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East final matches experienced Villanova vs Elite 8 newcomer Texas Tech

A technician watches a monitor as Texas Tech coach Chris Beard speaks during a news conference at the NCAA men's college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 24, 2018, in Boston. Texas Tech faces Villanova in a regional final on Sunday. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

Boston • When Villanova coach Jay Wright talks to his players about the Wildcats’ 2016 national championship, he wants them to remember what it felt like before they took the court, not after they cut down the nets.

“There’s a certain hunger when you’ve never been there that can elevate you, too, that you just want it so bad,” he said on Saturday as he prepared to play Elite Eight newcomer Texas Tech for a spot in the NCAA Final Four.

“When you’re in it for the first time and you’re advancing, you’re so excited. You’re so hungry. That can be your advantage,” Wright said. “We’ve got to remain humble, and we’ve got to be more hungry than Texas Tech, and then hope some of our experience pays off.”

No. 1 seed Villanova will face the third-seeded Red Raiders on Sunday at TD Garden, a matchup of tournament veterans vs. a team that is so unfamiliar with this level of March Madness that coach Chris Beard had to ask his players what the next round is called.

“We just made the — what’s it called? The Great Eight?” he asked his players after beating Purdue on Friday night to advance past the Sweet 16 for the first time in the program’s 93-year history.

“Elite,” guard Keenan Evans corrected him.

“The Elite Eight our second year together,” Beard said. “We’re blessed to be here, but I think we’ve earned the right to be here.”

Villanova (33-4) has made seven trips to the Sweet 16 just since Wright arrived on campus in 2001, going on to the Elite Eight four times while making two trips to the Final Four. They won it all in 2016, and then last year bowed out in the second round.

That set off alarms for Wright.

“It kind of felt like our team last year, that kind of hit us,” he said. “We kind of had two similar seasons in a row. ... You go into the NCAA Tournament, you’re a 1 (seed vs. a) 16. It’s crazy to say, but I kind of felt like it was just business as usual.”

Guard Phil Booth said Wright hasn’t done anything different to keep the team hungry.

But he doesn’t need to.

Only four players on the current team were on the roster when the Wildcats beat North Carolina for the 2016 title, including Booth and guards Mikal Bridges and Jalen Brunson.

“I don’t think this team needs any pumping up,” Booth said. “I don’t think anybody feels complacent.”