St. Louis ? Wayne Simien dropped his gear into a familiar Edward Jones Dome locker stall Thursday afternoon.
“It’s the same one I had two years ago. It feels like I was just here yesterday,” said Simien, Kansas University’s junior power forward.
He’s happy to be back at the site of KU’s first-and second-round victories over Holy Cross and Stanford his freshman season.
“We walked in, nobody had taken it, I remembered it was a good spot and moved in,” added Simien, who insists he’s not the superstitious type.
Simien and his teammates ran through a light, 30-minute shootaround before about 500 fans at the dome, shortly after holding a harder, two-hour practice at Saint Louis University.
“This brings back good memories,” said third-year sophomore Jeff Hawkins of the Jones Dome. “We were able to win two here and (ultimately) advance to the Final Four.”
As far as the background being different in a dome, freshman J.R. Giddens said it was no big deal.
“The court is the same length. I’m pretty sure the shots will go in like regular,” Giddens said.
Freshman David Padgett never has played in a dome.
“The biggest building I played in was Cleveland last year for the McDonald’s game, and I didn’t play (because of injury),” Padgett said of Gund Arena, the home of the NBA’s Cavaliers.
Padgett, who sprained his left ankle at Tuesday’s practice, practiced Thursday and said his ankle was fine.
“I can’t speak for Illinois (which like KU had a coaching change in offseason), but as for ourselves we want to show that a lot of what we accomplished in the past two years was us and not just all what coach Williams did. Granted, he was a big part of that (two Final Fours), and we looked up to him, but we really take pride in how we performed the past couple of years.”
“The only other team I can remember doing that against was Arkansas. When we were at Oral Roberts, we used to practice against seven and eight every time we played Arkansas,” Self said.
Giddens said practices had been especially physical.
“Coach Self told Stephen Vinson, ‘Steve, don’t let him catch it and foul him,'” Giddens said. “I said, ‘How’s that anything different than usual? Steve always fouls.”
Omar Wilkes has been one of the eight defenders.
“If you put eight sixth graders out there, it’d be hard,” Wilkes said. “It will mess you up.”
“I think it’s always good to play in front of your fans,” Graves said. “The fans really like this because we’re not far from Kansas City. I’ll have a lot of family coming in for the game. Hopefully, it’ll be to our advantage.”
“Maybe people I know from Reno,” Padgett said, “but I think their fans are here to cheer for their team, not us.”
“I think we’re all anxious to get out there. Before a game like this, there’s a lot of buildup,” he said. “Once you get out there and start playing, the nervousness goes away.”