March has long been a favorite month, and not just for the blanket of pollen that coats outdoor surfaces and plays havoc with people’s sinuses. The NCAA Tournament annually provides three weeks of compelling theater – upsets, great games, last-second shots, interesting characters, excuses to couch surf for entire days.
Fairbank P.I. |
Former comrade David Teel and I covered Duke-Kentucky. He sent a text message during the re-broadcast with a screenshot of a younger me on press row, behind the Duke bench, proving that I really was there. Given the talent, stakes and level of play, it’s the best game I personally witnessed in 33 years in the biz, and it’s in the discussion for best game ever. Unfortunately, I have few vivid memories of that day. I chalk it up to a small mental hard drive, time and distance, and a thousand other games and moments clogging my head. I needed a more efficient, weighted mental filing system, one that allowed me to retain Duke-Kentucky and to delete much of the Chuck Swenson era at William and Mary.
It was also a reminder of a time when newspapers had actual staffs and travel budgets. Long before I arrived and through the 1980s, ‘90s and even early 2000s, the Daily Press routinely sent reporters to multiple NCAA Tournament sites. In 1988, my former boss sent me to Lincoln, Neb., where N.C. State was the No. 3 seed. Yes, Raleigh is three hours from Newport News and no, we didn’t cover State regularly. But we considered ourselves an ACC paper, and conference and Wolfpack types were happy to grant us credentials. Different times. Anyway, N.C. State was upset in the first round, so I was stuck in Nebraska with no upcoming game of interest. I asked the boss what to do. He said, can you get to Hartford, Conn.? Number 13 seed Richmond had just upset defending champ Indiana and would face Georgia Tech. Pre-cellphone and Internet, I found a flight, arranged credentials with Richmond and CAA folks, found a hotel room in Hartford, flew out early the next morning and arrived that afternoon, scooted to the arena and cobbled together a couple of stories. The next day I watched Dick Tarrant’s Spiders upset a Georgia Tech team with future pros Dennis Scott, Brian Oliver, Tom Hammonds and Duane Ferrell to reach the Sweet 16.
Speaking of Richmond, my NCAA good fortune extends into history. I covered Richmond’s win against Syracuse in College Park, Md., in 1991, the first time a 15 seed beat a 2. Guard Curtis Blair scored 18 for the Spiders, and 6-5 grinder Terry Connolly had 14 points and seven rebounds against an Orange front line with Billy Owens, LeRon Ellis and Dave Johnson. I covered three of the first four 15 vs. 2 upsets. In 1997, I was in the building in Pittsburgh when Coppin State of the MEAC bounced No. 2 South Carolina. I was there to cover Old Dominion, which narrowly lost to New Mexico in the first round, and the Coppin game was a happy coincidence. Two years prior, I was in Albany, N.Y., and watched the No. 14 Monarchs outlast No. 3 Villanova 89-81 in three overtimes behind Petey Sessoms’ 35 points.
But the damnedest, sweetest, most compelling tournament appearance I saw was in 2001. Hampton University’s experience in Boise, Idaho was equal parts sporting event and cultural phenomenon. A contingent of 70-some people from a Historically Black College and University connected with and was embraced by a mostly lily-white population that didn’t know they existed one week earlier, in ways that are difficult to describe.
The Pirates, in just their sixth season as a Division I program, breezed through the MEAC and were the No. 15 seed in the West Region. Now, the eight-team sub-region was peculiar to begin with, as the NCAA sent Maryland (No. 3), Georgetown (No. 10), George Mason (No. 14), Georgia State (No. 11, coached by Lefty Driesell) and Hampton to Idaho, along with Iowa State, Wisconsin and Arkansas. Seedings even gave us a Maryland-George Mason first-round game 2,000 miles from their respective nearby campuses. Out-of-the-way as it was, Boise was a cool town that welcomed the tournament and everyone involved.
Iowa State-Hampton was the last game of the day. The crowd in Boise was already amped from the first three games – featuring upsets Georgetown over Arkansas and Georgia State over Wisconsin – that were decided by a total of six points. Hampton U.’s pep band, The Force, and its cheerleaders were an immediate jolt, with their funk, bounce and energy. As the Pirates went toe-to-toe with the Big 12 champs, the players, crowd and band all seemed to feed off each other. The last 30 minutes were an HU home game, only louder and at a bigger venue. When Jamaal Tinsley’s driving shot at the buzzer rolled off the rim and Hampton had hung on 58-57, the roar was deafening. Coach Steve Merfeld raced across the court in ecstasy and was picked up from behind and lifted in the air by David Johnson, arms and legs joyfully extended, in a scene that the NCAA still runs in tournament promos.
