Could BYU win NCAA basketball title? Here’s one coach who thinks so


Blaine Fowler and I have been announcing BYU games for over three decades for KSL-TV, SportsWest, Blue and White Network, BYUtv and now ESPN+. We have seen and heard a lot of things over the years, but what Bellarmine head coach Scott Davenport said after Friday’s 101-59 loss to No. 17 BYU at the Marriott Center was a first.

“You might think I’m crazy, but that’s a team that could win the national championship. Mark it down, on Dec. 22, I’m saying it right now, that team could win it all.” — Bellarmine coach Scott Davenport

“You might think I’m crazy, but that’s a team that could win the national championship,” Davenport said of the 11-1 Cougars. “Mark it down, on Dec. 22, I’m saying it right now, that team could win it all.”

Davenport had just finished his postgame radio show when we walked over to wish him a Merry Christmas and safe travels home to Louisville, Kentucky. As with each opposing coach, we spent time with him as part of our pregame preparation and occasionally we get together for a follow-up after the game.

Davenport continued.

“They have everything you need, and their best players (Fousseyni Traore and Jaxson Robinson) didn’t even play,” he said. “I know they had the Utah loss, but never mind that one. Some nights the ball doesn’t go in the basket. But I’m telling you, in my opinion, that team has everything you need to win it all.”

BYU throttled the Knights with six players scoring in double figures, including a bench that produced 44 points. The nation’s leading 3-point shooting team nailed 16 long balls. The nation’s leading assist-to-turnover-ratio team handed out 30 assists to nine turnovers (three after halftime).

“I’ve seen these kinds of teams,” Davenport said. “Just like with Kansas and San Diego State the last couple of years, they are so experienced, they are deep, they rebound, they play defense, they share the basketball, and they can all shoot.”

BYU was Bellarmine’s sixth and final Power Five opponent this year. The Knights, who are in their third season as a Division I program, went 0-6. They were defeated at Washington (by 34 points), at Kansas State (8), at West Virginia (4), at Louisville (5), at Utah (42) and in Provo (42).

Davenport is in his 19th season at Bellarmine. His 417 victories make him the winningest coach in program history. The former Rick Pitino assistant at Louisville won the Division II national championship in 2011. In the Knights’ second season at the D-I level, he coached them to the Atlantic Sun Conference tournament championship.

He’s seen a lot of basketball teams, and he is free with his opinions. For a BYU program that hasn’t ever made it to the Final Four, Davenport’s self-projection of the Cougars’ NCAA potential raised a few eyebrows. But just as a pessimist has a right to declare a glass…

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Read More: Could BYU win NCAA basketball title? Here’s one coach who thinks so 2023-12-23 20:49:00

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