By RON MALY
Be proud of yourself, Des Moines.
Raise a fist. Pound your chest.
The city has again landed the first and second rounds of an NCAA men's basketball tournament -- this time the 2019 event.
The games will be played March 21 and 23 at Wells Fargo Arena in downtown Des Moines [pictured].
Drake will be the host university, meaning Iowa state, Iowa and Northern Iowa would be eligible to play in the tournament.
Drake, however, wouldn't be eligible even though it stepped front and center and became the host school.
If you ask me, that's idiotic.
I'm not saying Drake's struggling men's basketball program will be strong enough to produce a team worthy of an invitation to the NCAA's Big Dance in two years, but it's ridiculous that a university whose president and athletic department officials were willing to host the first- and second-round games has no chance of its team being selected for the Des Moines event.
That's totally unlike the NCAA women's regulations, which permit host universities to have their teams in the tournaments they sponsor.
The host schools' presence vastly improves attendance in the first two games, and consequently the host team has a much better chance of succeeding.
Indeed, Drake's 2016-17 women's team--which was unbeaten in the Missouri Valley Conference's regular season and league tournament--had to play at host team Kansas State in Manhattan, Kan., in the first round of the NCAA tournament, and lost.
Whatever, Des Moines should be proud as hell.
The city did a wonderful job hosting 2016 first- and second-round games, and the NCAA noticed.
I'm confident Des Moines will stage another spectacular NCAA show in 2019.