INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The sight seemed a bit strange at the time.

Eric Musselman, the veteran who has led teams everywhere, from the NBA to overseas, was on the bench at Arizona State, assisting coach Herb Sendek. With his resume, Musselman could have been an NBA assistant or possibly a head college coach somewhere.

He had a different plan in mind. A head college job was his goal, but he wanted to do it right.

There would be no figuring it out as he went along. Musselman was going start at the bottom and build from there.

“I was clueless, but I wanted to try, I wanted to learn,” Musselman recalled this week. “There’s probably not a lot of former NBA head coaches that are willing to be a college assistant coach to learn, but I knew what I didn’t know.”

Musselman’s ground-up method has allowed Arkansas to regain a bit of its glorious past in two short years.

He had the Razorbacks in position to make the NCAA Tournament his first year in Fayetteville before the season was called off. This year, he has them in the Sweet 16 for the first time since the Nolan Richardson “40 minutes of Hell” nearly three decades ago.

Arkansas (24-6) will face No. 15 seed Oral Roberts (18-10) in the South Region semifinals on Saturday with a chance to reach the Elite Eight for the first time since the 1995 team played for a national championship.

Musselman is right on schedule.

The son of former NBA coach Bill Musselman has coached at nearly level of the professional basketball world, from the minor leagues to national teams to two stints as an NBA head coach.

When Musselman set his sights on college coaching, he narrowed his focus. If he was going to succeed, the foundation had to be there.

Musselman began his ground-up education of the college game by becoming an assistant for two seasons under Sendek, one of basketball’s sharpest college minds. Musselman moved on to LSU, where he got to experience the NCAA Tournament for a second time under Johnny Jones.

“Coach Sendek took a flier on me with no recruiting experience. I didn’t know what a buy game was for nonconference scheduling,” Musselman said. “Two great years and same thing when I went to work for Johnny Jones at LSU. I thought that was a great opportunity as well.”

Musselman parlayed his newfound knowledge into his first head college coaching job at Nevada, leading the Wolf Pack to three consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances.

That led to the job at Arkansas, where he has quickly turned around a program that has had hit-or-miss success since Richardson was fired.

“I think there is an aggressiveness and a swag and a confidence and an enthusiasm,” Texas Tech coach Chris Beard said before Musselman’s Razorbacks knocked his team out of the bracket. “What I do know about coach is he is a basketball guy. I don’t think he sits around thinking about what he is going to do after coaching. I don’t think he is probably working on his law degree behind the scenes. Basketball guy, right? Loves it, eats it, drinks it, sleeps it.”