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NCAA MEN'S 2ND & 3RD ROUNDS: JACKSONVILLE


March 18, 2015


Tommy Amaker

Siyani Chambers

Steve Moundou-Missi

Wesley Saunders

Jonah Travis


JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA

Q. If any of you guys would like to field this, and this is a fun question, but after the winter you guys had, can you describe what it was like to step off the plane into this kind of weather? And did the winter in any way adversely affect practices, things like that, for you guys?
SIYANI CHAMBERS: It felt good to come out and come down here and be able to wear shorts. We haven't been able to do that a lot. A few times we had to move practice back or even cancel practice because of the snow. We had a few mishaps with that.

STEVE MOUNDOUMISSI: Like he said, it felt good. Obviously Boston is not warm, it's not Florida, but we want to make sure this is not a vacation trip and take our business tomorrow and today.

WESLEY SAUNDERS: Yeah, we got off the plane, we were able to walk on the beach a little bit, and it was just great to be in the sun. Being a California guy, LA guy, reminded me a little bit of being back home, and yeah, like they said, we had some troubles with practice, but it's still a business trip coming down here, and we're hoping to take care of business.

JONAH TRAVIS: Yeah, it was nice to be in places with airconditioning for the first time in a long time. We had school canceled a couple days, which was nice, but of course we couldn't practice during them. But other than that, we're ready to get started.

Q. Wes, I'm just curious, what was Coach Amaker's reaction when you were paired with North Carolina and what do you think this means to him as a Duke guy?
WESLEY SAUNDERS: Yeah, I mean, obviously Coach Amaker has a lot of history with UNC, obviously going to Duke. And so I wasn't really aware of his reaction when we first got the selection, but I know that he's looking forward to the opportunity to play against UNC again, and I'm sure he's having some flashbacks and it's kind of nostalgic for him to be matched up against UNC.

Q. For everybody except Steve, can you explain to me how he manages to fly so far under the radar? He seems like the quietest, but plays a big role in your defense, and then what he does mean as a captain when he does speak?
SIYANI CHAMBERS: Steve doesn't really say much. He leads by his play. He lets his play do his talking, and like you said, he doesn't talk that much. So since he doesn't talk that much, when he does talk it's very profound and everybody listens and takes it to heart?

Q. Siyani, just your impressions of Marcus Paige?
SIYANI CHAMBERS: He's a great point guard. I've been playing against him for a long time. We lived pretty close to each other. We grew up in the same location. We've grown up in the same location. He grew up Iowa and I grew up in Minnesota, so our teams crossed paths a lot. He's a great playmaker and a great shot maker. He runs this team very well and I'm looking forward to the matchup, and so is everybody else on this team. It's going to be a lot of guys guarding him, and we're going to do our best to try to contain him as much as possible.

Q. Fellows on the teleconference, you said to have at chance at North Carolina defense and take care of the ball were two of the main things. I'm wondering, does it also enter into the reason why some teams  some 12, 13, 14 seeds pull off some upsets in the NCAAs because you've got some seniors, you've got some guys who have been playing together for three and four years. Just how much does that matter in a game like this?
JONAH TRAVIS: I think it like definitely factors in. You look at a team like Mercer last year against Duke, and although they didn't have the most talented guys you would say, but they definitely had senior leadership and the right pieces together that were accumulated over a number of years that were able to allow them to be successful. And I think we have that in the room, which has helped us throughout the entire season.

Q. I'm curious as a senior, the Ivy League has changed a lot the last two, five, ten years, and Harvard's sort of emergence has been a big part of that. How have you seen the league change from when you were being recruited to where you are now?
JONAH TRAVIS: Just definitely kind of the feel that kind of the shift in power that we've had now. We feel like we're definitely the big dog on campus. We're at the top of the mountain as we have been for a couple years, and it's something we don't take lightly and something we've really worked hard for, and also Yale's emergence throughout the years, to become one of our premier rivalries. In years past it's been Princeton and Penn, and now it's shifted to a great rivalry with Yale. I think that's the most noticeable shift I've seen.

COACH TOMMY AMAKER: Well, obviously we're incredibly excited about this opportunity for our basketball team, a wonderful year for our club. We're pleased to represent our wonderful institution and the Ivy League Conference. We recognize the challenge in front of us with the UNC Tar Heels and how terrific and great they are. They always have been. But our kids are excited to be here. We're very hopeful that we'll play in a manner that's deserving of being in this great tournament.

Q. How do you focus on controlling the pace of the game and the tempo that it's played at?
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: Well, I think the tempo, and you can think about it in a couple different ways. The one that we're going to try to do, obviously, is being able to take care of the basketball. Tempo can change based on turnovers and bad shots, so if we can be efficient offensively, we like the chances of doing a much better job of managing the game.

Q. You talked on Marcus Paige a little bit yesterday but can you elaborate a little bit more on him?
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: He's an outstanding, complete basketball player that plays the backcourt. He plays the 1, plays the 2. He's crafty. He's dynamic shooter and scorer, I should say. He's a kid that I think has played exceptionally well in bigger games for their program and has a knack for  coming up big in the second half is what he's done in the past. We're going to do our best to see if we can limit great opportunities for him, but they do a lot of things to create shots for him, and he's a bigtime scorer and a bigtime shot maker and a preseason AllAmerican, a preseason Player of the Year candidate, so I think that tells you the quality of the player that he really is.

