I have to tell you all though, that it was Jeannine who scouted out all this news and then I saw it on my little ESPN Davidson Bball widget. I got a good laugh when Jeannine (my best friend from high school and NOT a Davidson grad) told me she'd spent her lunch break reading up on Stephen Curry and Davidson's latest boost to such celebrity status. I think last week Stephen Curry's name was the 4Th most googled name for the week! Crazy!
Haha to that celebrity status part. I went to the urologist today and 'borrowed back' from my mom that original T-shirt we all got on our very first day at Davidson--you know--the gray one withe Davidson written in black, a red line underneath, and 1998 written on the sleeve. (Clearly I must not have sent that one to the laundry service if it's still in good shape 14 years later?).
Anyways, I was determined that on ONE outing from my house, even if it was only to the doctor, that I would share my Davidson pride. Alas, all interactions took place with women who knew nothing of basketball. The urologist said to me, "All I know about basketball is that the ball is orange."
However, since the nursing staff all know me so well, they attempted to lift my spirits by recruiting one of the rheumatologists (and big basketball fan) to head on over to my exam room and 'talk basketball' with me. The nurse says, "Hey, she went to Dickinson!" And I said, "NO! Davidson," thinking all along, here we go again with this Dickinson/Denison thing.
Well, the doctor was a student at Vandy medical school way back in the days of Lefty Driesel and remembered Vandy beating Duke, UNC and Davidson in 1969 or 1966? Can't remember what he said. Anyways, he remembered them being a powerhouse and was excited to say, "It's been a long time for them and they're doing great!" Then he turned to all of the nurses and said, "Davidson is a very good small liberal arts college." Yippee!!!!!! That sooo made my day. I'm so tired of doctors thinking I am stupid. Maybe I should make a t-shirt of some snotty sort to wear specifically for appointments.
Anyways, no medical talk here. I'll share the bladder results in another blog for those of you not squeamish about medical speak. For now, I'm leaving this blog all to the fun of Davidson!
Enjoy the game tonight!!!! Soak up the glory!
Special love and hugs to my Davidson pals. Davidson may have been a very challenging and difficult four years of my life--but it gave me so much, including all of you.
Much love and blessings,
Emily
Life is beautiful with Davidson's generosity
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=forde_pat&id=3315722&sportCat=ncb
DETROIT -- Davidson center Thomas Sander was halfway through his senior economics seminar Wednesday afternoon when a fellow student excitedly raised his hand.
"I've got a pretty cool announcement," the guy said to the class. And then he read the e-mail that had just dropped from college president Tom Ross, containing the coolest invitation in the history of March Madness:
If you're a Davidson student, the Sweet 16 is on us. And you're all invited.
"Everyone was going crazy, saying 'I'm going to Detroit!'" Sander recalled.
"I think the whole community recognizes the level of commitment and effort by the basketball team to be able to reach this level while still maintaining their academic standing. This is a gesture of appreciation."
--John McCartney, member of the board of trustees
"I think the whole community recognizes the level of commitment and effort by the basketball team to be able to reach this level while still maintaining their academic standing. This is a gesture of appreciation."
--John McCartney, member of the board of trustees
College kids love free stuff. But a free trip -- tickets, hotel and a bus ride included -- to see your Cinderella school play Big Ten champion Wisconsin in a once-a-generation NCAA tournament game? This was better than Ed McMahon showing up at your door with a Publishers Clearing House check.
"It's unbelievably generous of the trustees," said Davidson freshman Kevin Hubbard, who talked to me by phone from campus Thursday. "They really did not have to do this."
That's the key point here: They did not have to do this, but they did it anyway. No other school still playing in this tournament would.
This was a spectacular act of pure goodwill in a sport that has become so coldly mercenary it threatens to lose some of its abundant charm. Just about everything in College Sports Inc. is sponsored, logo'd, seat-licensed, underwritten or overpriced -- and the first casualty of the money grab has been the peers of the athletes themselves.
In gymnasiums and football stadiums across the country, students are herded into the cheap seats while the prime locations go to boosters and donors who can be gouged for tens of thousands of dollars. Or students get hit with athletic fees as part of their tuition to help pay for the latest phat facility or colossal contract extension for the coach.
