Bo Ryan let the spray hit him full on. ¶ Minutes earlier, his Wisconsin men's basketball team was staring down yet another NCAA tournament exit. The Badgers had a one-point lead with 2.3 seconds left in overtime, but Arizona had the ball and reason to be optimistic. All-America Nick Johnson's shot didn't beat the buzzer, however, and a swarm of red followed at midcourt.
"I can't believe I'm gonna say it," longtime Wisconsin play-by-play voice Matt Lepay shouted. "Bo Ryan and the Wisconsin Badgers have punched their ticket to Texas!"
Ryan was prepping for a postgame speech in the locker room at the Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif., when his players, loops of net tied into their "West Regional champions" hats, twisted open the caps on their water bottles and attacked.
It wasn't bubbly, but perhaps this shower was more appropriate for the blue-collar, workmanlike Badgers.
For the first time since 2000, the Badgers are back in the Final Four. They play Kentucky, hotter than Dallas on a summer afternoon, in Saturday's second semifinal.
What Ryan has been methodically building over the past 13 seasons has finally come to fruition, and the result is his first Final Four and a Wisconsin team that is decidedly different from years past.
The program 250 miles southeast of the University of Minnesota is no stranger to success. Rather, Ryan has built a legacy in Madison, taking over a successful Badgers team establishing clockwork-like consistency. In each of his 13 years, he has finished in the top four in the Big Ten and brought the Badgers to the NCAA tournament.
"I just think that these guys that have done it for so long at a high level, that's really what I'm impressed with, " 31-year-old Gophers coach Richard Pitino said. "Because for me, this is Year 2, and I think: Goodness."