BUFFALO, N.Y. — A.J. Graves can't grow any wider or taller, and the junior point guard doesn't believe Butler will ever shed its mid-major label.
But boy, can the Bulldogs pull off a surprise or two once they get into the NCAA tournament.
Goodbye, Maryland. Welcome back, Butler: the tiny Indiana school that clinched its second trip to the round of 16 in four years with a 62-59 win over the Terrapins on Saturday.
Graves led the way, scoring 19 points, including a crucial 3-point basket with 2:09 left.
"Man, it was amazing," said Graves, who's generously listed at 6-foot-1. "To be put in a position like that to make a big play and to have teammates backing up and supporting you, it was just an amazing feeling."
Butler (29-6), the No. 5 seed in the Midwest Regional, advances to St. Louis next week and improved their record to 7-6 in seven tournament appearances — six since 1997.
"I think we've proven we can play with anybody," added forward Brandon Crone, who scored 13 points. "This means everything."
Maryland (25-9), making its first tournament appearance since 2004, has not advanced past the second round since 2003. The Terps were undone by an aggressive and smaller team, which kept their offense out of rhythm.
Graves in particular outplayed Maryland star swingman, D.J. Strawberry, who failed to score a point in the first half and finished with eight.
Mike Jones led Maryland with 21 points, but they had only one other player — James Gist with 13 — in double-digits. That's unusual for a team that entered the game averaging nearly 80 points.
"We had good looks in the first half and couldn't score," Gist said. "We knew we made some mistakes, and some of those mistakes cost us the game."