Sports

Loyola New Orleans men’s basketball caps banner year by winning NAIA championship  

Cameron Dumas, 13, and the Loyola Wolfpack hoist the NAIA championship trophy Tuesday night at Municipal Auditorium after defeating Talladega, 71-56. The title is the Wolfpack’s second NAIA championship.
Cameron Dumas, 13, and the Loyola Wolfpack hoist the NAIA championship trophy Tuesday night at Municipal Auditorium after defeating Talladega, 71-56. The title is the Wolfpack’s second NAIA championship. MSH Visual

Loyola of New Orleans, a team without a home gymnasium for much of the season, has a new banner to hang in the rafters of its renovated arena.

The No. 1 overall seed Wolf Pack blew past second-seeded Talladega (Alabama) 71-56 and claimed the 84th NAIA men’s basketball championship on Tuesday night in a meeting between Southern States Athletic Conference rivals at Municipal Auditorium.

The effects of Hurricane Ida last summer damaged the Wolf Pack’s cozy home, known as The Den, forcing the team to spend preseason camp in Dallas, practice at odd hours on other courts in town, including a portable court installed in The Den that broke down.

Loyola played five early-season home games as well as the first two rounds of the NAIA Tournament at Tulane University, but little could keep the Wolf Pack from producing a 37-1 record, including wins in all four meetings with Talladega, 32-6.

The Wolf Pack claimed the school’s second NAIA Tournament championship — and first since 1945, when it was the NAIB Tournament — a title commemorated by an aging banner high above the new court installed in The Den.

“It built a type of chemistry for us,” said forward Myles Burns, who scored 17 points and had 17 rebounds for his 13th double double of the season and was voted the tournament’s Most Valuable Player. “When you deal with stuff like that you’ve got to come together.

“Guys were connecting with each other and tried to get workouts wherever we could. I don’t think we could do what we did this year without that.”

Loyola’s first three victories over Talladega, including the conference tournament final, were decided by 10, 6 and 8 points (in overtime). But Loyola took control of this one early, and except for a spurt in the second half by Talladega, which was missing suspended point guard Cam Potts, the Wolf Pack was not seriously threatened.

”They were missing a key guy,” said Loyola coach Stacy Hollowell. “Cameron Potts is an unbelievable player. But our kids have an unbelievable amount of passion. You can’t quantify passion. You can judge skill levels … can’t dribble, can’t shoot, whatever. But if you have kids who play with passion, you have something special.

”Not one of them was selfish. Everyone bought into what we wanted to do.”

Talladega coach Chris Wright did not use the absence of Potts, who was sent home after an altercation on the bench in Monday’s semifinal, as an excuse for his team falling short to Loyola again.

“Loyola is really good, I said all season they were the best team in the country,” Wright said. “We were 32-2 against teams that were not named Loyola and 0-4 against them. They just out-toughed us tonight.”

Talladega, playing in its first NAIA title game and seeking to become the first Historically Black College and University program to win the championship since Texas Southern in 1977, made a second-half run at the Wolf Pack, going from a 19-point deficit to 50-45 after a pair of three-pointers by Markel Williams and Darryl Baker.

But the Wolf Pack answered with a tip-in by Burns, a three-pointer by Brandon Davis, and a steal and slam by Zach Wrightsil, rebuilding Loyola’s lead to 57-45 with 6 minutes, 17 seconds to play.

Wrightsil, a 6-7 senior and five-time SSAC Player of the Year, sparked the Wolf Pack with 19 points, 12 rebounds and four assists. Both he and Burns have opportunities to return next year and add another banner at Loyola, though both were non-committal afterward.

“No comment,” Burns said, with a big smile on his face.

Talladega was led in scoring by Baker, with 22 points.

This story was originally published March 22, 2022 at 10:46 PM.

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