NCAA Tournament

NCAA Regional Finals: The Death of “Electric” Atmosphere?

Posted by Jamie on February 10, 2010
NCAA Tournament, Opinion / 11 Comments
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NCAA Basketball LogoAs the Northeast gets a foot of snow and the site of the 2010 Winter Olympics soaks in 50 degree weather, our blog overlord was caught reminising about last year’s Sweet 16/Elite 8 in the comment section of Brian’s earlier post.

In response to my comment that the NCAA has decided to hold future Regional Finals in domed stadiums, IBBW regular Vinnie linked to the future sites of the Sweet 16/Elite 8 through 2013, which clearly proves that I am a walking imbecile.

Kidding aside, a reliable source clued me into this development during last year’s Final Four in Detroit, but stated that it couldn’t happen until 2014 as the NCAA plans roughly 3 to 4 years in advance when it comes to NCAA Tournament Sites.

When I first learned about this potential atrocity, a ball of fury began to take over my body as I remembered the “electric atmosphere” of the prior weekend in Boston. Combine this loss of excitement with the awful sight lines at the 2009 Final Four in Detroit, and you have another example of how the NCAA is “all about the money.”

However, after taking Vinnie’s comments into account about the feasibility of 4 Domed Regional Sites occuring (that’s East, West, South and Midwest for all you geography majors out there) I decided to do a little research into how the NCAA could carry out their master plan.

From what I can find, here are the breakdowns of the regions and their respective domes. Before getting to the list, its important to point out that apparently the NCAA is very liberal when it comes to their geographical placement of certain domes. Take for instance that in 2013, Cowboys Stadium is placed in the “South” Regional but in 2011, the Alamodome is placed in the “Midwest” Regional. Yes, I am ashamed to admit that I did a double-take and broke out Google Maps to ensure my head didn’t explode. For sanity sake, I correctly placed these two according to the information we know, but it wouldn’t shock me if the NCAA pulled these antics again if it meant bringing them closer to their ultimate goal of 4 sites in domes. Also, I included baseball stadiums that have retractable roofs as well.

Now to the list:

East (1): Syracuse, NY (Carrier Dome)

West(4): Glendale, AZ (University of Phoenix Stadium), Chase Field (AZ), Safeco Field (Seattle), Tacoma Dome (WA) – didn’t know this existed

South, Southeast (3ish): Marlins ballpark (new stadium, eta 2011), Tropicana Field (Tampa) and the Georgia Dome

Midwest (10): Cowboys Stadium, Lucas Oil Stadium (Indy), Alamodome (San Antonio), Reliant Stadium (Houston), Ford Field, Edward Jones Dome (St. Louis),  Superdome (New Orleans), Metrodome (Minny), Minute Maid Park (Houston), Miller Park (Milwaukee)…. I’d include the Astrodome but it looks like that place is finished.

Ok. So now where were we? Oh yeah can this happen.

Judging by the looks of it, the only problem would be in the East as the Carrier Dome is the only dome on the Eastern Seaboard. Hypothetically, an all domed affair with the final 16 teams can happen at least one year and I fully suspect that the NCAA will eventually try this out at some point in the next 5 years. The obvious problem is how does the NCAA make as much money as they do with Domed Regional Final locations in subsequent years that the Carrier Dome is used? This brings us back to Vinnie’s original point…..unless the NCAA makes up specific Regions/Locations as they go along (which they’ve done in the past) and include say Tampa or Atlanta as the East because they reside on the Eastern part of the country…..then the quest for maximum profit falls short.

However, with talk of a 96 team field growing daily, the mecca of basketball has expressed interest in hosting a Regional Final as the NIT would become even more irrelevant. Yes I do realize that MSG is in fact, not a dome. But, I have a sneaking suspicion that the NCAA wouldn’t mind having the country’s largest media outlet as its outlier.

On a side note, please don’t try and convince me that the shithole that is Continental Airlines Arena  or whatever the hell its called is considered the same location as MSG. Same with the Prudential Center (which I hear is nice, never been). Newark is Newark people. Glad we cleared that up.

Now, if the “World’s Most Famous Arena” were to host a Regional Final or gasp a Final Four, I think I’d wet myself. We all have had the pleasure of witnessing the heroics of the Big East Tournament at MSG every March, and I’m sure everyone would be on board with this decision. I’ve gotta be honest, the thought of a Villanova team winning either the East Regional or the National Championship at the corner of 33rd & 8th tickles my fancy.

