Everyone knew how it worked: 68 teams were heading into the NCAA Tournament, college basketball's biggest stage. Thirty-two spots went to conference champions—automatic bids. The other 36? Those were wild cards. The Selection Committee handed them out based on performance, potential, and hype.
Before the actual bracket kicked off, eight of the lower-ranked wild card teams had to scrap it out in the First Four play-in games. The winners joined the other 60 to make up the final 64.
Once that 64 was set, they'd be split across four regions—South, Midwest, West, and East. Each region had 16 teams, seeded 1 through 16. You win, you move on. You lose, you go home.
And the final four teams standing—one from each region—got a shot at the big dance: the Final Four.
March 14, 2009. Selection Sunday.
The NCAA dropped the official bracket, and the buzz hit Davidson's campus like a lightning bolt.
Coach McKillop walked into the gym, bracket sheet in hand, face unreadable.
"We're the No. 2 seed in the South," he said, holding up the paper.
The room went quiet, then burst into a mix of excitement and nerves. No. 2 seed was huge. It meant people believed in them. Davidson wasn't some underdog anymore—they were legit.
But then they saw who the No. 1 seed in their region was.
North Carolina.
Everyone groaned.
"Oh, come on…" someone muttered.
The South Region this year? Straight-up brutal. People were already calling it the Group of Death.
Lin Yi studied the bracket. "Well, at least we won't face North Carolina till the Elite Eight," he said, trying to sound optimistic.
Stephen Curry nodded. "And we avoid Kentucky Wildcats and Gonzaga Bulldogs till then too. But Sweet Sixteen? Probably Syracuse Orange."
"Not gonna lie," Lin added, "our round of 32 matchup might be the toughest. If Harden and Arizona State make it through, we're playing James in round two."
He said it casually, like reading the weather.
Some of the other players, like Anthony Beasley and McMillan, stared at them like they were crazy.
"Hold on," Beasley said. "You're talking about Arizona State and Syracuse like we've already got this first game in the bag."
Syracuse wasn't just some random school. Their alumni included Carmelo freaking Anthony. And this year, they had Jonny Flynn—an explosive point guard with hops like Westbrook and ESPN drooling over his dunks.
And Morgan State, Davidson's first-round opponent? Not exactly pushovers either. They had guys who were NBA-bound too—not working finance gigs or slinging tech out of Silicon Valley like some mid-major squads.
Coach McKillop was about to rally the team and give one of his eye of the tiger speeches, but Lin Yi and Steph were already calm—cooler than anyone else in the room.
"The way I see it," Lin said, "if we want to win it all, we're gonna have to beat the best eventually. Doesn't matter when we play North Carolina, just that we do."
Steph looked around the room, voice serious. "This is it, guys. Last ride for me and Lin. I hate saying it, but if we don't go for it now, there won't be a next time."
His usual playful tone was gone. Every word hit hard.
Everyone knew it was true. Lin and Steph were headed for the NBA. This was their shot—our shot.
No one said anything for a second. Then Beasley gave a nod. McMillan let out a slow breath. The mood had shifted.
Davidson was a school in a small town. But when the team left for Houston, it felt like the whole place came alive. Students signed a massive Wildcats banner, covering it with good luck messages. The cheer squad—who'd screamed themselves hoarse all season—lined the walkways with pom-poms and tears.
And outside? The townspeople showed up. Every last one of them.
They waved and clapped as the team bus rolled out. No one stopped cheering.
Coach McKillop stood in front of the team, voice thick with emotion.
"I don't know if you'll go into coaching or broadcasting, or if this is the last time you'll even touch a basketball," he began. "But I do know how hard you've worked to get here. I know what you've sacrificed."
He looked every player in the eye.
"You've pushed yourselves past your limits. And now you're headed to the biggest stage in college basketball. The entire country will be watching. One day, maybe you'll tell your kids about this moment. Maybe they'll tell their kids."
A pause.
"And if North Carolina is the king of college hoops—" he smiled, just slightly "—then let's go knock the damn crown off their heads."
The team stood still, soaking it all in. Then one by one, their jaws tightened. Their fists clenched.
They were ready.
On the bus, Lin Yi cracked the window open and leaned his head against the frame. The town was getting smaller in the distance.
He nudged Steph. "Hey, look."
Curry looked up, followed Lin Yi's finger—and saw it.
A rainbow stretched across the sky over Davidson.
Maybe it was the morning drizzle still hanging in the air, or just the way the light hit the mist over the hills. Either way, it felt like a sign. A blessing. A promise.
The other players crowded over to look.
Davidson might've been home. But they were chasing something bigger now.
And to reach that place?
They'd have to walk through the storm, climb the hills, and believe—really believe—they belonged.
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