Here in Detroit, they've rejiggered the standard basketball-in-a-dome seating plan to sell more tickets. About 57,000 seats have been sold as of 5 p.m. Thursday at Ford Field for the games Friday night. The good news is that more fans will be in the building than ever before at a regional semifinal. The bad news is that there are more bad seats than ever before.
Among the school allotments, many universities take care of the fat cats first. Students? Hey, if some of you can make it, great. You'll get a few tickets. But don't expect the school to do anything for you along the way.
Then along came No. 10 seed Davidson, basking in the glow of a surprising run and willing to share some of the reflected glory. Members of the school's board of trustees are digging into their own pockets for about $100,000 to provide at least five buses, 250 tickets and 125 hotel rooms for the student body to see their Wildcats.
Because it's the right thing to do.
What a beautiful counterconcept.
"The sense of intimacy that exists on our campus is unparalleled in NCAA Division I basketball," coach Bob McKillop said. "You hear all about the free laundry [a laundry service is offered to all Davidson students]. But when the board of trustees votes in a meeting on Tuesday to go into their personal pockets and put out the money so that every student can go to this game … that reaches a level that's unprecedented.
"I'm stunned by it. Thrilled by it."
So was everyone else on the campus. The news crackled like sheet lightning across the small liberal arts enclave of 1,700 students located 30 miles outside Charlotte.
Athletic director Jim Murphy heard a student say, "The library is going crazy." So was the student union. And the dorms.
The only catch was that the school needed an RSVP from each student by 4 p.m. Wednesday.
That put some urgency into the student body.
"Everyone ran to their computers," said Hubbard, a freshman from Queens, N.Y.
Brenda Fuentes, a sophomore from Long Island, got the e-mail on her phone at 2:23 p.m. on Wednesday. She and two of her friends dashed to the computer lab, sending in their RSVP at 2:42.
"Whether or not we have gotten to the Sweet 16 or won 28 games, we have won because we've lived up to our belief."
--Bob McKillop
--Bob McKillop
But a lot of students didn't hear about the offer until after 4. By 6 p.m. at the president's office, staffers had received 450 requests and still had about 700 unread e-mails.
"I'm surprised the wireless didn't crash on campus," Murphy said.
The only downside of this story is that the offer became too much of a good thing. Davidson couldn't come up with nearly enough buses in 24 hours to accommodate demand. Buses will roll from campus at 6 Friday morning and return sometime early Monday morning -- why not think you're playing two, right? -- but the school won't be able to transport two-thirds of the student body after all.
"The response is overwhelming," said Davidson trustees chairman John McCartney. "More overwhelming than the logistics of getting the kids up there. It's too bad the suggestion [from a fellow trustee] didn't come until Tuesday. I wish I had thought of it on my own, and I wish I had thought of it earlier."
Having thought of it at all is part of what sets Davidson apart from the Sweet 16 crowd. Athletics and academics are so well-entwined at the school that there is no disconnect between the athletes and those who cheer them on.
Brenda Fuentes describes herself as a good friend of star guard Stephen Curry. They have classes together. See each other on campus all the time.
She said she ran into Curry on campus Tuesday, after he'd become the face of Madness by scoring 70 points in upsets of Gonzaga and Georgetown. Curry told her that over the weekend he got 1,800 new friend requests on his Facebook page.
"You're a big shot," Fuentes teased. "Can you still hang out with us little people?"
At Davidson, they're all little people. That's the charm.
They offer 21 intercollegiate sports at Davidson, so a good number of students are participating in something. They also offer zero jock majors at a school known for its academic rigor.
"Davidson is a place where nearly a quarter of our kids participate in intercollegiate athletics, and they're in a very, very demanding academic environment," McCartney said. "I think the whole community recognizes the level of commitment and effort by the basketball team to be able to reach this level while still maintaining their academic standing. This is a gesture of appreciation."
The players deserve the appreciation, but do not overlook their coach. McKillop, a longtime New York high school coach who is now in his 19th season at Davidson, was producing chills Thursday while talking about this breakthrough season.
"I don't know that I could ever imagine the feeling that this would generate on our campus, in our community and within me personally," McKillop said, eyes glistening for a moment. "I am at ease now in my life. I have never been more at ease, more comfortable, more grounded than where I am right now.
