A View from the Cheap Seats

Through the last day of January, it had been a season that was particularly forgettable.

At the halfway point of that 1996-97 season – back when there was still a true halfway point – we were 0-8 in the conference, which in all fairness wasn’t entirely unexpected. We had played strikingly close games against two Top 5 teams, having lost in early December at Reynolds to Wake 53-45 and in early January in Chapel Hill 59-56. Otherwise, we had been utterly steamrolled by just about everyone else in the ACC.

The nuances that defined that season are conspicuously similar to the ones that have left their impression on this one. In ’97 we were feeling out a first-year coach with a new offensive system. In Sendek’s case it was ever-deliberate – albeit entirely pragmatic under those circumstances – while in Lowe’s case, the antithesis. Moreover, the starting five could have most accurately been described as outmatched with a bench that could just barely be described as thin. There had been no real reason for expecting this to change; we hadn’t finished a season above .500 since 1991 and we had become perennial locks for the tournament’s play-in game.

1997 had become without question one of the toughest ever ACC seasons top-to-bottom, perhaps only second to this season. Carolina, with Jamison, Carter, and Cota; Wake, with Duncan and Rutland; Maryland, with Booth and Profit; and Duke, with Langdon, Capel, and McLeod, were each considered Final Four contenders. Virginia, with Alexander, Nolan and Staples (the ACC’s best shooting guard in my lifetime prior to Redick) and Clemson, with Buckner and McIntyre, were both very good teams that anchored the middle of the standings.

Meanwhile, we had been starting Clint Harrison (6’4”), Jeremy Hyatt (6’6”), Ishua Benjamin (6’5”), Danny Strong (6’6”), and Damon Thornton (6’8”); Justin Gainey (6’0”) was the bench. On the last day of January it had become a very real possibility this would become a 16-loss team. Quite simply, we were a perpetually overmatched, undersized team. But we had oversized heart and against all odds, this team refused to go out with a whimper.

Instead, we plunged headlong with a bang into February, scoring a hard-fought 58-54 home win over then Top 5 Clemson – Rick Barnes’ strongest Clemson team, their season ended in the Sweet 16 in two overtimes to Minnesota, who in turn eventually lost to Kentucky in the Final Four. Our obstinate tempo had, amazingly enough, forced Clemson’s high-octane offense out of its rhythm.

We had our first victory and the fun was just beginning.

Two weeks later we went to Winston-Salem and beat #2 Wake Forest 60-59 in overtime. Trailing by two at the end of regulation, Gainey went for the steal at mid-court against Rutland rather than the foul and managed to not only take away the ball, but slip loose for the game-tying lay up. I remember very vividly my mom chiding me to calm down because I’d had knee surgery only a few days before, and she was worried I’d tear out my staples (I was already on dangerously thin ice for “accidentally” kicking a hole in the foyer wall after losing to Carolina a month earlier).

Of course, Wake would turn out to be just another underachieving Dave Odom team – with Duncan, one of the top three ACC players all-time, supported by a potent backcourt of Rutland and Braswell, they had cruised through mid-February but would eventually lose to Stanford in the second round of the NCAA tournament.

State, on the other hand, had just begun to roll, despite a potentially demoralizing setback. In early February, Thornton had arguably been the front-runner for the ACC rookie of the year. But as March rolled around, he was out with a season-ending hip injury (Ed Cota eventually received the honor). Luke Buffom stepped up and admirably filled Thornton’s absence with a solid 15 minutes per game off the bench while Gainey, now a starter, had quickly climbed the steepest and least-forgiving learning curve of a true freshman point guard in the ACC.

More importantly, we were infuriating very good teams that relied on up-tempo, finesse styles of play by requiring their patience on defense while we very intently exploited breakdowns caused by their lack thereof. The pressing and trapping that had dismantled us in January had become largely ineffective due to the smart, often seamless play of five interchangeable parts (let it go, just let it go). Ironically enough, we were winning because we were taking any and all athleticism out of the game – we were doing nothing more impressive than lulling opponents into submission.

But it was working.

As ridiculous as it might have seemed, we had earned an eight-seed in the ACC tournament with consecutive blowout wins over Georgia Tech and Florida State to end the regular season at a suddenly-respectable 4-12. We had split February and that, in itself, was quite impressive.

Then the real fun began.

On March 6 of that year, I was a 17 year old high school senior who’d already been accepted into State’s prestigious and highly-competitive First Year College program. There had never been any doubt where I was going to college; in fact, I’d always been very keenly aware of just how little I could actually do in high school and still get into State. I’m not particularly proud of that; just that was a truly innocent time when college was simply my ticket into Reynolds Coliseum.

