The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
UMBC basks in 15 minutes of fame as tourney’s Cinderella
As the sun rose on the Saturday morning celebration of their unprecedented NCAA Tournament upset,
Ryan Odom implored his suddenly-famous basketball team to get some sleep. It was time for family and friends of UMBC to leave the hotel and for the
Retrievers to return to their rooms. On any other night,
they’d have started a “Fortnite” video game battle to unwind. The gamers sat this one out. The only devices the Retrievers were tethered to were their phones. UMBC had made history as the first No. 16 seed in NCAA Men’s Tournament history to knock off a No. 1 seed and the texts
and the calls never stopped buzzing. And it wouldn’t take more than a quick scroll to find out they were trending. Up next, UMBC plays No. 9 seed Kansas State (23-11) on Sunday with a Sweet 16 berth at stake. UMBC is a commuter school in Baltimore — one in which the chess
team reigns supreme, no less — and they had just checkmated No. 1 Virginia. The bracket-busting
sweethearts were suddenly linked with Buster Douglas, the Miracle on Ice and Chaminade on the short list of sports all-time upsets. The pithy tweets from
its Twitter account made highlight reels. The school website crashed. Virginia turned into a punchline. For these players, the ones no other teams wanted, it was simply surreal. “I’m getting so many notifications that my phone froze,” said K.J. Maura, the emotional floor leader who play edall40 minutes Friday night.