"I think it's a response to the pursuit of something and seeing it happening right in front of your eyes, knowing the investment and realizing how many people were part of this investment, and now are sharing in this investment."
Later, in a hallway outside the Davidson locker room, McKillop invoked the final scene of the movie "Life Is Beautiful" ("La Vita e Bella," in the original Italian), a heartbreaking World War II concentration camp story. A father sacrifices his life so that his son can endure the horrors of internment and ultimately escape, and the boy rides away joyfully atop an American tank in the closing scene, thinking he has won a game.
The father prevailed. That's what McKillop loved.
"Whether or not we have gotten to the Sweet 16 or won 28 games, we have won because we've lived up to our belief," McKillop said of Davidson's improbable rise to this position. "We did not surrender. Our world today is full of surrender at the first sign of a challenge to people's hopes and dreams. We did not surrender."
There will be no surrender from Davidson Friday night. Be sure of that. And no surrender from the hundreds of Davidson students who are at Ford Field thanks to the largesse of a school that gets it, money be damned.
Pat Forde is a senior writer for ESPN.com. He can be reached at ESPN4D@aol.com.
Davidson is providing transportation, lodging, tickets to game
Associated Press
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/ncaatourney08/news/story?id=3314342
RALEIGH, N.C. -- It's a free-for-all at Davidson College.
Thanks to the deep pockets of the school's Board of Trustees, nearly 300 students will travel to Detroit to watch their beloved men's basketball team continue its surprising run in the NCAA tournament Friday night.
Students are getting bus transportation, two nights lodging and a ticket to see Davidson play Wisconsin in the Midwest Regional -- all for free.
Trustees pledged Wednesday to pay for any student. Within a day, 275 students -- nearly 20 percent of the student body -- had signed up. That sent officials at the small liberal-arts college, located about 20 miles north of Charlotte and about 650 miles south of Detroit, scrambling.
"The response was tremendous and frankly, surprisingly large," school spokeswoman Stacey Schmeidel said Thursday. "We actually have a lot more students who want to go, but we're trying to find more buses."
Behind sophomore sensation Stephen Curry, Davidson upset Gonzaga and Georgetown last week for the school's first NCAA tournament wins in 39 years. Curry, the son of NBA sharpshooter Dell Curry, has led the Wildcats to a 28-6 season they hope to extend Friday.
Curry hit eight of 10 3-pointers and scored 40 points in Davidson's upset of Gonzaga in the first round of the NCAA's Midwest Regional. Two days later, Curry scored 30 points to send Davidson past Georgetown and into the Sweet 16 for the first time in almost four decades.
When students learned they could witness Curry and the Wildcats in person, they jumped, even though the seven buses pull out at 5 a.m. for the 11-hour trip.
Davidson coach Bob McKillop credited the enthusiasm not only to the Wildcats' success but to the size and atmosphere of Davidson, a private school with about 1,700 students.
"The sense of intimacy that exists on our campus is unparalleled in NCAA Division I basketball," McKillop said Thursday as he and the team prepared in Detroit.
"But when the Board of Trustees votes in a meeting on Thursday to go into their personal pockets and put out the money so that every student can go to this game with a free bus ride, free hotel room, and free game ticket, that reaches a level that's unprecedented.
"I'm stunned by it, thrilled by it."
Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press
1 comment:
For those of you who know me well and have laughed, or just shook your head at my anti-athletic stand for most of my life (it's part jealousy, part seriousness, and part desire for sports to bring back the love of game instead of love of the almight dollar), I am hereby announcing that I am changing my ways. My wonderful undergraduate institution is famous for doing things on a large scale--removing loans from financial aid packages so students won't be overwhelmed with loans when they leave undergrad, finding ways to "get you here" if you want to go there, helping you start your dreams, sending you across continents in search of enlightenment, studying with the best and brightest they can fine--the list goes on). But this is the most wonderful thing, and I didn't even know about it until this morning, after the game. After we WON. Thank you Davidson for bringing back the love of the game and for making me realize athletics can be a good thing for spectators, schools, and players alike. I hope you all will tune in Sunday for what promises to be a very entertaining game. Win or Lose we are having a wonderful time and that's what it's all about--read the article below.
Marla
Post a Comment