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Best friends Ben McCollum of Drake, Grant McCasland of Texas Tech square off for spot in Sweet 16

Best friends Ben McCollum of Drake, Grant McCasland of Texas Tech square off for spot in Sweet 16
NEWS STARTS WITH BREAKING NEWS. DRAKE MAKES HISTORY IN WICHITA. IT’S A BIG NIGHT. FOR THE FIRST TIME IN MORE THAN 50 YEARS, THE DRAKE MEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM IS ON TO THE SECOND ROUND OF THE NCAA TOURNAMENT AFTER BEATING MISSOURI. GOOD EVENING. THANKS FOR STAYING UP LATE WITH US. I THINK A LOT OF DRAKE FANS ARE JUST STILL RIDING THAT ADRENALINE. WE HAVE TEAM COVERAGE OF ALL THE MARCH MADNESS. WE START, THOUGH, WITH SHANNON EARHART IN WICHITA. FOR MORE ON DRAKE’S BIG WIN. SHANNON. BEN. STACEY. IT WAS A WILD GAME HERE. DRAKE DID PULL THE UPSET. THEY DID WHAT EVERY DRAKE FAN KNEW THEY COULD DO GET IT DONE. AND THEY ADVANCED TO THE SECOND ROUND FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 1971. DRAKE WAS ABLE TO GET IT DONE ON THE DEFENSIVE END BY GETTING STOPS AND THEN CONTROLLING THE PACE THE ENTIRE GAME. THEY SLOWED DOWN A MIZZOU TEAM WHO IS SCORING 84 POINTS A GAME TO JUST 23 POINTS AT HALF. DRAKE LED BY SEVEN POINTS AT HALFTIME AS WELL. THEY WERE ABLE TO GET THOSE STOPS AND THEY WERE UP 15 POINTS IN THE SECOND HALF. BUT MIZZOU DID MAKE IT A ONE POINT GAME WITH 430 LEFT BY GOING 23 OF 26 FROM THE FREE THROW LINE. THE BULLDOGS WOULD PUT TOGETHER A60 RUN AND FINALLY MAKE THEIR FREE THROWS DOWN THE STRETCH. THEY WENT 12 OF 24, BY THE WAY, 50% FROM THE LINE. NOT VERY GOOD, BUT THEY WERE ABLE TO WIN 6757. DRAKE FINISHED THE GAME SHOOTING 53% WITH 23 POINTS OFF TURNOVERS AND OUTREBOUNDED MIZZOU 3126. COACH MAC TOLD US HOW THEY WERE ABLE TO HOLD OFF MIZZOU. I MEAN, WE GOT GOOD PLAYERS. YOU KNOW, I THINK WE GOT GOOD PLAYERS AND THEY EXPECT TO WIN AND THEY EXPECTED TO WIN THAT GAME AND THEY HELD IN THERE DEFENSIVELY WHEN THE RUN WAS GOING. I FELT LIKE THE GAME. I FELT LIKE THE GAME WAS GOING SO SLOW. I MEAN, WE GOT THAT LEAD EARLY IN THE SECOND HALF AND I LOOK UP, IT WAS LIKE THE 16 TO 12 MINUTE. I’M LIKE, IT’S BEEN LIKE 20 MINUTES AND WE PLAYED FOUR MINUTES. SO FOR IT TO FINALLY GO OFF AND FOR FOR EVERYTHING WE’VE DONE IN THE GAME TO TO COME OUT WITH A W, IT WAS NICE. I’M NOT GOING TO LET IT SET IN BECAUSE IT’S LIKE JUST ANOTHER GAME. YOU GOT YOU GOT TO KEEP IT. YOU GOT TO KEEP THE COMPOSURE. YOU GOT TO JUST HAVE THAT SAME MINDSET WITH EVERY SINGLE GAME. DRAKE’S 31 VICTORIES ON THE SEASON IS TIED FOR MOST IN THE COUNTRY, WITH DUKE AND HOUSTON. THAT IS PRETTY GOOD COMPANY. A VERY IMPRESSIVE WIN FROM DRAKE OVER MIZZOU. AGAIN, A TEN POINT WIN, 6757. THE FINAL. NOW DRAKE WILL GET THE WINNER OF UNC WILMINGTON AND TEXAS TECH WHO ARE PLAYING RIGHT NOW. TEXAS TECH WAS UP FOUR POINTS LAST TIME THAT I CHECKED BY PHOTOGRAPHERS SAYING FIVE POINTS. NOW WE’LL HAVE MORE ON THAT GAME LATER. PLUS HEAR FROM MORE OF THE PLAYERS AFTER THIS HISTORIC WIN FROM DRAKE. I’M L
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Best friends Ben McCollum of Drake, Grant McCasland of Texas Tech square off for spot in Sweet 16
The coaching fraternity is much closer than most people realize. Friendships are formed and relationships kept through all the hirings and firings, and paths cross and cross again as coaches climb and fall on the professional ladder.Every once in a while, they cross on a stage so big that everybody notices.So it will be on Saturday night, when Grant McCasland leads third-seeded Texas Tech against Ben McCollum and his team full of Division II transfers from No. 11 seed Drake. At stake for the best friends: a spot in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament."It's just like playing pick-up with your teammates," McCollum said after beating No. 6 seed Missouri in the first round. "When you're playing pick-up, sometimes you kind of get after each other a little bit, but afterwards it's all love."The 