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The Shot (Ole Miss–Valparaiso)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1998 NCAA tournament
midwest regional first round
The Cox Convention Center (formerly The Myriad) in 2016
Valparaiso Crusaders Ole Miss Rebels
(21–9) (22–6)
70 69
Head coach:
Homer Drew
Head coach:
Rob Evans
1st half2nd half Total
Valparaiso Crusaders 3436 70
Ole Miss Rebels 3831 69
DateMarch 13, 1998
VenueThe Myriad (now Prairie Surf Studios), Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
United States TV coverage
NetworkCBS
AnnouncersTed Robinson, Rolando Blackman, Beth Mowins

"The Shot" refers to a play by the Valparaiso University's Crusaders (now Beacons) that occurred in the Midwest Regional first round of the 1998 NCAA Tournament.[1] The play came in Valpo's game against the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) Rebels at The Myriad in Oklahoma City on March 13, 1998, in which Bryce Drew hit a three-point shot to give the #13 seed Crusaders a 70–69 victory over the #4 seed Rebels. "The Shot" became one of the notable highlights in March Madness history; it was named the fifth most memorable moment in CBS's coverage of the NCAA tournament by sports analyst Gary Parrish in 2007.[2]

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Transcription

Buildup

Although Ole Miss was a much higher seed than Valparaiso and was expected to win easily[3] and advance to the second round, the Crusaders played tough throughout and were down 69–67[4][3] with less than ten seconds left. Bryce Drew, Valpo's star guard and son of coach Homer Drew,[5] missed a three-pointer with approximately five seconds left, and after Mississippi grabbed the rebound Valparaiso fouled Ole Miss' Ansu Sesay to stop the clock and send the 72.5% free-throw shooter to the line.[5]

Although Sesay had made three of his last five attempts at the charity stripe, he missed the first of two. Coach Drew then called his last time out before Sesay could take his second free throw, in order to draw up a play for the Crusaders' last possession. When play resumed Sesay missed his second free throw, and following a battle for the loose ball Valparaiso was awarded possession after Ole Miss guard Keith Carter knocked the ball out of bounds. This left Valpo with 2.5 seconds to get off a shot,[3] and forced inbounder Jaime Sykes to put the ball in play from the far end of the court.[5]

The play

The Crusaders' play for this situation was known as "Pacer".[5][6] Sykes threw the inbounds pass over the midcourt line, where Bill Jenkins outjumped a Rebel defender for the ball and immediately tapped it over to a running Drew, who shot a 23-foot 3-point shot. Drew's defender had been left flat-footed as he considered defending Sykes, leaving Drew open as he began streaking. The ball went in as time expired, giving Valpo a 70–69 win and eliminating Ole Miss from the tournament.[7][4]

The calls

Box score

CBS
March 13, 1998
#13 Valparaiso Crusaders 70, #4 Ole Miss Rebels 69
Scoring by half: 34–38, 36–31
Pts: Bryce Drew – 22
Rebs: Bill Jenkins – 11
Asts: Bryce Drew – 7
Pts: Keith Carter – 29
Rebs: Keith Carter – 11
Asts: Tied – 3
The Myriad – Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Aftermath

With the win against Ole Miss, Valparaiso started to make a Cinderella run in the tournament. The Crusaders later defeated #12-seeded Florida State in the second round, 83–77 in overtime. Their run came to an end in the Sweet Sixteen when the Crusaders lost to #8 seed Rhode Island, 68–74.[10]

In 2003, ESPN Classic ranked Valparaiso's 1998 run as #3 on its "Classic Cinderellas" list, with "The Shot" as a large part of the reason why it ranked as high as it did.[11]

Parody

"The Shot" was parodied during the 2013 NCAA Tournament with an Axe Apollo Body Spray commercial by placing a fictitious Astronaut on the Valparaiso sideline that garnered more attention than Drew's shot.[12]

References

  1. ^ King, Ben (2022), Revisiting 'The Shot' From Ole Miss vs. Valparaiso in the 1998 NCAA Tournament, web: Sports Illustrated, retrieved 13 March 2023
  2. ^ Parrish, Gary (2007-02-15). "Memorable Moment No. 5: Valpo's Drew sinks Ole Miss". CBS SportsLine. Archived from the original on 2007-02-17. Retrieved 2007-02-15.
  3. ^ a b c Cleveland, Rick (2022), It's Valpo vs. Ole Miss for the first time since '98. Remember?, web: Mississippi Today, retrieved 13 March 2023
  4. ^ a b "Ole Miss faces Valparaiso for first time since 'The Shot'", CBS Sports, web, 2023, retrieved 13 March 2023
  5. ^ a b c d Furtado, Noah (2023), 25 years later: Behind Bryce Drew's 1998 buzzer beater were the unknowns of March Madness, which lend hope to GCU, web: Cronkite News, retrieved 13 March 2023
  6. ^ Rickman, Martin (2013), The shot heard 'round March, web: SB Nation, retrieved 13 March 2023
  7. ^ Sacks, Ian (2022), Why Bryce Drew's buzzer-beater for Valparaiso is one of the best March Madness moments, web: Mid Major Madness, retrieved 13 March 2023
  8. ^ Bryce Drew buzzer beater: Valpo vs. Ole Miss (1998), web: March Madness, 2021, retrieved 13 March 2023
  9. ^ Schroeder, Harry (2020), March Moments – Valpo – The Shot, web: Valley Hoops Insider, retrieved 13 March 2023
  10. ^ Legwold, Jeff (2023), Bryce Drew's buzzer-beater and Valparaiso's upset, 25 years on, web: ESPN, retrieved 13 March 2023
  11. ^ "Classic NCAA Cinderellas | 3. Father Knows Best". ESPN Classic. 2003-11-19. Retrieved 2010-03-14.
  12. ^ Earnshaw, Rob (2013), Crusader fans cheer on team, web: Valpocommunity.com, archived from the original on 2013-03-25, retrieved 13 March 2023

External links

This page was last edited on 4 February 2024, at 19:00
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