Until someone convinces me otherwise, this would be my ideal situation. If my source is as accurate as I believe, the movement to an all out dome fest is fast approaching over the horizon. Will the NCAA do the smart thing and accept MSG’s bid? We’ll have to wait and see.

Do you think any of this will happen or better yet do you think it matters? Do you even care?

Let the debate commence in the comments.

Braving the Elements

Posted by Brian on February 04, 2010
Article, Big East Play, NCAA Tournament / 4 Comments
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Yet another major snowstorm approaches the Northeast this weekend, threatening numerous sporting events across the nation.  Regardless of the weather though, the showdown between Georgetown and Villanova at the Verizon Center on Saturday is most likely going to happen.  It is pretty much a foregone conclusion that Washington D.C. will get slammed by almost 2 feet of snow.  Georgetown officials obviously know this, and they are still saying the game is on, so there’s no reason to believe they would posptone the contest at this point.  If you still plan on attending the game, kudos to you, but be prepared to use a mode of transportation other than the Metrorail.  Furthermore, while the entire East Coast will be experiencing a virtual white-out this weekend with the snow, Georgetown fans may try to gray-out the arena.  Not really sure how well that is going to work, considering the Verizon Center will be well under full capacity.  Anyways, please be careful if you are traveling this weekend.

I’ll leave you with some interesting articles surrounding Villanova and the Big East:

-Wildcats living up to lofty expectations

-Big East coaches, including Jay Wright, want a bigger NCAA Tournament

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postGame: North Carolina 83, Villanova 69

Posted by Chris on April 05, 2009
NCAA Tournament / 4 Comments
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Game recap and box score if you missed the game.

Sometimes, you just have to tip your hat and admit that the other team is just better. Some people will look at this game and be upset and get mad, but in reality North Carolina is a great program, with great players, and a phenomenal coach. Villanova is getting better in all those categories every day, but last night the Tar Heels were just better.

Be proud. Stand tall.

Be proud. Stand tall.

Ty Lawson completely lived up to the hype surrounding him. His 22 points and 8 assists felt like a lot more, and he was a nuisance to ‘Nova all evening. Wayne Ellington seemingly could not miss a shot, and finished 5-7 from downtown. His game was a harsh reminder of what the Philly product could have meant for Villanova.

Danny Green made the shots when he was left open, and Tyler Hansbrough got to the line often enough to finish with 18 points and 11 rebounds.

I could dissect this game on Villanova’s end and tell you who played bad and who played well, but it really came down to the fact that once again in the Tournament, ‘Nova should poorly from the outside, and they did not play defense and did not rebound well. The latter two especially have been instrumental in their tournament run and their season as a whole. It failed them last night and the Heels took full advantage of it.

Scottie Reynolds had a team-high 17 points, but it was on an awful 6-18 shooting, including a porous 3-11 from behind the arc. I’m not a Reynolds basher at all, but when it’s not your night shooting the ball, you need to find other ways to help the team win. There have been nights this season where Reynolds has done just that, but not in this game.

His backcourt mate Corey Fisher did a great job getting into the lane, but the ball wouldn’t fall for him. And on more than one occasion the refs blatantly refused to call a foul, even as Fisher was getting mugged. His 5-19 effort looks bad on paper, but I liked his initiative on offense. Sometimes the ball doesn’t drop.

Reggie Redding seemed to be the only Wildcat to find some consistent offense, including from the outside, yet he only played 29 minutes and was never in foul trouble. If he is the team’s smartest player (I believe that) and one of their best playmakers (I also support that), Jay Wright’s reluctance to play him more was certainly a head-scratcher.

Dante Cunningham started off well, but North Carolina did a good job taking him out of the game. Dwayne Anderson’s shots wouldn’t fall if the hoop was a foot wider. Again, just that kind of night.

But let’s not forget what this team did. How many of you expected a Final Four appearance at the beginning of the year? Probably just the team did, and they met their goals.

As a fellow senior with the 4 guys on the team, I was crushed last night after the loss. But I don’t want to sulk about the loss. This team was amazing, and I couldn’t be more proud of them. Dante Cunningham has turned himself into a possible 1st round draft pick. Shane Clark fought through an injury-riddled career to become one of my favorite players. Dwayne Anderson might be the best story this school will ever have. And Frank Tchuisi never stopped giving all he could for his team and his school.

