When Hubert Davis returned nearly his entire North Carolina national runner-up basketball team from last season, that helped to end a drought that was nearly 30 years old.
Davis, who took over for Hall of Famer Roy Williams at his alma mater last year, is the first Black men's college basketball coach to lead an Associated Press preseason No. 1 team since Arkansas' Nolan Richardson in 1995.
Yes, you read that correctly. No Black coach had entered the men's college hoops season with a team favored to win the NCAA title in almost three decades. Davis joins South Carolina's Dawn Staley on the women's side as Black coaches for the top teams in their game to open the season.
Davis, who fell to Kansas last season in New Orleans, came so close to being the first Black coach to be crowned NCAA men's hoops champion since Kevin Ollie at Connecticut in 2014.
"We were one rebound away from winning the national championship," Davis said at ACC media day. "The hard work and the preparation, the practice that had to be put into place to put ourselves in position to do that. It's the same approach this year."
Davis isn't alone. Ranked No. 3 in both preseason polls is Houston, coached by Kelvin Sampson. Indiana's Mike Woodson and Michigan's Juwan Howard also enter the season with two of the Big Ten's top contenders. The odds haven't been this good in years to have a men's coach of color win it all.
Early hype doesn't matter to Sampson, who opened Monday night with his 700th career win.
"November basketball is nothing like January basketball or February basketball," Sampson told reporters after beating Northern Colorado. "We have got a lot of work to do, and we are a long way away from being as good as we can be."