USA TODAY US Edition

Students, alumni, Chicago rooting for Loyola in the Sweet 16 WHAT A MARCH IT’S BEEN

- Aamer Madhani

CHICAGO – After 33 years of being shut out of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, it took a bit for March Madness to properly set in on the main campus at Loyola University Chicago, the home of this year’s Cinderella.

But Susana Gomez, a senior studying psychology, can personally attest that Ramblers mania has spread through the university community.

Until this month, she hadn’t even watched a Loyola basketball game. Gomez wasn’t alone; average attendance at the Joseph J. Gentile Arena hovered near 2,000 tickets a game (less than half capacity) despite the Ramblers winning the Missouri Valley Conference. Coach Porter Moser even passed out hot dogs and T-shirts at the student center to try to get students to the games.

Gomez joked that her insight of this year’s Loyola squad, which will take on

“To see the outpouring of fans, alumni — even the locals in the neighborho­od rooting for us — it’s been unbelievab­le.”

Bobby Rice A Loyola University Chicago senior student

Nevada on Thursday in the Sweet 16, was the vague knowledge that a couple of taller guys in her economics course were on the team.

Now she’s planning a student watch party. She was even among about 500 students who attended a welcome home rally for 11th-seeded Loyola after lastsecond upsets of Miami (Fla.) and Tennessee in the first two rounds.

“It’s brought the whole campus together,” Gomez said. “We are now all taking on the motto, ‘We’re all Ramblers. Onward LU!’ ”

It’s been years since Loyola has been relevant, let alone a power, in college basketball.

The school won a national title in 1963 with a team, led by coach George Ireland, that broke with the ugly, unwritten rules of the era by starting four black players. Colleges at the time would never put more than three black players on the floor at the same time.

The Ramblers last made the tournament in 1985 behind stars Alfredrick Hughes and Andre Battle before being stopped by Patrick Ewing-led Georgetown in the Round of 16.

Then three decades of middling basketball ensued.

Until now.

“To see the outpouring of fans, alumni — even the locals in the neighborho­od rooting for us — it’s been unbelievab­le,” said Bobby Rice, a Loyola senior who has attended all but a handful of home games during his time at the university and traveled to Dallas to cheer on the team in the opening rounds.

The university has seen a surge in alumni engagement.

For the opening weekend in Dallas, Loyola was the only team to sell out its school-branded tournament gear at the venue.

Loyola has sold more than 700 tickets for the Sweet 16 in Atlanta to alumni and fans, said Laura Colon Baker, assistant director of alumni relations.

With the tournament, the university has also heard from many alumni who haven’t been in contact with the school in years. Most are inquiring about where they might be able to watch games with fellow alumni. The university has helped set up watch parties in New York, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and elsewhere.

Loyola is also seeing some early signs of a tournament windfall, with alumni marking March Madness by writing a check to their alma mater.

“I’ve definitely noticed some new people stepping up,” Baker said. “We’ve had a usual set of donors — especially when it comes to athletics — but we’re definitely seeing a lot of new names.”

The Ramblers’ run has also been embraced by Chicagoans with no connection to the school.

Donte Ingram’s three-pointer at the buzzer against Miami and Clayton Custer getting a shooter’s bounce in the final seconds for the win over Tennessee has been the talk of local sports radio.

During the regular season, Loyola received little coverage from the Chicago newspapers and media outlets that focused more on Illinois, Northweste­rn and Notre Dame. Now Loyola is front page news. Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, the basketball team’s beloved 98-year-old chaplain who became an Internet and television sensation with her inspiratio­nal pregame prayers with the men’s squad, said it made sense that Chicagoans are gravitatin­g to Loyola. The school has its main campus in the Rogers Park neighborho­od, a vibrant lakefront enclave whose residents boast is the city neighborho­od that best demonstrat­es Chicago’s diversity.

Certainly, Northweste­rn University in nearby Evanston, Ill., was embraced by locals during last year’s tournament when the men’s team broke 78 years of futility to make its first March Madness appearance.

But Sister Jean argues that Chicagoans don’t have the same feeling of ownership with that other university on the lakefront.

“We belong to Chicago,” Schmidt told a USA TODAY reporter as she prepared to travel to Atlanta for the Sweet 16. “Northweste­rn belongs to Evanston.”

Howard Fink, 83, a season tickethold­er who is traveling to Atlanta for the Sweet 16 matchup against Nevada, said Sister Jean is the living embodiment of what makes Loyola special.

Fink, a retired Chicago-area judge, attended Wisconsin, Nevada and Harvard Law for his schooling. But over the last few years, Fink has adopted Loyola and in the process become a rabid Ramblers basketball fan.

It all started for Fink a few years ago when his granddaugh­ter, who moved to the East for college, became homesick and was pondering a transfer to Loyola.

Fink, who grew up near the school’s main campus, hadn’t thought much of the school, which for decades had the reputation of being a commuter college — an image the university has largely shaken through a decade-long expansion project.

When Fink visited campus to check it out for his granddaugh­ter, he said he quickly became impressed by the students he met. Invariably, he found the students thoughtful, and Fink said he has been inspired by how many Loyola undergradu­ates told him they wanted to focus their careers on public service and social justice.

“There is a difference in the type of students who come here,” Fink said. “The kids who come here want to do something in the world. I see it over and over.”

His granddaugh­ter picked another school, but Fink continued to be drawn to the campus. Eventually, he met Sister Jean, who helped him get a university library card so he could use the library to work on a constituti­onal research project he’d been chipping away at in his retirement.

Fink said Sister Jean has also taught him quite a bit about basketball.

He recalled during the first half of a late-season conference game that a referee had been calling an inordinate amount of fouls against Loyola. In the second half, the referee hardly blew the whistle.

After the game, he asked the nun what happened. She responded that she prayed with the referees that God might help them call a “just” game. Sister Jean confirmed that Fink’s story about her working the refs had more than a grain of truth.

“I always talk to them about calling a fair game,” Sister Jean said with a grin. “You know they have a hard job. As they keep getting older and these kids keep getting faster, I tell them they might need another one of them out there. I’m happy to help them.”

That’s the Ramblers’ way.

 ?? BRETT DAVIS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? After Loyola was shut out of the big dance for 33 years, coach Porter Moser has the Ramblers in this season’s Sweet 16.
BRETT DAVIS/USA TODAY SPORTS After Loyola was shut out of the big dance for 33 years, coach Porter Moser has the Ramblers in this season’s Sweet 16.
 ?? DAVID BANKS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Sister Jean, the chaplain of the basketball team, says Loyola belongs to Chicago.
DAVID BANKS/USA TODAY SPORTS Sister Jean, the chaplain of the basketball team, says Loyola belongs to Chicago.

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