That Thursday morning at school I made the boldest prediction based on nothing more than an unfounded cliché: we would win the ACC tournament if for no other reason than it’s tough to beat a team in the ACC three times in a season. Fact was, once we got past Georgia Tech in the play-in game, any of our potential pairings would likely be against teams that had swept the regular season series from us.

That night in Greensboro we crushed Tech 60-45 in what would become Cremins’ last real chance as coach in Atlanta. Bring on the one-seed, Duke.

As usual, I was “sick” on ACC Tournament Friday. In elementary school, we had watched the games in class, which had been largely acceptable, if not wholly tolerable, but somewhere along the way that beautiful tradition had been banned. In protest, I decided to no longer attend school on ACC Friday – five years out of college and I still take off that holiest day of the college basketball season. Pig Pickin!

At tip-off on that Friday, no eight-seed had ever advanced to Saturday and early in that game it didn’t appear it would happen that year, either. Duke jumped out to a huge 16-point lead, but behind the scrappy play of Hyatt and Strong, in addition to Harrison’s usual solid play, we had cut that lead by 10 to a manageable six by halftime. I don’t recall that we actually outplayed Duke in the second half; I just think we annoyed them into complete frustration. We didn’t give them any open looks, we limited their penetration, and most importantly, we stayed almost even on the boards, limiting their second-chance opportunities. Every basket would prove to count.

We held them to 29 points in the second half and won 66-60, pulling off the biggest tournament upset in ACC history. It’s that March storyline that every true fan loves, that One Shining Moment. The mighty one-seed had fallen, while on rolled lowly State.

Saturday we beat the four-seed Maryland 65-58 in much the same way; we simply overwhelmed them with our sheer stubbornness. It was a battle tip-to-horn, but Gary Williams would have to wait at least one more year to play for his first ACC championship.

Regrettably, those of us too young to remember 1974 and who know of 1983 and 1987 only through faded childhood memories, folklore and replays know all too well how this story eventually ends.

Sunday morning the preacher mentioned the game. Meanwhile, my chief concerns were that no one would stand to testify and the sermon would be short and the invitation even shorter, so that I wouldn’t miss the opening tip. Not only was the “sick” excuse rendered by my folks invalid for church, but I was also dreadfully leery of skipping church on such an important day.

Earlier that morning in Sunday School, I remember asking one of the teachers whether or not it’s wrong to pray about a sporting event. His answer, surprisingly, was that nothing was outside the realm of God’s power, no matter how small or trivial it may be deemed – on the contrary, this most certainly was not in the least trivial. So I prayed, several times actually; each time tactfully sneaking in a humble request for victory over the hated Evil Empire amongst the nobler requests for the players’ safety and humility and all that other good stuff for which you’re supposed to pray.

Alas, Divine Intervention, or at least my newfound perverted interpretation of it, was not to be. We just flat ran out of gas. Our legs were, understandably, gone.

Gainey had played all 160 minutes of the tournament while the other starters were spelled briefly by Buffom and in small part by Norton and Wells (Wells played more minutes as a freshman in the ACC tournament than he did on his Senior Day). We had played admirably, having lost by a misleading 10 points, due in large part to Carolina’s made free throws in the waning minutes. But in our Good Fight we had continued to frustrate another excellent ACC team – an eventual Final Four team – by limiting their possessions and dictating tempo. But in that offensive style baskets come hard, every possession is critical, and every State fan knew that six-point halftime deficit would likely prove insurmountable.

And indeed it had been.

Thus it had ended, 64-54, that remarkable run by the newest version of the Cardiac Pack, 10 years after its last ACC title and five years after it had forfeited all respectability.

While disappointed, there was no shame in that loss. My grandfather, who had a knack for imparting hard-earned wisdom in the most inconvenient of ways, offered me this consoling yet slicing insight: “Well boy, someone has to lose. Too bad it’s always your team.”

Now here we are, 24 years after we penned the ultimate Cinderella story and 10 years after that unprecedented tournament run, looking to write the next chapter. Perhaps we expect it, because we know it’s indeed possible. Just ask Coach Lowe.

Sure, we’re not as hot as we were towards the end of that 1997 season, but this time around we have that same heart and same fighting spirit in addition to the size and quickness and talent to exploit match ups and beat anyone in the league, which we’ve already proven on several occasions this season.

It’s been 20 years since our last conference title. Maybe, just maybe, the slipper will fit one more time and this will once again be our year.

About LRM

Charter member of the Lunatic Fringe and a fan, loyal to a fault.

