Purdue, Jaden Ivey await Ivy League champion Yale

Iowa Hawkeyes forward Josh Ogundele (23) jumps up as Purdue Boilermakers guard Jaden Ivey (23) shoots during the second half of the Big Ten championship title game Sunday, March 13, 2022, at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. Iowa won, 75-66.

Iowa Hawkeyes Versus Purdue Boilermakers In Big Ten Men S Championship Title Game On Sunday March 13 2022 At Gainbridge Fieldhouse In Indianapolis

Credit: Jenna Watson/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK

The voice of tournament experience loudly reminds third-seeded Purdue not to overlook No. 14 seed Yale in the first round of the East Regional on Friday in Milwaukee.

Purdue was a No. 4 seed last season in the NCAA Tournament when it was upset 78-69 in overtime in the opener by No. 13 seed North Texas. In 2016, the fifth-seeded Boilermakers lost in double overtime 85-83 in the first round to 12th-seeded Little Rock.

“A lot of times people look at when you get upset by somebody that you didn’t respect them and I thought both times we got beat by Little Rock and got beat by North Texas, I thought our players really respected them,” Purdue coach Matt Painter said. “That just wasn’t it, we just got beat. They played better than us.”

Purdue (27-7), ranked No. 1 in the country in early December, came up a game short in both the Big Ten regular season and the conference tournament. The Boilermakers lost to Iowa 75-66 in the tournament title game, and dropped two of their final three regular-season games to finish a game behind co-champs Illinois and Wisconsin.

Yale (19-11) earned its third NCAA bid in the past seven years with a 66-64 victory over top-seeded Princeton in the Ivy League tournament final. In 2016, the 12th-seeded Bulldogs topped No. 5 Baylor in the first round before losing to fourth-seeded Duke 71-64. As a No. 14 seed in 2019, Yale lost in the first round by five points to third-seeded LSU.

Jaden Ivey leads the Boilermakers in scoring at 17.3 points per game. Zach Edey, a 7-4 sophomore center, averages 14.7 points and 7.7 rebounds in 19.1 minutes per game. Trevion Williams adds 11.6 points and 7.4 rebounds.

Purdue committed 17 turnovers against Iowa, leading to 14 points for the Hawkeyes.

Yale, which allows 68.8 points per game, also forces 13.2 turnovers per contest.

The Bulldogs are led by fifth-year senior Azar Swain, who averages 19.2 points, and Jalen Gabbidon with 11.6. Swain, the Ivy League tourney MVP, scored 23 points and Bez Mbeng added 13 points and 11 rebounds in the win over Princeton.

The Bulldogs were supposed to be in the 2020 tournament, which was canceled. The Ivy League canceled its 2020-21 season.

“It’s always exciting to see your team’s name pop up on the screen,” Yale coach James Jones told the Yale News after the announcement. “It doesn’t really matter who the other team is.”

Jones, who is Yale’s all-time winningest coach with 352 victories in his 23 seasons, also coached Purdue’s Ivey and Caleb Furst last summer as an assistant with the U.S. Under-19 team that won the World Cup.

Yale was 6-8 in a rugged non-conference schedule, including an 80-44 early-season loss at Seton Hall, and an 86-64 loss at Auburn.

“I know Coach Jones and he’s an excellent coach,” Painter said. “We were watching them — obviously I was writing on the board before this game and that game was on, so I was watching them that last three minutes of the game and they have a good team, man. Everybody earns their way in this one.”

The winner of Purdue-Yale will face the winner of sixth-seeded Texas and No. 11 seed Virginia Tech on Sunday.

–Field Level Media

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