Friday, March 22, 2024

The Dukes (Was It The Shoes?)

It was big sports news earlier this week when the Duquesne University Dukes made the cut to participate in the NCAA men's basketball tournament for the first time in decades.  It was even bigger news when they won their first round game, upsetting 6-seeded BYU.  It was the first Dukes victory in the NCAA tourney since 1969.  

But when I was growing up in western Pennsylvania in the 1950s and 60s, and learning the game, the Dukes were the very definition of the best college basketball.  They participated in the NCAA tourney six times in the 1950s, and won the national championship in 1955. This was a whole different era, with set shots and some players still shooting foul shots underhanded. The dunk was not even a distant dream, let alone the three pointer.  From the time I could read headlines in the sports section of the local paper to later when I could read the stories, Duquesne was dominant.

On Thursday, the Dukes ran at the BYU team with athleticism and a 9-0 run to begin the game, and even after BYU took a brief lead, the Dukes went on another run and were up by 12, and maintained that lead throughout the first half.  They kept the pressure on with steals, a characteristic of their game (so of course they've been called the Pittsburgh Stealers.)  BYU came back but the Dukes edged ahead again and held on for the victory.  

Before the game (as ESPN reported Friday), the Dukes team received new shoes from LeBron James, because the Dukes' coach had previously coached LeBron for two years in high school.  So...was it the shoes?

Duquesne University was founded as a Catholic college in Pittsburgh in 1878, and became the first Catholic university in Pennsylvania.  It's a peculiarly Pittsburgh name, going back to the time before the French and Indian War when France claimed the city, guarded at the point of its three rivers by Fort Duquesne (renamed Fort Pitt when the English took over.)  A number of towns and townships in Western Pennsylvania still have their French names, though no one from France would recognize how they are locally pronounced.  Back in those 1950s, sports events on radio and TV were sponsored by both Duquesne Beer (Have a Duke, Have a Duke, Have a Duquesne Beer) and Fort Pitt Beer (Fort Pitt--That's It!)

The beers are gone (though the Duquesne brand was revived) but the Dukes still have a strong sports program for a relatively small school.  Now there must be many wondering "the what Dukes?"  They've already made a national splash.  Perhaps there's more to come.  

Wednesday, March 20, 2024

Reality Check

 The night of my last post, Steph Curry went down with an ankle injury towards the end of a game against the Chicago Bulls that the Golden State Warriors then narrowly lost.  He was out three games, and the Warriors lost two of them.  With Curry back and scoring 31 points in 3 quarters, they looked good beating the Lakers in LA, though the fairly early exit of Anthony Davis with a nasty eye injury might have been the key.  

Then they lost at home to the surging New York Knicks, which combined with the Lakers convincing beat down of Atlanta, dropped them into 10th place.  It was the Knicks' fifth win in a row on the road, but notably Coach Kerr and especially Steph Curry did not emphasize this momentum in their postgame comments.  Kerr said the Warriors had simply been outplayed.  Curry expanded on that idea, noting that a week or so ago he was talking about the Warriors moving up to the sixth slot for the playoffs, but now it didn't seem to matter what slot they got, if they played in the playoffs as they did against the Knicks, they wouldn't get very far.

It was a sobering reality check.  The Dubs have a physical disadvantage against particular teams but  the quality of their play is in their own hands.  So even if it was an off night, there can't be too many of those for the rest of the season or the playoffs.

Meanwhile, Kerr continues to play his depth.  Nobody cracked 30 minutes on the floor against New York but Curry and Green, and both of them barely.  In that game only Jackson-Davis was truly impressive, with 19 points and 10 boards in his twenty-some minutes.  The other bright spot is Klay Thompson, who had great games (though in slightly different ways) against both the Lakers and the Knicks.  He continues to thrive off the bench. Draymond Green may be hampered by injury, and Moses Moody is also questionable.  Obviously Dray is a big factor, and in particular matchups Moody could be. 

Now the Dubs have a chance to improve their doleful record at home with two more games this week, against Memphis and Indiana.