General NCS Basketball Tradition

103 Responses to A View from the Cheap Seats

  1. CaptainCraptacular 03/07/2007 at 12:23 PM #

    Thats a good way to sum it up. They did quit in the game.

  2. tractor57 03/07/2007 at 12:25 PM #

    On a better note,
    In the 60’s when I was in grade school we always carried radios on the Friday of the ACCT so we could listen to the game on the bus going home.
    My best friend and I always have an “ACC Tourney celebration”. He spends the weekend with me and we watch BB all the weekend – been doing that since the mid 80’s. Some years it was a much bigger party. In those days there were two rules – 1. Don’t block the TV 2. Don’t throw anything toward the TV.

  3. kool k 03/07/2007 at 12:28 PM #

    2 reasons why it was good HDTV did not exist in 1989: The Maryland loss and Terry Jordan’s manperm mullet (though I will say, he was a helluva option QB)

  4. CaptainCraptacular 03/07/2007 at 12:33 PM #

    As long as we are wallowing in misery with the last 3rd of this thread. That Vandy game was the lowest I’ve ever felt as a pack fan.. Surpassing even the Georgetown game and the Maryland fumble during PRs senior season. I was a few rows off the court in the corner in Orlando…. My boss had just said to me on his way heading out at the 3 minute mark.. you guys got this one. I replied.. I’ve been around too many collapses to think that.. and then proceeded to watch in horror the collapse that is now seared into my brain.

    Walking out of the O-rena to our car.. I made eye contact with a little old pack granny heading in the opposite direction. There were no words spoken, but so much was said in her eyes. There was a mixture of anger and pain and yet empathy with my pain that I was showing. Its odd the little things you remember. But I still remember that look in her eyes that day.

  5. cedarblockhead 03/07/2007 at 12:39 PM #

    I was in Greensboro at the NCSU/Duke finals game. I was in the middle of the Duke section.
    I went to church as normal that day and found out a friend (UNC fan that reads this site alot) had tickets. BAM I hit the door running.

    It was a tough beat.

  6. kool k 03/07/2007 at 12:43 PM #

    I too remember that Sunday in Orlando very well. It was a beautiful day, got there early and tailgated, then caught the second half of the Xavier/Miss St game. I had my picture taken with Marcus Melvin’s mom before the game(it is still on the fridge).We owned Vandy all day. I was already planning on heading down to the other end to high five players as they went in the tunnel and trying to figure out any way I could get to Phoenix for the Sweet 16 matchup against UConn. Then, the fouls…seems like bs fouls were called on 3 point shots on consecutive possesions, and they hit the 3, missed the ft, got the rebound and hit another 3. A bogus intentional foul on Melvin was in there somewhere as well. Man, maybe I don’t remember the bad stuff as vividly as the good stuff that day, but it was hurtful and frustrating walking down those steep, angled steps out to the parking lot.

  7. CaptainCraptacular 03/07/2007 at 12:46 PM #

    It was a double dose of down for us. My woman is a Miss State grad and we were both so down (me more so as I’m more emotionally invested) that no words were spoken on the ride home.

  8. dj9686 03/07/2007 at 1:08 PM #

    KoolK and Tractor,

    The Gamecock fans always were the worst behaving I’d ever seen. They made our student section, and I was one, look like the most tolerable in comparison. I can understand your Dad’s frustration at Ellis’ actions. I remember being pretty PO’ed too. Wonder what he thinks about his actions that day, today? And to reiterate what Tractor said, the Clemson fans were always very classy. Not only did I deal with them at the games but used to bartend at a Marriot where many of the IPTAY club members stayed when they came to town. I’d have on some sort of Wolfpack item the night before the game and they were always diplomatic about State’s chances even when there were slim. You would think that a team, CU, located in a more rural area might be more on the redneck side than those in the capital city metropolitan area of South Carolina, but obviously the folks from the country are more classy. Obviously doesn’t take living in the city to make you the more insightful fan.

    By the way, wonder if the South Carolina fan base will show more sophistication now that we’re renewing the rivalry? Never did like Spurrier much before, but his half-ass effort in collecting his fortune to coach the Redskins didn’t exactly endear him to me. One more reason to dislike the SC gamecocks. And, please SC fans, don’t refer to yourself as USC or Carolina. There are two much more sports rich schools who have already laid claim to those names and initials.