48-year-old McCasland certainly is no stranger to facing familiar faces. The Red Raiders play Big 12 games against his alma mater, Baylor, where he spent five years on the staff of longtime coach Scott Drew. And they regularly play Kansas State, which is coached by Jerome Tang, who was on that staff in Waco, Texas, at the same time.Yet his friendship with the 43-year-old McCollum goes back even farther, way back to their very origins in coaching.It was the early 2000s and McCasland had just been hired for his first real job, as an assistant at Northeastern Junior College in Sterling, Colorado, where the pay was so modest he felt fortunate to live in the dorms. It was there that McCasland came across Jeff Linder, an assistant at Emporia State, a Division II school in Kansas, who was recruiting some of his guys.Linder, by the way, is now an assistant on McCasland's staff at Texas Tech.WATCH: Drake's Division II transfers are proving they can win in March MadnessSo fast-forward a couple of years and McCasland gets his first head-coaching job at Midland, a junior college in Texas. One of his first calls was to Linder, who joined his staff, and together they went to the national tournament their first year.The guy that replaced Linder at Emporia State: Ben McCollum, a young man happy to land a first full-time job of his own.The three of them grew close — they were all just starting out, after all. They'd spend hours discussing offensive and defensive strategy, and how to build a winning culture. They leaned on each other when times got hard and applauded every success."We were young," McCasland said, "and we didn't make any money, and we all loved ball. We loved being around each other."McCasland eventually got the head job at North Texas, the one he parlayed into his current position at Texas Tech, and McCollum got his shot as a head coach at Northwest Missouri State, which he quickly turned into a Division II juggernaut. But even as their professional paths diverged, their personal relationship only grew closer through the years.Their families get together in offseasons. They call each other up when they're in a rut. They go trout fishing together.McCasland remembers one year at North Texas that he thought his team had a pretty good offense. It was the nation's No. 1 team when it came to scoring out of timeouts. He had installed some creative movements, and McCasland was proud of it."Ben watched film of our team," he recalled, "and straight-up told me our offense sucked.""You know, that's the kind of relationship we have," continued McCasland, who on at least one occasion tried to hire McCollum to his staff. "I love him, but you know, when you play him, it's going to be different."WATCH: Griff benched by NCAA: Fans rally for Drake's beloved mascot to join March Madness funMcCasland may have missed his chance to hire him, by the way.In McCollum's first year leading the Bulldogs, and with a team relying heavily on the four transfers he brought with him from Northwest Missouri State, McCollum has already set a school record with 31 wins. They won Missouri Valley regular- and postseason titles, snapped a four-game losing streak in NCAA Tournament first-round games, and on Saturday, McCollum will be trying to get Drake to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1971.Not surprisingly, his name has been linked to just about every coaching vacancy in the game. One in particular keeps surfacing: Iowa. He was born in Iowa City, in the shadows of the university, and grew up in the small western Iowa town of Storm Lake. He spent a stint playing ball at North Iowa Area Community College.McCollum batted back any talk of other jobs this week. He insisted that his only focus is on what Drake is doing right now.Right now, the Bulldogs are getting ready to play his old friend and his Red Raiders in the NCAA Tournament."We'll always be friends," McCasland said, "but tomorrow, I guess, it will be on."

