Joseph N. Bell -- THE BELL CURVE
The best show in town has been playing mostly to slim houses all year.
That is, until a week ago Wednesday. It was a good show before that, and
it’s going to be a very good show for a long time to come. But the
Newport-Mesa townsfolk have been inordinately slow to discover it.
I’m talking about the basketball Anteaters at UC Irvine. A blip in the
basketball firmament the past decade, one of those soft-touch teams
scheduled early in the year to fatten up the records of the
heavy-hitters, UC Irvine has suddenly and wonderfully turned on the
predators. But the students -- and especially the Town-and-Gowners --
took little notice until the bully of the Big West conference, Utah
State, came visiting UC Irvine with a 16-2 record and went home with a
bloody nose. Almost overnight, the blip became an incipient star.
I was there to see it, just as I’ve been there expecting some sort of
miracle to take place at almost every home game for the past 10 years.
When a half-dozen wins was a big season for the Anteaters, I was the guy
sitting on the visitors’ side in a sea of empty seats, across from a few
dozen students who were bored with studying and didn’t have anything else
to do.
I had lots of other things to do, but I went anyway, usually alone,
ever hopeful. Why? Because I love college basketball. Because I grew up
in Indiana, where failure to have a basketball hoop on your garage is the
mark of a dangerous radical. And because I greatly admired Coach Bill
Mulligan and his UC Irvine teams when I was teaching at the university,
and the connection never wore off.
Mulligan sent a half-dozen players to the pros and faced down the
bully of those days -- the University of Nevada at Las Vegas -- time
after time in UC Irvine’s bandbox of a gym that would have been
inadequate in any Indiana high school. Mulligan never got to the Big Show
-- to the NCAA tournament -- although he did get to its stepsister, the
NIT. And he enjoyed only a few years playing in the Bren Center before he
left the scene on a losing note that just continued to get worse.
UC Irvine is a tough athletic sell. Its academic demands are high, and
its athletic profile low, both downers for high school athletes being
recruited by the heavy-hitters. UC Irvine students have shown little
interest in basketball, and the Town-and-Gowners even less. So -- except
for the exceptional athlete to whom academics and a low profile are
attractive -- recruiting has to be done with an eye for reasonably smart
kids whose skills are latent enough that the major athletic schools pass
them by. Such perceptions require a kind of combination Svengali, Billy
Graham and David Copperfield.
Coach Pat Douglass came along three years ago and qualified on all
counts. He came out of a national championship program in Bakersfield to
the woebegone Anteaters and started recruiting high school projects. Some
worked and some didn’t, and so he sifted through them, hanging on to the
keepers and coming up each year with a new batch of projects. The records
improved until he won as many as he lost last year. And then it all came
together this year, built on a nucleus of the keepers garnished by some
high-class freshmen intrigued by what is happening at UC Irvine.
Public awareness was as apathetic as usual this year until UC Irvine
beat California -- a team probably headed for the NCAA tournament. Cal
alumni hyped the crowd to near capacity. When UC Irvine then almost beat
UCLA and did beat Washington on their home courts, the corps of believers
grew, along with UC Irvine’s winning record.
Only the basketball team was prepared for Utah State. The surrounding
cast was unaccustomed to such frenzy as hundreds of people standing in
line at the box office and chaotic lines of cars contesting for space in
the parking garage. So were the rest of us who had long been able to
arrive 10 minutes before the start of the game and get seated
comfortably.
There were students with painted faces, a band that rocked,
cheerleaders who actually drew cheers, and -- best of all -- a
blue-collar team supporting a magician named Jerry Green who simply
refused to lose. Somehow, all this was epitomized by a rather awkward
giant named Dave Korfman who came into the game wearing a helmet because
he had brain surgery only a month before and was not expected to return
this season -- or maybe any season.
Korfman had passed out while lifting weights on New Year’s afternoon.
When he fell, his head smashed against both the barbell and the wall. Two
hours later, he was in surgery. Two days after that, he was hungry and
wanted out of bed. And four weeks later, wearing a new steel plate and a
helmet, he was playing basketball against Utah State -- and a crowd that
filled every seat at Bren Center was ecstatic.
So that’s the way it’s going these days for the Anteaters. The winner
of the Big West tournament in Anaheim in March gets an automatic
invitation to the Big Show. That’s probably the only way UC Irvine will
get in, and Utah State will be standing firmly in the way. Meanwhile,
there are a half-dozen home games remaining in the regular season. And,
like I said, it’s the best show in town.
I’m starting to get in shape for the tournament. Gordon McAlpine, who
is a fine novelist and teacher at Chapman University, shoots hoops with
me regularly, and I’m going to step up the sessions. I concede him a few
years, but when I have the range, I can beat him. So I’ll be ready --
along with the Anteaters -- by tournament time.
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