The New York Post e-Edition

Ex-SJU/FAU coach Jarvis amazed by Final Four run

By ZACH BRAZILLER zbraziller@nypost.com

HOUSTON — The first adjective that came to mind was incredible. Then miraculous followed by amazing.

“Maybe that’s the best word,” Mike Jarvis told The Post, when asked to describe Florida Atlantic’s stunning run to

The Final Four.

The former St. John’s coach understands better than most how difficult a job Florida Atlantic is, and how shocking it is for the ninth-seeded Owls to be among the last four teams standing.

Jarvis coached Florida Atlantic for six seasons, from 2008-14. He was the last man to win 20 games in a single year at the Conference USA school before Dusty May guided the Owls to a program record 35 wins this winter.

“The reasons why Coach May [should be] be the National Coach of the Year is it’s an incredibly difficult job, as are most jobs at that level,” Jarvis said. “With the budget that you have, with the facilities that you have, with the fact that usually you have to play a lot of buy games, which means you get a lot of losses because you’re playing against teams you probably have no business playing against, and that in turn destroys a lot of kids’ confidence.”

Living now in Boynton Beach, Fla., the 77-year-old Jarvis still follows the program and goes to a few games each season. The biggest change he has noticed since his time there is the leadership at the school. Athletic director Brian White has engineered the Owls’ upcoming move to the American Athletic Conference and has made facilities upgrades with much more on the way. He also hired May, an assistant at Florida at the time, in 2018, and the two sides are expected to agree on a new long-term extension after this weekend, May said.

“Now they have a guy who I think understands what it’s all about,” Jarvis said, referring to White. “I think he understands what it’s all about. He hired a really quality young coach who has come in and done an amazing job.”

May hasn’t had a losing season yet, though he hadn’t won more than 19 games before this year. He has been able to keep his entire core together, no easy feat in the transfer portal era. This winter, Florida Atlantic broke through in a major way. It was nationally ranked for the first time in program history and beat in-state powerhouse Florida on the road.

A lot has gone right in this run. Purdue became just the second No. 1 to lose to a No. 16 when it fell to Fairleigh Dickinson in the first round, setting up Florida Atlantic with a much easier second-round game. It took advantage, then outplayed No. 4 Tennessee in the Sweet 16 and No. 3 Kansas State in the Elite Eight.

“Purdue lost, and that in itself was huge,” said Jarvis, who coached at St. John’s from 19982003. “You have to be good, you have to be playing well, you have to be healthy and you have to have luck on your side. All of those things went FAU’s way.”

Even so, it’s an incredible story. Before this March, Florida Atlantic had never won an NCAA Tournament game. Now it is two wins away from what would be the most unlikely national championship in college basketball history.

“If someone said this could happen,” Jarvis said, “I wouldn’t have believed them.”

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2023-04-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-04-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://nypost.pressreader.com/article/282381223811961

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