The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Big shots that define the madness of March

- By Dave Skretta

This is the time of year people usually start tweeting at Ali Farokhmane­sh.

The Northern Iowa fans who remember his backto-back buzzer-beaters to beat UNLV and Kansas and usher the Panthers to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament a decade ago. The Missouri and Kansas State fans still thankful he helped take down the topseeded Jayhawks. And yes, there will be Kansas fans still pained by the memory.

“I mean, any time someone brings it up to me or somebody randomly tweets at me, or something along those lines, it brings me back,” Farokhmane­sh told The Associated Press this week. “And honestly, normally this time of the year is when I start thinking about that — thinking about when I was playing.”

Nothing is normal this year, though. There will be no last-second heroics in the NCAA Tournament after the outbreak of the coronaviru­s led to its cancellati­on. There will be no underdogs taking down basketball bluebloods, or previously unheralded kids becoming household names because of their heroics during the madness of March.

Instead, basketball fans will be left — like Farokhmane­sh — to reflect on the big games, big shots and big moments that have come to define the NCAA Tournament as one of the most heart-stopping sporting events in the country.

For Farohkmane­sh, it is not necessaril­y the 3-pointer in the final minute that took down Kansas in the second round of the 2010 tournament that jumps to the forefront of his mind. It’s the shot he hit two days earlier, a 3 from well beyond the arc in the final seconds, that gave the Panthers a 69-66 victory over the Runnin’ Rebels.

“That one gets completely passed up,” said Farokhmane­sh, now an assistant at Colorado State. “Magnitude-wise Kansas was bigger, but the UNLV game, that was crazy too, because it was back and forth and we got lucky enough to have the last possession, and it was crazy because they were doubleteam­ing us. I was pretty deep and let it fly.”

There are plenty of other players in the history of the NCAA Tournament that have “let it fly,” earning them a spot in the history books.

The Shot

Christian Laettner hit plenty of memorable ones, including the winning jumper against Connecticu­t in the 1990 regional final and the winning foul shots against UNLV in the 1991 national semifinals. But it was his catch-andshoot off a full-court pass from Grant Hill to beat Kentucky in double-overtime of their 1992 regional final that became historic.

“I don’t realize what happened,” Laettner said afterward. “I just caught the ball, turned around and made the shot.”

For the win

Villanova and North Carolina had already played a championsh­ip classic in 2016 when the Tar Heels’ Marcus Paige hit a 3 to tie the game 74-all with 4.7 seconds left. The Wildcats in-bounded the ball and Ryan Arcidiacon­o pushed up the floor, then dished to Kris Jenkins, who released the winning three as time expired to set off pandemoniu­m inside NRG Stadium.

“I watched it one time,” Villanova coach Jay Wright told AP this week. “I watch game film right after the game. That one I didn’t. So I remember the day after the parade, our family said, ‘We’re going to sit down and we’re going to watch this game.’ We did it.

The whole family sat down and watched the game and that was the only time I watched it.”

The perfect miss

To this day, North Carolina State’s Dereck Whittenbur­g jokes his deep jumper that came up woefully short against Houston in the 1983 title game was really the perfect pass. Regardless, the Wolfpack’s Lorenzo Charles was in the perfect spot to make the catch, drop the ball through the net and send Jim Valvano racing across the court like a mad man.

“I never thought it was going to be short,” Whittenbur­g told AP years later. “I thought it was going in.”

The slipper fit

In the pantheon of Cinderella teams, the 1998 bunch from Valparaiso are near the top of the list, and the biggest reason is Bryce Drew’s winning shot against Mississipp­i. With the No. 13 seed Crusaders trailing with 2.5 seconds left, Bill Jenkins caught an in-bound pass from Jaime Sykes and got it to Drew, who let loose a shot as time expired. It gave Valpo a 7069 win, kicking off a run to the Sweet 16 for Homer Drew’s team.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this April 4, 2016, file photo, Villanova’s Kris Jenkins makes the game-winning threepoint shot against North Carolina, in Houston.
DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this April 4, 2016, file photo, Villanova’s Kris Jenkins makes the game-winning threepoint shot against North Carolina, in Houston.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States