The coaching fraternity is much closer than most people realize. Friendships are formed and relationships kept through all the hirings and firings, and paths cross and cross again as coaches climb and fall on the professional ladder.

Every once in a while, they cross on a stage so big that everybody notices.

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So it will be on Saturday night, when Grant McCasland leads third-seeded Texas Tech against Ben McCollum and his team full of Division II transfers from No. 11 seed Drake. At stake for the best friends: a spot in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament.

"It's just like playing pick-up with your teammates," McCollum said after beating No. 6 seed Missouri in the first round. "When you're playing pick-up, sometimes you kind of get after each other a little bit, but afterwards it's all love."

The 48-year-old McCasland certainly is no stranger to facing familiar faces. The Red Raiders play Big 12 games against his alma mater, Baylor, where he spent five years on the staff of longtime coach Scott Drew. And they regularly play Kansas State, which is coached by Jerome Tang, who was on that staff in Waco, Texas, at the same time.

Yet his friendship with the 43-year-old McCollum goes back even farther, way back to their very origins in coaching.

It was the early 2000s and McCasland had just been hired for his first real job, as an assistant at Northeastern Junior College in Sterling, Colorado, where the pay was so modest he felt fortunate to live in the dorms. It was there that McCasland came across Jeff Linder, an assistant at Emporia State, a Division II school in Kansas, who was recruiting some of his guys.

Linder, by the way, is now an assistant on McCasland's staff at Texas Tech.

WATCH: Drake's Division II transfers are proving they can win in March Madness

So fast-forward a couple of years and McCasland gets his first head-coaching job at Midland, a junior college in Texas. One of his first calls was to Linder, who joined his staff, and together they went to the national tournament their first year.

The guy that replaced Linder at Emporia State: Ben McCollum, a young man happy to land a first full-time job of his own.

The three of them grew close — they were all just starting out, after all. They'd spend hours discussing offensive and defensive strategy, and how to build a winning culture. They leaned on each other when times got hard and applauded every success.

"We were young," McCasland said, "and we didn't make any money, and we all loved ball. We loved being around each other."

McCasland eventually got the head job at North Texas, the one he parlayed into his current position at Texas Tech, and McCollum got his shot as a head coach at Northwest Missouri State, which he quickly turned into a Division II juggernaut. But even as their professional paths diverged, their personal relationship only grew closer through the years.

Their families get together in offseasons. They call each other up when they're in a rut. They go trout fishing together.

McCasland remembers one year at North Texas that he thought his team had a pretty good offense. It was the nation's No. 1 team when it came to scoring out of timeouts. He had installed some creative movements, and McCasland was proud of it.

"Ben watched film of our team," he recalled, "and straight-up told me our offense sucked."

"You know, that's the kind of relationship we have," continued McCasland, who on at least one occasion tried to hire McCollum to his staff. "I love him, but you know, when you play him, it's going to be different."

WATCH: Griff benched by NCAA: Fans rally for Drake's beloved mascot to join March Madness fun

McCasland may have missed his chance to hire him, by the way.

In McCollum's first year leading the Bulldogs, and with a team relying heavily on the four transfers he brought with him from Northwest Missouri State, McCollum has already set a school record with 31 wins. They won Missouri Valley regular- and postseason titles, snapped a four-game losing streak in NCAA Tournament first-round games, and on Saturday, McCollum will be trying to get Drake to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1971.

Not surprisingly, his name has been linked to just about every coaching vacancy in the game. One in particular keeps surfacing: Iowa. He was born in Iowa City, in the shadows of the university, and grew up in the small western Iowa town of Storm Lake. He spent a stint playing ball at North Iowa Area Community College.

McCollum batted back any talk of other jobs this week. He insisted that his only focus is on what Drake is doing right now.

Right now, the Bulldogs are getting ready to play his old friend and his Red Raiders in the NCAA Tournament.

"We'll always be friends," McCasland said, "but tomorrow, I guess, it will be on."