Saul Phillips was thrilled to see his North Dakota State men's basketball team all over ESPN last week.
"Usually, when Fargo makes it on TV," Phillips said, "it's on The Weather Channel."
Phillips was thrilled to see his adoptive city make the national news, too, "for something other than the wood chipper scene in 'Fargo.'"
Phillips is the 36-year-old, fast-talking, Mountain Dew-drinking, second-year basketball coach who helped NDSU become the first team since 1970 to qualify for the NCAA tournament in its first year of eligibility. He'll bring the Bison and a knack for shooting the bull to Minneapolis for a first-round game against Kansas on Friday.
"I'm a little verbal," he said. "I can't believe how much I've talked, and how many people I've talked to, in the last week. I mean, I was on the radio with the Fabulous Sports Babe. What's next, the San Diego Chicken dropping by?"
The Final Four is traditionally about power programs. Regionals bring us quainter, more charming stories -- guys such as Phillips, who work their whole lives to become overnight successes.
As an assistant coach at Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Phillips found himself assigned to driving head coach Bo Ryan to get his haircuts. Only OPEC holds more oil than Ryan's hair. "He lays it on thick," Phillips said.
Ryan eventually became the highly successful coach at the University of Wisconsin. For three years, Phillips was his director of basketball operations. Phillips parlayed Ryan's tutoring into an assistant coaching job under Tim Miles at NDSU, and when Miles left for Colorado State, Albert Lea's Ben Woodside, now the Bison's career leading scorer and owner of the shot that put NDSU into the tournament in its first year of eligibility, went to the powers that be and lobbied for Phillips.