SAN ANTONIO – Two years ago, Jalen Brunson was a starter on Villanova's national championship team.
Brunson wasn't the best point guard, let alone best player in the game that night in the Wildcats' victory over North Carolina.
This time around, Brunson will most likely be the guy if his team cuts down the nets again at the Final Four. His patience to keep developing as a player over the last two seasons has paid off for the Wildcats.
Entering Saturday's national semifinal against fellow No. 1 seed Kansas, the 6-3 junior is trying to be the first national player of the year to lead his team to an NCAA title since Kentucky's Anthony Davis in 2012.
"I think the experience of a couple years ago has definitely helped," Brunson said. "Just going through it once and being able to come back here is definitely an honor and a blessing."
His 700-plus points this season makes Brunson the best Villanova scorer since Kerry Kittles in 1994-95. He's also been the orchestrator of the nation's most prolific offense, but he wasn't considered the frontrunner for college player of the year honors until later in the season.
Like Davis did for Kentucky six years ago, college hoops observers expected star freshmen such as Oklahoma's Trae Young, Arizona's Deandre Ayton or Duke's Marvin Bagley III to be named the best player in the country.
The thing Young, Bagley and Ayton have in common besides being one-and-done is they all have lost in the NCAA tournament. Brunson stuck around in college, for not one but two years after his freshman season.