So don’t feel bad and cry over this loss. This team accomplished so much more, and they deserve to be celebrated. I’m as proud to be a Villanova fan as I ever have. These guys have continued to raise the bar for the program, and leave as the best senior class Villanova has ever had. Congrats boys!

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preGame: #3 Villanova vs. #1 North Carolina

Posted by Chris on April 03, 2009
NCAA Tournament / 3 Comments
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The Game: #3 Villanova (30-7, 13-5) vs. #1 North Carolina (32-4, 13-3)

Location: Ford Field in Detroit, MI

Time: 8:47 p.m. ET

Broadcast: CBS and CBSHD

Brief Rundown: Villanova came out on top in one of the most epic tournament games ever thanks to Scottie Reynolds’ heroics. Before that, they had escaped tiny American in the 1st round before destroying both UCLA and Duke. This is the Wildcats first trip to the Final Four since they won it all in 1985.

North Carolina made Oklahoma look awful last weekend, despite Blake Griffin’s great day. The Tarheels destroyed Radford in the opening round before a comfortable victory over LSU and a blout of Gonzaga.

The last time these two played was in 2005’s Sweet Sixteen. The Tarheels advanced on an awful traveling call on Allan Ray. The Wildcats want revenge.

3 Keys to Victory:

  1. Slow down Lawson – Ty Lawson has been magnificent for UNC thus far. The uber-quick point guard has fueled the team’s run thus far, and nobody has had an answer for him. Shutting him down completely is crazy talk, but slowing him down and not allowing him to run wild will slow down the entire Tarheel attack.
  2. Punch them in the mouth – UCLA and Duke, two teams from outside the rugged Big East, had no idea what to do with Villanova’s tenacity. It was if they’d never seen it. Well North Carolina hasn’t either. For all their talent, they are a very soft team. Make it known that we’re in the building and get them on their heels (no pun intended) early.
  3. Shoot it well – This is something Villanova has not done at all in the tournament. They’ve been dreadful from the outside and that needs to change fast for ‘Nova to win. Reynolds, Fisher, Stokes and Anderson need to make some shots. And that in turn will open up the dribble-drive even more.

…Lets Go Nova…I’ll be in Detroit but ‘Nova Nation should be amped up for this wherever you are…let’s have some preGame chatter…

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It's almost time…

Posted by Chris on April 03, 2009
NCAA Tournament, Opinion / 1 Comment
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This is going to be my 2nd to last post (the last will be the typical preGame post) before I head to Detroit. I’m leaving around 3-4 a.m. and I’m hoping to be in Detroit in the early afternoon. Long drive, ugh. But at the end of that is the proverbial pot of gold. So it’s all worth it.

Since I finished up school for the week I’ve been listening to the radio and TV trying to get a sense of what the media thinks about this game. After listening to the talking heads, I’ve come to the conclusion that while everyone would love to see the upset, nobody is really giving us a chance at all.

After all, we’re up against big bad North Carolina and their roster of future pros. Heck, if I hadn’t been watching our team all year, I might even think we have no chance. Half the country still doesn’t know our team. They know Scottie Reynolds, sure. And probably Dante Cunningham as well since even though he’s relatively new on the scene. But the rest? Just a ragtag group of guys who don’t belong.

Even our suit-connoisseur of a coach (who we think Roy Williams has a crush on) is new to the party.

And I really wouldn’t have it any other way. Cunningham and Tyler Hansbrough (as much as we’ve ragged on him) should have a great matchup. Ty Lawson is clearly (in my opinion) the best player in this tournament, but is he ready for the bevy of players that will bump him and bother him?

Who is stopping Corey Fisher from getting into the lane? Lawson is quick, but nobody on UNC cares about defense.

Which brings me to my main point. Boomer Esiason pointed out on WFAN that defense wins this time of year. Did anyone see Michigan State stomping Louisville like that? Of course not, but it is because they played D. North Carolina will score against ‘Nova. They are that good. But they aren’t going to score 90, or even 80. And when they play in the 60s and 70s, they aren’t as good. Because they can’t rely on themselves to get a stop when they need it.