Q. Your players said none of them could see your reaction when UNC came up in the bracket with you guys 
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: That's a good thing.

Q. Given your personal history, what was your reaction?
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: I mean, I think we were looking in that range of the seeds, in terms of us being a 12 or 13 or 14, whatever the seeds are as you kind of go around the brackets. We were aware that we could be in those areas when those higher seeds were announced or unveiled. And certainly, the location was something that we were kind of intrigued about since we were so  we've been shipped out in the past and gone far. So I think we were very hopeful for maybe a closer opportunity to our school and more of our fan base. But then seeing that the Carolina Tar Heels, that's who we were matched with, that's good news and bad news. Good news that we're actually in and here's our moment. And the bad news is, boy, this is who we have to play. So for me, thinking about how terrific and great they are and they always have been, it wasn't necessarily a very pleasant thought internally when I saw the actual draw.

Q. Without giving away state secrets, what are you going to try to do with your 45 minutes on the floor right now?
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: You know, we've always just tried to get accustomed to the facility, to the arena, for our guys to get a lot of shots up, handle the basketball, go up and down a little bit, but just having a familiarity with the place we're going to play. That's the main thing I think most teams try to do when you get a short period of time in the facility that you're going to play, get some shots up, and hopefully feel comfortable in the environment.

Q. Tommy, other than the fact that you're playing a highly seeded team that's going to be very difficult to play, is there anything special about playing Carolina for you and having your history at Duke?
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: You know, and I try to  honestly keeping my history out of it. It's not about me. It certainly is about what these kids have accomplished in our program and what we've done over the last number of years and how excited I am for them. But certainly they recognize, and we all do, the history and the tradition and the greatness of Carolina basketball, and so anything with me is really irrelevant. I'm really, really pleased for our school. We're pleased that we are representing our conference, and we have been able to do that for a number of years now, and we're hopeful that we will play well to showcase Ivy basketball.

Q. Going back to your days at WT, when you were being recruited, did you consider Carolina, and did Roy Williams, was he a part of the recruitment if you did?
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: You know, that's a long time ago to try to remember, first of all, but no, I wasn't. I was recruited by a few ACC schools, and my counterpart during that time was a good friend then and is still a good friend now, Kenny Smith was the guard that went to UNC. There was a lot of guards that were picking ACC schools, whether it was Keith Gatlin at Maryland, I was recruited by Maryland, I was recruited by a few other ACC schools, but not necessarily UNC.

Q. The obvious caveat that you and Harvard instigated a lot of the change, what do you is the biggest change in Ivy League basketball since you arrived in the league?
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: Well, I think we're seeing great depth in our conference. I think through the years, Penn and Princeton have dominated Ivy basketball and have had great teams and terrific traditions. I think what we're seeing now is that you're seeing a league that has evolved and becoming an outstanding basketball conference. I think when you see postseason play last year, teams winning outside of our league, challenging games within our league on each and every day and every night. We play a schedule that we play Friday and Saturday, so that second night is a bear for everybody in our conference. I just think you're seeing a league that's very balanced, very challenging. You're seeing teams that are playing at a high level, not only within our league but certainly outside of our league. And maybe that was done to a certain degree in the past, but I think it was certainly thought of as a twohorse race with Penn and Princeton. I think now you're obviously seeing Ivy basketball taking a step forward with everyone.

Q. Having been here before, is there any advantage or is there anything to not only having been here before but having won here before, or is each year its own entity?
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: I think each year can certainly stand on its own merit, but there's nothing that can replace, in my opinion, a confidence factor of having done it before. I think that's obvious, and we certainly have that, and we're proud of that. That's not going to necessarily help us rebound the ball against Carolina tomorrow, but I do think the fact that our kids, we have a veteran team, many of our players have had experience in the tournament, have had success and experience in the tournament. We're hopeful to draw on that. We're hopeful that that will serve us well in those moments where we're going to be challenged greatly.

Q. Obviously Wesley took over in the second half of the Yale game last week, and you want to see that, but is that sort of a doubleedged sword when you want your offense to get going, especially in a tournament game when you don't necessarily want it to come from one source?
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: Well, we certainly, as you mentioned, we needed that from Wesley in that playoff game, and how he put us on his back, and he's capable of that. We trust Wesley. We want the ball in his hands. We want him to make plays for us, and as we've said before, we trust his decision with that. There will be many times where the decision is  the opportunity is for himself, and I thought he made really good decisions in the game against Yale, in that playoff game, and certainly came through for us. We're best when we have balance, but there are times and stretches of a game and certainly a stretch of a season where certain players kind of emerge, and we'll take off. And certainly if that's Wesley for us, usually that's a very good thing because he is a play maker and not just a scorer.

Q. Coach, when you spoke with Coach K last night on the phone, what was the scouting report about the Tar Heels from Coach K, because I'm assuming you talked to him?
COACH TOMMY AMAKER: I was going to say you're making a big assumption there. We certainly, as I said earlier to someone else that asked about that, they have their own agenda and being a No. 1 seed, and they're certainly swamped with their thoughts of trying to do well in the tournament, get to the next stage of it. We were just going to congratulate each other on a great season. They have their scouting to do, we have ours. We're not trying to share thoughts in that regard, but certainly our staff will do its job in trying to get prepared for Carolina, and we have enough  they have enough on their plate, we have enough on ours. But thank you.
FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports
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