Porterville Recorder

Banish madness? Nunsense! March shows best of college hoops

- By EDDIE PELLS

BOISE, Idaho — Commanding the spotlight this first week of the NCAA Tournament are a 98-year-old nun, a pair of high school teammates who made game-winning shots a half-continent apart, a matchup of programs bonded by airplane tragedies and two, if not more, teams full of nobodies from nowhere who knocked off some of the best-known names in America.

This is what makes it March Madness.

This is what, despite college basketball's growing list of unseemly, unsolvable problems, makes it a game worth saving.

It has not been a good season for the sport.

Dozens of programs have been ensnared in an FBI probe and subsequent media reports looking into improper benefits to players provided by unmoored coaches and shady agents. That has led the NCAA to trigger an investigat­ion by none other than Condoleezz­a Rice, who should make her conclusion­s available shortly after the Final Four.

She will undoubtedl­y call for change. Critics will undoubtedl­y say the calls don't go far enough.

When all is said and done, the NCAA is unlikely to do anything to disassembl­e this tournament, which is worth more than $820 million a year in TV money and provides the funding that keeps not only basketball, but every other college sport besides football, up and running.

The unspoken irony is that the tournament provides the stage for the small, out-of-nowhere programs that presumably do things the right way to compete against, and sometimes beat, all those monsters who presumably create all the problems that got the sport in this mess to begin AP PHOTO BY with.

When a little guy beats a monster, tears well up and beautiful stories get told.

If it weren't for all those monsters to beat — to say nothing of that wonderfull­y designed, Ncaacreate­d, 68-team piece of art called the bracket — the tournament wouldn't be anything more than an extension of a 5,000-game, 351-team regular season, 99 percent of which flies past mainstream America completely unnoticed.

"The 98-year-old nun and all those other things don't necessaril­y redeem the various deep problems," says Robert Thompson, the pop culture professor at Syracuse who is, himself, a No. 1 seed when it comes to dissecting what America loves and why. "But when you put a bunch of teams together and put brackets in there, then of course, you're going to get some great stories. There's the excitement. And sometimes there's the uplifting, enlighteni­ng stuff that manages to seep in, in spite of everything else we've heard this season."

The nun is Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt , who writes up scouting reports for Loyola-chicago, and certainly had a prayer answered Thursday when Donte Ingram heaved up a shot from the logo at midcourt that went in just before the buzzer to lift the 11th-seeded Ramblers to a 64-62 victory over Miami.

Ingram's shot came only a few hours after Zach Norvell Jr. of Gonzaga hit a 3 of his own to give the small-but-successful school a closerthan-expected win over UNC Greensboro. Fitting, it seemed, because Ingram and Norvell were high school teammates in Chicago. Their former coach, Robert Smith, said he watched the game from his office: "I couldn't stop smiling," he told Cbssports.com. "I was just so proud."

 ?? TONY GUTIERREZ ?? Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, left, greets the Loyolachic­ago basketball team as they walk off the court after their win over Miami in a first-round game at the NCAA college basketball tournament in Dallas, Thursday, March 15.
TONY GUTIERREZ Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, left, greets the Loyolachic­ago basketball team as they walk off the court after their win over Miami in a first-round game at the NCAA college basketball tournament in Dallas, Thursday, March 15.

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