Over the next 36 hours, the Pirates were local celebrities. People approached them on the street to chat them up and tell them how much they enjoyed watching and hearing them. The local minor-league hockey team, the Idaho Steelheads, asked the pep band if it would perform at the next night’s home game. They didn’t have to ask twice. The Force rocked the arena, introducing funk to hockey fans and hockey to band members.
Steelheads coach John Olver told the Boise paper, “They really added to the atmosphere. I’m really glad they don’t play here every night, or the hockey game would become the second attraction.”
Hampton’s ride ended the next day against Georgetown, but again the crowd was all in with the Pirates and their band. No one who was there will forget.
Even I remember it.
We need more Fairbank around here, even though his professional writing feeds my inferiority complex.
ReplyDeleteThat. Is. Awesome. All of it. Boise, Cherokee, Hampton, etc.
ReplyDeleteper the richmond times-dispatch, liberty university is reopening next and jerry falwell jr. is ordering faculty to return to the classroom. that's outfuckingrageous. that charlatan is going to get people killed. i hope students sue his ass back to fucking nazareth. (i don't think he's from nazareth, but i couldn't do any better on short notice while filled with rage.)
ReplyDeleteC'mon Rob. These fuckers managed to take this seriously for an entire week. What more can they do?
ReplyDeleteGreat post, DF.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of Boise. HS buddy of mine is a doctor in present day Boise. He's an anesthesiologist. Last night he had to intubated two positive COVID cases and also gave an epidural to lady about to give birth that was also positive.
Crazy thing is they only have 10 single use PAPR suits for the whole hospital system. They are supposed to be one and done but because they only have 10 they will keep reusing them until they fall apart, washing them after each use. He also mentioned the state has 350 test kits for the whole fucking state.
And to add insult to injury while at the hospital working, his wife, also a doctor, told the hospital she has a cold. So they made her get tested and quarantined her and the kids until Thursday or until a negative test result. He can't go home now until they are out of quarantine or a negative result. Which uses up another of the 350 test kits the state has.
Needless to say, he summed it up as we're all fucked. Stay safe.
Me and Kweli close like Bethlehem and Nazareth.
ReplyDeleteFalwell Jr has gotten much, much richer thanks to an insane influx of online college class dollars. He doesn't need the instructor-led-class money. He's grandstanding to go against the grain, and science, and stand by his man Dumb Donald.
ReplyDeleteIf he were to be sued back to wherever, there would likely be a great deal of schadenfreude.
As for Nazareth . . . well, love hurts.
I like the way this web site presents data:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/italy/
You can analyze the bar charts to see the curve. Some modestly positive news out of Italy, if you like second derivatives.
You can replace italy with “us” or “spain” to see other countries.
A colleague/acquaintance has a son that was recruited to go to liberty on a football scholarship starting next year. I raised my eyebrow, without raising it. I like to think he's clueless but that would be hard to reconcile. Not judging as it would admittedly might make it a hard decision especially if the offers were few or nil.
ReplyDeleteBest thing I've seen in a long time.
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/WOLG2nBQ-Ns
We've had a week of posts every day! Good work, team.
ReplyDeleteAnyone got anything for tomorrow? Or anyone got an idea for something profoundly asinine that I can compose for tomorrow?
If that really is Huey Lewis as a member of Hans Gruber's gang in Die Hard...what song was it that made Hans recruit him to the heist?
ReplyDeleteThe easy answer is "Bad Is Bad," but I'll say "Hip to Be Square."
ReplyDeleteOh, should that have been a post?
I have something in the works. If I don’t fall asleep putting zkids to bed I’ll finish it tonight.
ReplyDeleteHow ‘bout a post on the NYC Health Dept urging against run jobs amid the virus outbreak?
ReplyDeleteNot a lie.
run jobs, you say?
ReplyDeleteSorry. RIM JOBS. And NY is declaring war!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.google.com/amp/s/nypost.com/2020/03/24/nyc-declares-war-on-rim-jobs-in-graphic-health-department-memo/amp/
This is where Trump puts his foot down.
ReplyDeleteNice post Dave--thank you!
ReplyDeleteAlright, I’ll say it. I don’t love brisket. It’s okay, but I see it as one of the weakest meat options at a BBQ joint. Ribs and pulled pork are top options. Smoked turkey and sausage are other top options, and I always will try a unique, local meat a store offers.
ReplyDeleteAm I alone here? I appreciate that a perfectly rubbed/smoked brisket will have nice marbling and be tender as fuck, but the meat doesn’t have the same flavor, IMO.
Hi Gheorghies. Raising Arizona is 33 y/o. We DVR’d it and watched it tonight. Young Cage is amazing.
ReplyDelete