  9. tractor57 03/07/2007 at 1:18 PM #

    I’ve heard from some Clemson alums that a trip to UGA is worse than to South Carolina but since I never have been to Athens I can’t say. I can say that from my experience South Carolina and UNX are the only places I’ve visited where I’ve had any problems AT ALL.
    And for those who have never seen a game at Death Valley – it is an experience (over the years I was there for several of State’s games and several other games). Those fans are passionate and they don’t give any quarter but I never was treated badly. And you have to love the family atmosphere in the parking lot before and after the games – yes there was alcohol around but there was also plenty of kids tossing footballs around. When I first went to C-F after the renovations I thought “Excellent possibility for the same sort of atmosphere”.

  10. BJD95 03/07/2007 at 1:20 PM #

    Strangely enough, I wasn’t mad during or after the second ACCT finals loss to Duke. I liked that we kept attacking and didn’t go back in our shell. Duke just took that game away from us (specifically, Redick took it away). Nothing to be ashamed of in that effort. I remembered saying that if we kept playing like that, we’d be very, very dangerous in the NCAAT.

    Then we went back in a shell for the Cal game, and that was probably the lowest point for me.

    Vandy was also different. We completely gakked that one up. Vandy went on to lose to UConn by almost 30 points, IIRC.

  11. dj9686 03/07/2007 at 1:21 PM #

    I’ve never been to a Clemson game at Death Valley but I did go to a Panthers’ game when they were playing there before the stadium in Charlotte was complete. The fans were great and the tailgating was nice.
    It was in December though and I was very glad I wasn’t on the shadowy side of the stadium. Made about a 20 degree difference in temps. 🙂

  12. westwolf 03/07/2007 at 1:24 PM #

    ^Ah, Cal, Vandy, Texas…good times.

  13. lush 03/07/2007 at 1:26 PM #

    i remember watching lou holtz’ sc squad in carter finley in the rain. i was sitting on the grass in the endzone. there were a couple of g-cocks standing around, but i remember one vividly. about 20 ft away from me, near the top, this guy stood up, unzipped his pants and started peeing down the hill in the middle of the 4th quarter! i couldnt beleive it. it was extremely disrespectful, but i couldnt stop laughing. ever since then, i have believed any and everything ive ever heard about sc fans

  14. dj9686 03/07/2007 at 1:34 PM #

    Lush,

    Must not be a lot of indoor plumbing where that SC fan came from… lol

    PS-I just realized, through reading something on PackPride, that Ingin Atsur was still out in that first game against Duke. I did not remember that since I was out of town and didn’t see the game and the 23 point margin didn’t exactly make me want to watch the recording.

  15. the_phisherman 03/07/2007 at 1:39 PM #

    I thought the Duke game earlier this year was when Atsur reinjured the hammy, or realized that he was still too hurt to be playing yet. I thought I remembered him getting some minutes in that game.

  16. dj9686 03/07/2007 at 1:50 PM #

    Finally found the boxscore on USA Today, Phisherman. Don’t see Ingin’s name in it.

  17. the_phisherman 03/07/2007 at 1:51 PM #

    I guess he only came back for the BC game then.

  18. Mr O 03/07/2007 at 1:55 PM #

    Noah: I was at the 1989 tournament. Good memory on the closness of the games. I didn’t remember any of the games except the monumental upset by Maryland and the finals. The finals was a great matchup between pre-dominant Duke vs. still dominant UNC. JR Reid vs. Danny Ferry. Ferry took a last second shot from the opposite free throw line as time expired that was on line but hit the back of the rim.

    Here are the scores:

    ACC TOURNEY (Seedings in parenthesis)
    ————————————-
    First Round
    ———–
    (8) Maryland 71, (1) N.C. State 43
    (2) Duke 88, (7) Wake Forest 64
    (3) Virginia 90, (6) Clemson 73
    (4) N. Carolina 77, (5) Georgia Tech 62

    Semi-Finals
    ———–
    (2) Duke 69, (3) Virginia 58
    (4) N. Carolina 88, (8) Maryland 58

    Championship
    ————
    (4) N. Carolina 77, (2) Duke 74

    The 2004 semi-final loss to Md was one of the worst losses I have seen. Up by more than 20 in the first half, with a damn good team, we somehow lost the game. I walked out of the GSO coliseum with nine minutes to go in the first half. Then we capped off the post-season with another collapse against Md. At this point in time, I wasn’t a big fan of Herb Sendek.

  19. dj9686 03/07/2007 at 1:59 PM #

    That’s OK, I thought he played too until I read the article and then looked it up. Gives us a little more hope for tomorrow night since they are down a horse and we are up one since last game. In the first game Henderson had 8 pts, 2 rbs and a block.