Villanova on the other hand has had everyone raving about the way they defend. Raving about the way they punch people in the mouth. Raving about how they refuse to back down. Now all of a sudden, they aren’t going to do those things? Give me a break.

Here’s what I think. Nobody gives us a chance, and that helps us. We’re locked in. We’re focused. Meanwhile Ty Lawson is at the casinos. Nevermind the fact that we are familiar with the awful Ford Field setup from last year, or the fact that we got screwed at the hands of the officials 4 years go to this very same program. We can do this without all of that motivation.

So are you ready to give up on our boys? I’m certainly not. They may not be the most flashy and they are not talked about as future lottery picks, but they are winners.

See you in Detroit.

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Video: Jay Bilas talks underdogs

Posted by Chris on March 31, 2009
NCAA Tournament / 3 Comments
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ESPN’s Jay Bilas, a personal favorite of IBBW’s, talks with Rece Davis about the underdogs’ chances in Detroit. Bilas discusses what Villanova must do to pull off the upset, citing Villanova’s defense as a key. Davis tries to get Bilas to bite on something at the end. Too funny.

[vodpod id=Groupvideo.2301349&w=425&h=350&fv=]

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Listen: Jay Wright on WFAN

Posted by Chris on March 30, 2009
Audio, NCAA Tournament / 2 Comments
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This evening Jay Wright talked with WFAN’s Mike Francesa about the Wildcats impressive run to the Final Four. Brian just sent me the link, and I haven’t had a chance to listen to it yet, but I imagine it is pretty good.wfan-logo3

Francesa was calling Tyler Hansbrough ‘worthless’ all day, so it’s probably a pro-Nova interview as always.

You can listen to the interview here.

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postGame: We're going to Detroit!

Posted by Chris on March 30, 2009
NCAA Tournament / 9 Comments
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(Note: This is more than likely going to be the longest thing I have ever written on here. So if need be, print this one out and take it to “the office” or a place where you can sit back, relax, and relive the memories.)

As I drove back to Villanova this morning, I was listening to Evan Roberts and Joe Benigno on WFAN. Benigno repeatedly used the phrase “one of the all-time great games” to describe Villanova’s monumental win over Pittsburgh to send the team to the Final Four. Every time he said that, all I could think of was that this was one of the all-time great weekends. If you were lucky enough to be there, it was special. And even if you weren’t, and you were at one of the various alumni functions, or just on your couch, you’ll remember it for the rest of your life.

My weekend started on Thursday morning when I left Villanova, picked up Liz at Newark Airport and proceeded up to Boston. We got into town around 4:30, picked up our tickets at 5:30. and headed over to The Greatest Bar, where ‘Nova alums gathered. Not knowing we needed to register for this event, we weren’t allowed in, and instead headed next door to DJ’s and grabbed a few drinks. A few hours later, we got into The Greatest Bar, and that is where the night really began.

We began to meet up with friends, whether they were current students, recent graduates, our friend’s fathers, and alums we’d never met. It was out of control. Everyone was buzzing about the game and the atmosphere was flat-out incredible.

With about 20 minutes to game time we headed over to The Garden and found out seats, which were about 5 rows from the court behind the basket. We had been talking about this all night, but the Thursday night crowd felt like it was 80-20 in ‘Nova’s favor. The fans were everywhere. We ourselves had a great section of Villanova fans, and Boston fans in general who just wanted to see us knock the snot out of Duke.

The crowd, including an amazing student section in the upper tank, was out of control all game. It felt like we were at home, but better. Villanova home crowds rarely get that wild, much less when we’re on the road. But ‘Nova Nation came out in droves and took over Boston all weekend.

Anderson loved the beatdown of Duke (AP/Winslow Towson)

Anderson loved the beatdown of Duke (AP/Winslow Towson)

Despite our proclamations all week that we were going to kill Duke, I have to admit the nerves set in as the opening tip was thrown into the air. But a monster dunk by Dante Cunningham set the tone for the night — we were not going to lose. Our defense swarmed the Dukies all night. They looked like they had never seen anything like that. At one point a Celtics fan behind me remarked, “They don’t just look scared. They are legitimately afraid to do anything.” And it was true.

