don’t know nothing about that tactic,” Fousseyni Drame, Hassan’s twin and a fellow forward, said of Holloway’s future. “Nobody knows what the future holds.”

Fulop said the team had all the attributes of the city.

“I think everyone across the country identified with this team,” he said. “They didn’t get a lot of recognitio­n. There were not highly recruited and they came together. They were the little engine that could, knocking off all these big powerhouse­s.”

Around campus, life seemed to be returning to normal. There were only a couple of television crews and few reporters. Freshman Jamie Troutman of New Haven, Conn., said the tournament success united the community.

“It was nice seeing everybody come together to celebrate something so big and making history,” the psychology major said.

Jennifer Dang, a freshman from Middlesex, New Jersey, said while it was sad seeing the team lose Sunday, she said the watch parties on campus made everyone feel like they were at the games.

“No one really knows where Saint Peter’s is. No one really knows where Jersey City is,” she said. “But we’re known across the country, so in the aftermath of the game, it’s sad we didn’t make it to the Final Four but at least we made it somewhere in history.”

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