Kevin Young makes a splash in NCAA Tournament debut

The first-year BYU coach had his Cougars dialed in and focused during impressive win over VCU

Hand it to BYU’s rookie coach Kevin Young. He broke a five-game BYU losing streak in the NCAA Tournament for the No. 6 seed Cougars with a convincing 80-71 East Regional first-round win over No. 11 seed VCU on Thursday in Denver.

The win gave BYU win No. 25 on the season, the most by a first-year coach in program history.

And none of the previous coaches played a schedule as difficult nor in a league as tough as Young did.

This is the program’s first trip to the round of 32 since 2011 when Jimmer Fredette hit shots from the ocean all season. Young surpassed Mark Pope in career NCAA Tournament wins on Thursday.

He did it with a lot of tools.

He did it with schemes. He had depth.

He seemingly shrugged off what conspiracy theorists say the NCAA Selection Committee does to BYU because of no Sunday play — picking a first-round opponent to face the Cougars that excels at a BYU weakness (fighting off physical guard play). VCU was that kind of team and Young and his players made that point moot.

VCU is no Houston.

BYU is the first team to score 80 on VCU’s defense this season. And the Cougars weren’t scoring field goals — most free throws — in the final minutes.

He did it with a team prepared to win, mentally and physically. He used depth and he got his key players to step up, including freshman Egor Demin (15 points).

Young found a myriad of ways to win. His zone defense stymied VCU’s offense and for most of the game his pressure on Atlantic 10 player of the year Max Shulga (12 points) was effective. While that zone served up some VCU 3s, it completely took away the Rams’ inside attack.

But more than anything, Young found a way to push through VCU’s machete hack defense.

That kind of defense killed the Cougars at Providence and twice against Houston this season. It sent the Cougars out of the NCAA first round last year with Mark Pope when Duquesne deployed the put-welts-on-BYU-dribblers technique.

VCU tried it.

And failed.

This is exactly what BYU needed — a solid win — heading into Saturday’s game with No. 3 seed Wisconsin.

Yes, Young, his staff and players deserve credit for dialing it in against defensive-minded VCU.

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