Duke, led by fearless Jon Scheyer couldn’t muster the courage to take the ball into the lane. Maybe they had seen our dismantling of UCLA and feared for their lives, but I’ve never seen a team look like a deer in headlights like the Blue Devils. Gerald Henderson and Kyle Singler, two players who were lauded all week, were taken completely out of the game. With about 10 minutes left, I yelled out, “It’s over!” to the delight of everyone around me except for Liz, who slapped me and was convinced I had jinxed us.

But it didn’t matter, that game was in the bag. With each play, the crowd got louder. We could feel it. When it was over, we went wild. About two rows in front of us, our friends Ted, Thomas, Keith and Brian had been going ballistic all game. I posted it before, but as Brian continually belted out,”There’s something special about this team!” you could begin to feel the people in the arena really starting to believe it.

At Hurricane O’Reilly’s after the game, it was a party. We were living the dream. But in the back of our minds we knew a greater challenge awaited us. We weren’t going to get a soft scared team on Saturday night. We were going into the trenches for a war.

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When Saturday morning rolled around, even more people had come up to Boston. For whatever reason, be it work or other obligations, nearly everyone knew some other person or group who was making their way up for what was going to be an epic night.

We were wiser this time around, opting to register for the alumni pre-game reception. There was such a big turnout on Thursday that the Boston Alumni had to rent out a 2nd bar to host everyone. We made it to Hurricane O’Reilly’s at about 3:45, and were greeted with 100 people standing outside ready to start the festivities.

What occurred in that bar was nothing short of spectacular. Alumni of all ages, as well as current students, and even future Wildcats began to party like we had already won. People offered toasts, cheers, drinks, etc. It was a great afternoon with great people (most of whom I didn’t even know). But the fact that we were all ‘Nova fans brought us all together.

Finally, it was time for the game. I had been saying all morning that I just wanted it to start. I couldn’t wait. And now, it was here. Liz and I made our way down to our seats, and then realized that the pro-Nova section we had on Thursday was completely dominated by the Pitt fans. Damn. No matter, because we’re here and we’re going to make the best of it.

I know that everyone who reads this blog saw the game, so I’m going to skip to the last 4 minutes. This game was a war. That’s really all that needs to be said about the first 36 minutes.

With just under 4 minutes left, and ‘Nova and Pitt trading baskets and stops, Pittsburgh made a mini-surge and built a 4 point lead. The Pitt fans exploded. The ‘Nova fans were stunned. Could this really be the end?

Pitt brought the ball up the court with a 4 point lead. And then the crowd noise rose. Jermaine Dixon had nowhere to go. And then boom! Dwayne Anderson is taking off in the other direction with the ball, and he gets hacked, and STILL manages to lay it in! The Garden was going bonkers. My ears hurt from the noise, and even as I tried to yell as loud as I could, I couldn’t hear myself. It was insanity.

Then another turnover (this time by Sam Young)! Reggie Redding finds a slashing Corey Fisher for the layup! We have the lead back! I’m shaking a random Bostonian next to me, and he is shaking me back.

Pitt scores again, but it’s short lived. Anderson drains a 3 from the top of the key. The building is shaking. Fans from both teams are on their feet and losing their minds. Just 90 seconds left. I’m praying for the clock to move faster, but it won’t. Young jacks up a 3. Missed, but Levance Fields snags the board and dishes it to DeJuan Blair. Blair turns it over! Now the place is really rocking. We can feel it. We’re going to do it.

Corey Fisher steps to the line with under a minute to go. He had a rough first half, but now it’s his time. He calmly drains both free throws. We’re up by 4, and we can feel. And just like that, we’re quickly shut up as Sam Young drills a 3 with Shane Clark draped all over him. I’m upset, scared, angry and impressed all at the same time. What is going on?

Pitt fouls Fisher. He drains both shots again. Does this kid have ice water running through the veins or what? Now we’re up just 3. Villanova isn’t giving up another 3 again. They are pressing at the top of the key. Fields launches a 3 but it’s no good! I’m now about 4 rows from my actual seat just jumping around and going nuts.

AP/Winslow Towson

The team celebrates the win( AP/Winslow Towson)

Reggie Redding steps to the line. A Pitt fan realizes ‘Nova is perfect from the stripe. “They’re due to miss” he yells out. And he’s right. Redding’s first attempt rattles in and out. It’s okay, just make the next one and make this a two possession game. Redding puts it through.

