BOCA RATON, Florida -- The registration for Johnell Davis' summer camp in Gary, Indiana, had already closed. But the phones kept ringing.
The folks on the line wanted to know if they could still bring their kids to take pictures with the Florida Atlantic Owls star who had helped steer the team on a miraculous run to the 2023 Final Four in April.
Even when the camp began, a crowd stood outside the gym waiting for a chance to meet their local hero. Davis couldn't believe it.
But he knew then his life would never be the same.
"There were people coming up to you telling you how good you did and how great the team was," the FAU guard told ESPN. "We were just being celebrities in the city. And we were celebrities back home."
As Florida Atlantic's players returned to campus 2 miles from the Atlantic Ocean, it did not take long for them to recognize the enormous impact of their run to the Final Four in April.
Wins over 8-seed Memphis, 16-seed Fairleigh Dickinson, 4-seed Tennessee and 3-seed Kansas State had propelled the 9-seed Owls to full Cinderella status, as they followed past underdogs who'd enjoyed a similar path to the last stage of the college basketball season. Although they'd lost to San Diego State in the national semifinals, the Owls returned to Boca Raton, an hour north of Miami, as rock stars.
"Now, we can support our families," said guard Alijah Martin, who withdrew from the NBA draft and returned to FAU over the summer to a flurry of NIL deals. "It's less stress. We're not trying to go and get a pro contract as fast as we want to. You can help mom with the bills. You can send mom on a vacation."
For college basketball's elites, a Final Four run is just confirmation of their status in the sport and a return on investment. For the underdogs -- no team lower than an 8-seed has ever won the national title -- a trip to the Final Four can change an entire university. Admissions rise. Donors give more. Facilities improve. Schools ascend on the lists of rankings for universities, as the pedigree of faculty and students improves. National profiles expand. Regional schools can become household names, such as George Mason in 2006, after millions of Americans watch their Final Four journeys on TV.
But in a sport that defines itself by a team's results in a three-week stretch in March and April, the same measure of success that turns underdogs into darlings has also complicated their futures.
"It's even harder when those expectations are now there," said Butler president James Danko. The Bulldogs reached back-to-back national title games over a decade ago, so Danko knows what FAU might experience. "You're already kind of disadvantaged by your size and your financial resources. It puts a lot of pressure on the program. There are a lot of expectations. It's kind of the delusion of sports."
Thus far, school officials told ESPN, FAU's best evidence of the impact from its Final Four run is the 300% increase in donations to the athletic department since April, thanks in part to local residents -- some of whom live in multimillion-dollar oceanfront mansions -- opening their checkbooks. A study commissioned by the school showed it also received $1.9 billion in media exposure during the NCAA tournament.
School officials understand the school's potential to build on last year's run, academically and athletically, as a result of its Final Four run -- even if the significant boost in applications and other spoils have not yet arrived. If history says anything, though, they will.
"When you can walk down the streets of New York with a shirt that has a picture of an owl and people are yelling, 'Go Owls!' ... that's huge," said Stacy Volnick, FAU's president. "We didn't have that profile before. It was that 'We're small, we're in Boca Raton, our students come from the tri-county area and stay there.' And now we're getting that national attention. That's significant. That will change everything."
BRADFORD BURGESS TRIED TO keep his cool in a room full of the superstar athletes he admired. It was a challenge for the former VCU Rams star who helped the Rams make history as the first 11-seed to reach the Final Four in 2011, and three months later was at the Nokia Theater in Los Angeles to accept the "Best Upset" award with his teammates at the ESPYs.
Former NBA champ Amare Stoudemire and former tennis star Maria Sharapova presented the award to the Rams. Former NBA champion Ray Allen asked Burgess to recreate the viral, celebratory dance he did when VCU upset 1-seed Kansas in the Elite Eight. And Burgess wondered if he'd imagined bumping into Serena Williams. (He hadn't.)
In the 12 years since his team's run to the Final Four, Burgess -- who returned to his alma mater in May as its director of student-athlete development -- has seen the campus and program change.
In the 2010-11 season, four of the Rams' regular-season games were nationally televised. In 2022-23, 15 were on national TV. Applications from prospective students increased by 20% following the Final Four, too.
But possibly the greatest illustration of the Final Four's impact is the Basketball Development Center, which opened in 2015. The 62,000-square-foot practice facility features matching courts for VCU's men's and women's teams, a hydrotherapy room and a dining hall for team meals. Two wealthy boosters paid $14.5 million of the $25 million price tag after VCU's Final Four trip.
"It's probably one of the better practice facilities on the East Coast, if not the country," Burgess said.
"The Siegel Center [VCU's home court] has undergone renovations. Businesses have come to Richmond just to be a part of the scene. There have been so many buildings built on campus. We're getting invited to the Maui Invitational and all the holiday tournaments because VCU has a brand and it's recognizable around the country."