Hoping for magic all season long
BARRY FAULKNER
One might suggest two reasons why the UC Irvine men’s and women’s
basketball teams’ tipoff event Saturday morning was called Midnight
Magic.
First, donning the practice gear and taking the floor the first
minute of the allotted first day of practice, both displays and
encourages the kind of enthusiasm Pat Douglass has created around his
men’s program with three straight 20-win seasons.
“This senior class is the winningest in school history,” Douglass
noted in a brief address to the estimated 1,500, mostly students,
gathered at the Bren Event Center. “The last three years, we’ve been
the winningest program in Southern California.”
Loud cheers, not atypical of college students gathered to
celebrate the passage of Friday night into Saturday morning, followed
this statement, as well as Douglass’ forthcoming revelation that “I
think it’s time we go [to the NCAA tournament], so, I think, this is
going to be our year.”
The second reason? Poof, it makes fundamentals disappear.
The six-minute men’s scrimmage featured, arguably, more alley-oop
passes than Anteater fans can expect the entire 13-game home season,
including a pair of exhibitions, the first of which against the EA
Sports All-Stars, scheduled Nov. 1.
Big men launched three-pointers, guards dropped behind-the-back
dimes and Douglass, sitting approvingly near one end of the scorer’s
table, appeared to be anything but unsettled by the
less-than-Wooden-like display.
“They know what the students want to see,” Douglass said of his
players’ playground proclivity, which, beginning with Saturday’s
first “real” practice, must be left in the locker of any Anteater
hoping to win favor with the veteran coach.
A slam dunk contest followed the scrimmage and, well, let’s just
say springy 6-foot-7 senior Matt Okoro’s presence was missed. He is,
no doubt, saving it for the television cameras, which are becoming
more and more a part of the atmosphere accentuated by the
ever-expanding rooter section billed as the Completely Insane
Anteaters, or CIA.
“Part of the turnabout of our program [1-25 before Douglass
arrived to lead the ‘Eaters in 1997-98] has to do with the CIA
involvement,” Douglass said. “We’ve gotten more and more TV games,
because of the appearance those guys create by jumping up and down on
one side of the court.”
The CIA signup table seemed to be surrounded with new recruits,
anxious to trade their inhibitions and undamaged vocal chords for a
yellow T-shirt and a choice courtside, student-section seat.
The slam dunk champion? Patrick Sanders, a freshman walk-on out of
Orange High, whom Estancia and Costa Mesa high school players, fans
and coaches may remember for a few Dominique-like dunks as a prep.
The three-point challenge went to the women’s team, paced by
junior guard Courtney Ferguson, who sank 8 of 12 from three
designated spots beyond the arc.
Players were introduced one by one, delivering high-fives through
the rooters from the top of the arena to the floor. The players later
retraced those steps up the stands to pass out pocket schedules and
pass on their appreciation for and anticipation of the spectator
support.
With Midnight Magic’s complete, Anteater Anticipation has, indeed,
begun in earnest.
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