April 4, 2001:
From
the Editor
Last week it must
have been Wednesday, March 7 I received a phone call from
a gentleman from the Class of 1949. He had some nice things to say
about PAW, but the true purpose of his call was to make sure that
we were planning to give the proper amount of coverage to the miraculous
mens basketball season.
As any regular reader
of this space knows, he didnt have to worry that the teams
accomplishments would go unnoticed. And even if I werent a
thoroughly biased basketball fan, it would have been impossible
to miss the buzz of excitement on campus over Princetons remarkable
March 6, Ivy-League-championship- and NCAA-tournament-spot-clinching
victory over Penn at Jadwin Gym. With students in orange wigs and
body paint, Frist staying open late and giving out free pizza during
the NCAA game, and plenty of media coverage, from local newspapers
to a Sports Illustrated story on Nate Walton 01 and his two
ball-playing brothers, Princeton was once again transfixed by basketball.
But this season was a
little different. Over the years, Princeton mens basketball
has become a highlight reel of great moments: Bill Bradley 65
taking the Tigers to the 1965 NCAA Final Four; Geoff Petrie 70
leading them to an undefeated Ivy season in 1969; Armond Hill 85
pacing them to the 1975 NIT championship; the near upset of John
Thompson IIs Georgetown Hoyas in 1989; Pete Carrils
electrifying farewell victory over defending national champion UCLA
in 1996.
While this year had the
personalities and the storylines the unexpected departures
of coach Bill Carmody, star center Chris Young 01, and a passel
of other talented players; the emergence of two sons of basketball
legends, coach John Thompson III 88 and newly assigned center
Walton it unfolded more quietly, not in single spectacular
moments but in growing, shake-off-the-disbelief wonder. Not until
a beaming Thompson and his team finished cutting down the nets in
Jadwin did the magnitude of the teams success finally sink
in.
History may not distinguish
this single Ivy League championship from Princetons many.
But as Thompson said in a November interview with PAW (yes, the
one in which we said Princeton didnt have the horses to challenge
Penn for the Ivy title), The pressure is to maintain the level
of excellence that has been established by Princeton basketball.
Against heavy odds, he and his players did just that once
again providing a thrill for Tigers from every generation.
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