  20. kool k 03/07/2007 at 2:35 PM #

    Was it in 89 when we beat Wake in that 4 ot game? Didn’t we need that and a Duke win over UNC to lock up the regular season crown? I remember the game when Kelsey Weems made the first ft and missed the 2nd on purpose, with Mr. Ice catching the rebound and throwing in the tying bucket at the horn to put it into ot.

    Speaking of Clemson games…my first great memory at CF was the 86 game against the Tigers, who I believe were ranked in the top 5 at the time. It was a rainy Saturday, and again my Father and I watched from the grass. Haywood Jeffries had a big game and we won 27-3.

  21. redfred2 03/07/2007 at 2:44 PM #

    I can’t believe how many people on here are saying they haven’t been to a game in Death Valley. DO IT! It’s a good time, and almost regardless of the outcome, a great place to experience what college football should be.

  22. RedTerror29 03/07/2007 at 3:15 PM #

    Going to a game at Death Valley is high on my list of things to do after going to a concert there and going to a game at Auburn (ridiculous stadium and atmosphere).

  23. noah 03/07/2007 at 3:30 PM #

    ” I believe it was the year prior to the sack that pretty much ended his football career, but he was in Raleigh and threw a last second TD pass to beat NCSU. It was really a crappy pass but the receiver made a great, diving catch for the TD. Ellis then turned towards the NC State bench, pretended to pull out his six shooters and shot at the coaches and of course, blew the smoke off his guns before reholstering.”

    You’re conflating a whole bunch of different games.

    In 1986, we beat USuC on a last second pass. Actually the game was over…their DL jumped before Kramer could get everyone set and we got a free play from about the 33 yard line. Kramer hit Danny Peebles after Peebles ran around and broke the kneecaps on every Gamecock in the endzone and Naz Worthen tied them up and dumped them in the trunk of Joe Morrison’s car. Then they built a ladder with a slingshot and flung Peebles up so he could make the grab. (great play)

    In 1987, we went to Columbia and they beat the living hell out of us…48-0 as another poster said.

    In 1988, we were 6-1 and had just come off a 10-3 win over Clemson (both teams ranked in the top 15). USuC beat us 23-7 and it was never really that close. Our one touchdown, I think, came at the end of the first half. It was on ESPN and it was a cold, wet fall night.

    Ellis just picked us apart that night. We could never really get pressure on him. That was the one game all year where the defense didn’t have a good gameplan. We couldn’t get any pressure and our DBs couldn’t hang with their receivers long enough.

    Ellis DID do his six-gun thing as he left the field. There was a lot of bad blood between Ellis and the State staff anyway. He was from Greensboro Page and we were basically getting EVERYONE from Page in those days. The only two big recruits from Page that turned us down were Ellis and Tripp Welborne (who went to Michigan).

    In 1989, we were back at Columbia and the Ellis sack came on about the second play from scrimmage. It was NOT a dirty hit. Mark Thomas came in and just nailed him. Unfortunately for Ellis, it was in exactly the wrong spot.

    I was listening to the game on the radio and I THINK Wally Ausley was still doing games (seems like that was right around the time he retired) and I recall him saying, “Ellis is NOT getting up…he’s hurt.”

    And yes, there was a little joy in his voice. And yes, every State fan on the planet stood up and cheered. Normally when someone gets hurt, even if you feel GREAT about it on the inside, you keep your mouth shut out of respect.

    Not this time!

    If you were a state fan, you were celebrating.

    Nobody remembers the score (20-10), but everyone who listened to that game gets a little smile on their face and a little glee in their voice when they say, “Hey, remember Todd Ellis getting KILLED in ’89??”

    I think if the NC State defense had started a bonfire and slow-roasted Todd Ellis over it, we would have all bought tickets to the Ellis-Pickin’ and remembered how GOOD the hushpuppies were!

  24. CaptainCraptacular 03/07/2007 at 3:34 PM #

    *Was it in 89 when we beat Wake in that 4 ot game?*

    Had to look it up, but yes it was. See March 4
    http://www.sportsstats.com/ACC/boxlines/WFU/1989

    *I can’t believe how many people on here are saying they haven’t been to a game in Death Valley. DO IT!*

    I got to go to several games in Death Valley growing up, including the game that Clemson beat Wake 82-24. The tiger was sure tired of doing pushups at the end of that one.

  25. kool k 03/07/2007 at 3:46 PM #

    Thanks Capt.
    Wow, forgot about Kitley and Carlilse for Wake…both rocked the porn stache if I’m not mistaken
    And Mickey freaking Hinnet! I love these trips down memory lane!

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