The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sister Jean hoping stay extends through Easter

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Who needs “One Shining Moment” when you’ve got Sister Jean?

The 98-year-old nun who has become the face of this most-inspiring NCAA Tournament held court on Good Friday in one of the best-attended news conference­s ever held at the Final Four.

Hundreds of reporters and cameramen jammed in, elbow-to-elbow, in an

interview room that would normally draw two dozen journalist­s for a player. “I walked by, and I thought it looked like Tom Brady at the Super Bowl,” Loyola-Chi- cago coach Porter Moser said.

It was more monumental than that.

This was the No. 1 fan of Moser and the Ramblers — the 11th-seeded team whose magical, miraculous run to the cusp of the title would’ve made for great theater, even without a nun. Sister Jean Dolores-

Schmidt has added a com- pletely new, unexpected and, yes, wonderful twist to the proceeding­s. Her 15-minute Q&A on the eve of Loyola’s game against Michigan illus- trated precisely why. She fielded questions about everything from whether God cares about basketball — “more the NCAA than the NBA” — some light trash talk with former Michigan star Jalen Rose’s 100-year-old grandma — “Somebody said, ‘Maybe you need a pair of boxing gloves’ and I said, ‘Well, we’ll see what happens’” — and what it takes to really have your prayer heard — “God always hears, but maybe He thinks it’s better for us to do the ‘L’ instead of the ‘W,’ and we have to accept that.”

Sister Jean has been on a whirlwind since the Ram- blers started this unexpected return to the college basket- ball promised land.

That this is all happening on Easter weekend makes it that much more hectic. But, as she has shown time and again over the past three weeks, sports and religion really can mix, so long as you keep everything in perspectiv­e. “We’re having a university Mass together on Easter Sunday,” she said. “You know, I said Easter Sunday because we hope to stay, and we’re confident enough we will.” Not that this mix of sports and religion is particular­ly groundbrea­king. Players thank God all the time, and more often than not, their prayers and thanks go largely ignored by the mainstream media and the fans. But college basketball is going through some rough times these days, filled with dirty coaches and agents, payoffs to players and an FBI investigat­ion that has unmasked corruption in many corners of the game.

Sister Jean’s presence has reminded everyone that the game is about more than dunks, brackets, big money

and the glossy “One Shining Moment” video that wraps things up at the end.

“It’s just cool that everybody in the world knows who she is now, and they’re starting to get to see how cool she is and how amaz

ing she is,” Ramblers guard Clayton Custer said.

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