No 3’s, no 3’s. We’re all screaming. Villanova overplays Fields, who finds a wide open Blair for a layup. Now I’m nervous again. With 10 seconds left, there is plenty of time.

After a timeout, Redding is inbounding the ball. He looks and looks. Nobody is open. Cunningham is streaking down the court. Reggie decides he’s Peyton Manning and launches a home run pass. It’s overthrown, and Pitt is rushing back the other way. Fisher tries to take a charge, but is called for the block. Fields to the line. That kid is a warrior. Before he even steps up I know that both are going in.

With 5 seconds left, ‘Nova Nation is stunned. Are we really going to overtime? Redding with the ball again. He’s looking far down court! Please don’t heave it deep again, Reg. He finds Cunningham, who hands it off to a streaking Scottie Reynolds! This is the Scottie Reynolds who never saw a big-time shot he didn’t like.

He’s in the open court! He’s crashing into the lane and getting hacked by Pitt players. 3 seconds. 2 seconds. He’s starts to rise and gets met by Gilbert Brown.

The ball is at the rim with 1 second left, and it falls through. Don’t ask me what happened next, because I don’t remember. All I know is that I had a random 10 year old boy hoisted over my head. His father didn’t mind at all, and was even jumping up and down next to me.

There was one final heart attack as Levance Fields decided he was going to hoist a 70-footer and miss by 1 foot, but we did it. We’re going to the Final Four!

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The team was rushing the court. Players, coaches and fans embraced. Magic was in the air. The cutting of the nets was something I’d never seen, and it was incredibly special. Nearly all the fans stuck around to witness this piece of history, but the night was young.

We headed back to The Westin at the Waterfront, which just so happened to be the official hotel of Villanova’s trip to Boston. Hundreds of fans gathered in the lobby. Drinks flowed everywhere. You could tell this party was going to go on all night.

After about 45 minutes, and countless cheers whenever the TV’s showed Reynolds’ last shot, a police motorcade approached the hotel. Fans streaked to the front doors. Slowly, chants of “Let’s Go Nova” poured out. And finally, the team entered to cheers even louder than the ones at the game.

Chatting with Rollie was one of the highlights of my trip (AP/Winslow Towson)

Chatting with Rollie was one of the highlights of my trip (AP/Winslow Towson)

Players hugged fans, and fans cried. This felt more like war heroes returning from the battlefield than a basketball team returning from the hardwood, and I guess in some ways, it was.

Jay Wright stood up and thanked everyone for all the support. Dwayne Anderson said it was a night he’d never forget. And finally Dante Cunningham reminded everyone that we had not 1, but 2 more games left to win.

That brought the house down, and then ‘Nova Nation partied all night.

Congrats to everyone everywhere, this was one weekend that we’ll never forget.

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Pictures from the weekend

Posted by Chris on March 29, 2009
NCAA Tournament, Pictures / 8 Comments
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I’ll have a full recap of the weekend on Monday, but for now I just got back to my parents house in Fairfield and Liz is in the process of sending me some pictures that she took from her cell phone at the games this weekend. Enjoy the pictures, and enjoy this time in general. We went back to the team hotel after the game and I’ve never seen a group of people happier. It was truly a night to remember.

This reminds me, if anyone has any stories to share about the weekend, or any pictures or anything like that please let me know. Either leave a note in the comments section or send any of us an email and we’ll start posting people’s memories from a great weekend.

liz-duke-scottie

Scottie drains a free throw vs. Duke.

Scoreboard!

Scoreboard!

The celebration begins!

The celebration begins!

liz-pitt-win-1

The players showing off their hardware.

The net cutting begins.

The net cutting begins.

Scottie Reynolds cutting down the net.

Scottie Reynolds cutting down the net.

Jay Wright and the boys at the team hotel.

Jay Wright and the boys at the team hotel.

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Do you feel it?

Posted by Chris on March 28, 2009
NCAA Tournament / 1 Comment
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Thursday night was phenomenal, and one of the best nights ever. But it’s a new day today and we have the Final Four in our sights.

So many alums showed up in Boston that the VUAA had to rent out a 2nd bar today.

After Thursday’s win IBBW allIstar Brian Holman shouted “There’s something special about this team!” as we headed to celebrate at the bar.

Do you feel it too? Let’s get it done tonight.

We’ll be at Hurricane O’Reilly’s today before the game.

Let’s Go Nova!