Cowboys loving trip to NCAAs

? No two-hour bus ride over Oklahoma’s flat, scruffy landscape to reach the airport, followed by another two-hour ride after touchdown to complete the odyssey and make it to the gym for tipoff.

Direct flight? Sweet!

“It’s very different,” Oklahoma State guard Byron Eaton said Thursday, still taken aback by the Cowboys’ no-hassle trip to the University of Dayton Arena. “We were able to fly out of our own airport in Stillwater. Things are better when you make it to the NCAA Tournament.”

Forgive the Cowboys. It’s been awhile since they’ve done anything like this, and that’s one of coach Travis Ford’s biggest concerns as they get ready to play Tennessee — an NCAA frequent flyer — in the first round today. It’s tough to act like you’ve been there when you haven’t.

Oklahoma State (22-11) hasn’t been in the tournament since 2005, when the Cowboys reached the round of 16 under coach Eddie Sutton a year after making it to the Final Four. The Cowboys were becoming entrenched as a national power — or so it seemed.

They were about to make a U-turn.

Sutton’s career at the school ended after he got into an accident in February 2006. He later pleaded no contest to misdemeanor aggravated drunken driving and two other charges. His son, Sean, took over the program but couldn’t get it back into the tournament. Recruits turned away. The program’s profile slumped.

Oklahoma State became a mainstay in the NIT, going to that tournament three straight seasons and losing in the first round each time. One of the low points was the trip that Eaton remembers last season — a bus ride from Stillwater to Oklahoma City, a flight to St. Louis, another bus ride to Carbondale, Ill., a 16-point loss to Southern Illinois.

Think the trip back was much fun?

Maybe that’s why Ford’s players were still giddy when they took the court Monday in Stillwater to start getting ready for the NCAA Tournament — heady stuff for a team more accustomed to Carbondale. The first-year coach had to stop practice and start it over.

“We told them, ‘You’re just having fun in practice today,”‘ Ford said. “And we had to refocus them and make them understand that yes, you should feel proud of yourself; yes, you should be excited; yes, this is a great accomplishment. But that’s over with. You’ve made it. Now we have to move on from this.”