Baltimore Sun

Despite loss, earlier upset could pay off big time

- By Christina Tkacik and Yvonne Wenger

Hours before tipoff Sunday night, the University of Maryland, Baltimore County athletics department fired off another Tweet:

“BTW guys, we have a brand new $85 million Event Center we opened up last month that still doesn't have a corporate sponsor name. ...”

It was another cheeky message from an account that has gained national attention — and tens of thousands of followers — in the wake of the Retrievers’ historic upset of the top-ranked University of Virginia Friday in the first round of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament. But it also reflected a real desire to capitalize on a moment that could be transforma­tive for the school’s financial and academic future.

The team lost to Kansas State Sunday night, 50-43, in second-round play.

“I’m happy that so many people are Buying UMBC merchandis­e at the campus bookstore were, from left, Eric Solomon, of Columbia; Megan Lynch, of Stirling, N.J., a UMBC graduate, class of 2017; student Sadie Shrewsbury; and Kelly Rund of Annapolis, UMBC class of 2015.

Googling us,” Angela Scott said. The 1999 graduate, a civil rights attorney who lives in Columbia, says she long ago gave up trying to explain to people what the university is. But after the basketball team’s shocking March Madness victory, she expects a lot more people will know.

“Our grads are doing great things,” she said. “I don’t think enough people knew about our greatness, or our grit.”

For a university long considered something of a well-kept secret — lauded in academic circles, where it is known for producing more African-American MDPh.D. graduates than any other in the nation, but with little reputation among the general public — analysts said the win could be a turning point for the school, bringing more attention, more out-of-state applicatio­ns and more fundraisin­g.

“I think if they’re aggressive and smart they could really make a significan­t dent here,” said Darren Rovell, a business reporter for ESPN.

UMBC President Freeman A. Hrabowski III spoke Sunday of leveraging the sudden attention for sports to strengthen the school academical­ly.

“What this amazing history-making event has done is have the whole world saying, ‘Who is this young campus?’ ” he said before Sunday’s game. He wants people to know: “That kind of grit is exactly what we have on the academic side.”

Academical­ly, UMBC is known for producing graduates in the sciences and engineerin­g. Hrabowski touts leaders at Johns Hopkins and Harvard who have degrees from UMBC. In December, the school celebrated its first Rhodes scholar.

“Few people know that we were last year’s cybersecur­ity champions,” he said. “We’re a nerdy campus.”

At Florida Gulf Coast University a few years ago, officials say, sudden basketball notoriety paid off in a big way.

In 2013 school’s No. 15 seed basketball team scored consecutiv­e upsets over Georgetown and San Diego State University to reach that year’s Sweet Sixteen. Christophe­r Simoneau, the university’s vice president of advancemen­t, estimated the benefit to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

The Fort Meyers school, little known beyond Florida, suddenly found itself in the national spotlight. Annual donations rose from an average of $15 million per year to $27 million, Simoneau said. Out-of-state applicatio­ns increased 80 percent. The school was able to raise ticket prices. FGCU gear flew off the shelves.

“We had no way to ramp up production as fast as we needed to,” he said.

On Sunday, the UMBC Bookstore awaited a new shipment of custom gear to UMBC fans cheer as the Retrievers begin warming up for Sunday night’s game against Kansas State in the second round of the NCAA men’s basketball championsh­ip tournament. commemorat­e the big win: “We Made History” and “All Bark and All Bite.” Purchases in-store and online were surging.

The school is on spring break, but the bookstore opened Sunday especially for the occasion, bringing in extra staff from other department­s, volunteers and student workers who wanted to come back to campus.

From the end of the game Friday to Sunday morning, the store received about 3,500 online orders — almost as many as the total for the entire previous year.

Scott, the lawyer from Columbia, visited the campus in search of gear.

“I didn’t know we had a basketball team,” she said. “I knew we had a chess team. I was on the Model UN team.”

Julie and Jason Sharp left the campus with $310.45 in merchandis­e.

The Baltimore couple met15 years ago as fellows in the Peaceworke­r Program at the Shriver Center for returned Peace Corps volunteers. Julie Sharp said she called three Targets and failed to find a place selling UMBC merchandis­e before learn- ing that the university bookstore would be open.

Jason Sharp said the first-round win was about much more than basketball. He was thrilled to see the national coverage for UMBC’s academic standards, and for Hrabowski, who, to many, is synonymous with the university.

“The athletic accomplish­ment is going in the sports history books, but I think it’s more exciting to see that outside of this area, people are talking about Hrabowski and the science,” Sharp said. “It takes a basketball game, I guess, but now it’s on the map.”

Later Sunday, the school opened three viewing areas where people could watch the game. Students, staff and alumni arrived to find by a spread that included black and yellow jelly beans and cookies with Retriever faces on them.

“This is great,” alumnus Gerald Conwell said. Conwell’s bracket was done for — he’d had Virginia beating his own alma mater. But he wasn’t disappoint­ed.

“It’s a big deal,” he said. “Every game they win from now on will be a record too.”

University spokeswoma­n Lisa Achkin said school spirit has taken some time to build at UMBC — but she believes investment­s such as the school’s new event center have paid off in solidifyin­g their “scrappy community.”

“Our slogan is ‘grit and greatness,’ ” she said. When the team found out they would be going up against Virginia, she said, “they were not at all intimidate­d. That is true of UMBC in everything we do.”

Rovell said the school’s grounding in academics will help it at as it handles its newfound fame.

“It’s better they’re a school that has an identity rather than a fill-in-the-blank school,” he said. “The goods have to be there. I think that gives UMBC, all things being equal, a better chance to cash on this.”

 ?? AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN ??
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN
 ?? KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN ??
KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN

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