The Bell Curve -- Joseph N. Bell
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I’m writing this on Tuesday evening. When you read it, I will likely
be sitting happily in the Anaheim Convention Center. The election will be
behind us, the opening of the baseball season will still be off in the
distance, and I will be moving into the real world of college basketball
tournaments. In this world, there are no charges or countercharges, no
character assassination, no empty promises, no sour grapes. Just
performance. You win or you lose. If you lose, you’re out -- and you
start preparing for next year when you get another shot. Nice and clean.
I’ll arrive at the Convention Center somewhere before noon to watch
the first round of the Big West Tournament. I have followed the UC Irvine
basketball fortunes for three decades, ever hopeful, inevitably
disappointed, but always lifted up by the tournament play even when UCI
loses. Today, UCI doesn’t play until the evening session, but my
involvement goes deeper than that, which is why I’ll be on hand at noon.
All of this, I’m sure, has some profound connection with my growing up
in northeastern Indiana. I can mark the public events that have shaped my
life -- the Depression, World War II, the McCarthy hearings, for example
-- and high on that list would be the Indiana high school basketball
tournament. My high school -- South Side of Ft. Wayne -- won the state
championship in my senior year, the first time this prize ever went to
one of Indiana’s larger cities. But I was hooked long before that, and I
would have remained hooked if that championship season had never
happened.
To stretch a symbol, the Indiana high school tournament offered up a
passel of life lessons. If you ever saw the movie “Hoosiers,” you might
have picked up on some of them. “Hoosiers” told the story of a group of
farm kids from a tiny high school who won the state championship by
knocking off a series of giants week after week. It happened to be a true
story, reasonably accurately presented in the movie.
So the first lesson: Size and wealth don’t guarantee success. When the
gates open, only performance counts. Indiana was one of the few states
where competition wasn’t broken down into classes. Every school was
thrown into the same pot, which gave the tiniest school a legitimate shot
at the largest one. Frequently enough to get the blood boiling, the tiny
school won.
This was the closest thing I ever knew to pure democracy, a lovely
myth in a society as socially unbalanced as ours. But on the basketball
court, social, racial and ethnic differences disappear in simple
performance. This is pretty heavy stuff to lay off on a high school
basketball tournament, but it really did have an impact on those of us
who grew up in prewar Indiana. I am told that the high schools there have
recently been broken down into classes, which is shameful retrogression
that I’m glad didn’t happen in my time.
But life lessons aside, high school and college basketball tournaments
are flat-out wonderful entertainment. And the carrot at the Anaheim
Convention Center this week will be a trip to the Big Show -- the NCAA
March Madness, a trip UCI has yet to make.
It’s going to be a tough ride this year, since UCI drew Long Beach
State -- a team that beat them by 16 points last week -- in the opening
round. There is even more at stake than a trip to the Big Show. This is
the last hurrah for Jerry Green, who has led UCI from the basketball
wilderness over the past four years and may have a shot at the pros. He
has a tendency to hang out in the wings until UCI gets down, then come
galloping to the rescue. He needs to get involved early and often against
Long Beach.
If UCI loses in the first round, there will be a lot of empty seats at
the Convention Center on Friday and Saturday. But I’ll be there, even
though my involvement will be more objective than passionate. But that
won’t stop me from eating too many hot dogs, shelling too many peanuts
and maybe getting too involved with teams I don’t really care about.
What I won’t do is spend much time -- as I’m doing here -- analyzing
all this as some sort of microcosm of life. When you’re in your seat and
the game is close and you don’t have to think beyond the next timeout,
even the hot dog you just ate that is hanging out a little heavily in
your stomach is a reminder that you are at peace with the world.
That’s where I’ll be this weekend: at peace with the world. If that
carries me back to the alleys of Indiana where every garage had a basket
mounted and the arenas where all that energy was finally
institutionalized, so be it. I was at peace then too.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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