Times-Call (Longmont)

NC State’s Final Four double has Wolfpack fans howling

- By Aaron Beard The Associated Press

RALEIGH, N.C. >> The grave sits perched on a hill in the historic 72-acre Oakwood Cemetery near downtown. It bears “Valvano” carved in large letters on polished black stone, honoring North Carolina State’s charismati­c coach who sold big dreams then lived them in an unforgetta­ble run to the 1983 national championsh­ip.

Jimmy V has been gone more than three decades. Yet visitors are leaving fresh tributes: flowers, a bobblehead of the late men’s basketball coach, a large “Go Pack” foam No. 1 finger, a small red-and-white basketball bearing the “Tuffy” sailor hat-wearing mascot, a can of Wolfpack-branded beer sitting aside a themed bag of “Pack Snack” kettle chips. Among those: a sticker bearing the “Why not us?” mantra defining the maddest of March moments here in decades.

The Wolfpack men have followed their first Atlantic Coast Conference championsh­ip since 1987 with an even more improbable Final Four appearance, the first since Valvano’s “Cardiac Pack” magic of ‘83. Even more magical: The women are in the Final Four, too, their first trip since 1998, which came under their own beloved late Hall of

Famer, Kay Yow.

It’s all led to an emotional reconnecti­on with past glory on Tobacco Road, including this time a generation that has never seen anything like this before.

“Thrilled for both programs, both coaches, our students,” athletic director Boo Corrigan said. “But the fan base that’s been with us, that’s been a part of this and believing year in and year out … the excitement is really kind of the best part of it.

It’s a thrill borne of builtup frustratio­n. The feeling of having to do everything the hard way as a constant underdog. Even fighting against a Murphy’s Lawtype jinx known around these parts as “N.C. State (Expletive).” Yet battered hope remains, for a women’s team that has been nationally relevant for numerous seasons and a men’s program that spent much of the post-valvano era wandering in the wilderness.

Payoffs came Sunday with Final Four tickets. Now N.C. State owns a spotlight it often has to fight to share with nearby rivals Duke — the 11th-seeded Wolfpack men’s Elite Eight victim — and North Carolina.

Rod Brind’amour, coach of the NHL’S Carolina Hurricanes,

understand­s those dynamics. The Hurricanes share PNC Arena with the Wolfpack men and played their Stadium Series outdoor game last year in the school’s Carter-finley Stadium football home. He also married the daughter of former N.C. State player and assistant coach Eddie Biedenbach.

“It’s been a long time,” Brind’amour said. “Something good needed to happen there (for) all the loyal fans and stuff. It’s pretty special that both teams … are in it. I think that’s pretty cool. It’s nice to have all the buzz around.”

That explains why fans keep flocking to the redlit Memorial Belltower after wins to celebrate a ride beginning with the men’s five-games-in-five-days run to the ACC title, the origin of coach Kevin Keatts’ “Why not us?” message to his players.

By early Monday, fans were greeting one Final Four team in its campus homecoming, then the other about two hours later.

Both programs have leaned into it. Women’s coach Wes Moore attended the men’s ACC title win in the nation’s capital, then Keatts sat behind press row as Moore’s women beat Tennessee in an NCAA secondroun­d home win.

Businessma­n Greg Hatem,

whose Empire Properties helped revitalize downtown Raleigh with restaurant­s and building projects, is savoring it all. Part of the Wolfpack Club’s board of directors, Hatem was a photograph­er for N.C. State’s student newspaper The Technician during the 1983 run that ended with Lorenzo Charles’ dunk to beat Houston and Valvano franticall­y looking for someone to hug in Albuquerqu­e.

It was an enduring moment for a program that also won the 1974 NCAA title, which included beating UCLA in the Final Four to end John Wooden’s run of seven straight championsh­ips. Now 2024 has its place in Wolfpack lore.

“It’s nice to feel the energy again, it’s nice to see people out wearing the red,” Hatem said. “I have a habit: win or lose, the day of the game and the day after, I always wear an N.C. State shirt . ... You know, there’s a lot of fans around here, they don’t like to wear their color blue when they don’t win. Well, we do that all the time.”

Hatem had decided to ride out March with the men, who entered the ACC tourney on a four-game skid and needing to win the whole thing to reach March Madness amid uncertaint­y about Keatts’ future. What looked like a brief trip has now included NCAA games in Pittsburgh and Dallas with 14-year-old son George, who has “been squeezing school in and out of this thing.”

“It’s nice to see kind of the crescendo of people coming back out that just weren’t energized,” Hatem said. “It’s not that they weren’t fans. But now they’re excited again, and I’m talking about the young ones who have never seen this, and folks my age who have seen and remember ‘83 and ‘74.

“It’s something I didn’t know when we would get to see it. I love the fact I get to see it with my family now, but I love the fact that I get to see it again, too.”

The same is true of 1983 team member Ernie Myers, who said teammates are talking constantly about this run on their group text. Charles, he of the famous dunk, died in 2011 and is buried not far from Valvano.

“A lot of these people I meet now, that are my age, they would tell their kids about ‘83 and how they were on campus,” Myers said. “And some of the parents, now their kids or their grandkids now are experienci­ng what they experience­d at N.C. State with this run. And they’re telling them: ‘This is like ‘83! This is how it was!’“

 ?? LM OTERO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? North Carolina State’s DJ Burns Jr., far right, dumps confetti on head coach Kevin Keatts following an Elite Eight game against Duke in the NCAA Tournament in Dallas.
LM OTERO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE North Carolina State’s DJ Burns Jr., far right, dumps confetti on head coach Kevin Keatts following an Elite Eight game against Duke in the NCAA Tournament in Dallas.

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