Because college basketball just wrapped up this week, I thought this would be a good assignment that would keep one of the most incredible National Championship games ever in your mind.
The article below is about the history of the Villanova basketball program Please remember to put your name on your Blog so that I can give you credit.
Kris Jenkins's buzzer-beating three gives Villanova another perfect ending
Villanova sinks buzzer beater to claim NCAA title
Sports Illustrated's David Gardner and Seth Davis discuss the epic finish to the NCAA national championship game, where the Villanova Wildcats Kris Jenkins hit a buzzer-beating three-pointer to defeat the North Carolina Tar Heels.
HOUSTON — Ryan Arcidiacono streaked over to Rollie Massimino, wrapped his arms around the former Villanova coach’s waist and delivered a hug as violent as it was beautiful. Arcidiacono, a senior guard, pulled the 81-year-old coach more than a foot off the ground, kissed him atop his commemorative NCAA championship hat and whispered into his ear: “I love you, coach.” The moment encapsulated a collision of the ages, the Perfect Game of 1985 meeting the Perfect Ending of 2016. Villanova’s 77–74 victory over North Carolina in the national championship game on Monday night will be prominently featured in countless bar debates for years to come. Was it the best title game ever? Was it the best championship game finish? Was it the greatest buzzer-beater in college basketball history? At the very least, it’s in the conversation for all of those things.
But at the tight-knit Philadelphia school where basketball defines the university’s image and athletic culture, Monday night’s improbable ending will forever be paired with the incredible upset by the 1985 team, a No. 8 seed which toppled No. 1 Georgetown. Thirty-one years later, on Monday night, the No. 2 seeded Wildcats one-upped No. 1 North Carolina’s late-game theatrics to deliver this new Perfect Ending.
Junior forward Kris Jenkins delivered one of the NCAA tournament's definitive Shining Moments when he took a shovel pass from Arcidiacono and nailed a 26-foot buzzer beater that left his hand with .4 seconds remaining. It goes down as the first buzzer-beating three-pointer in NCAA championship game history. That will put Jenkins in the rare clutch air of North Carolina State’s Lorenzo Charles, who dunked home Dereck Whittenburg's 30-foot air ball to win the 1983 NCAA title.
• WATCH: Villanova students on campus celebrate national championship
“In a national championship game, to hit a shot at the buzzer, I mean, I haven’t seen many better than that,” Villanova Coach Jay Wright said of Jenkins.
What made Jenkins’s shot so remarkable is that it somehow managed to top the double-clutch shot from North Carolina guard Marcus Paige, who tied the game with 4.7 seconds remaining. Paige’s three-pointer will redefine the standards of difficulty for late-game heroics. He leapt in the air on the right wing, moved the ball around in the air to avoid an onrushing Arcidiacono, scissored his legs and shot the ball over Villanova’s Mikal Bridges while falling down. The shot going in was so remarkable that dozens of fans hurled orange seat cushions in the air, as if the basketball gods were crying from the heavens in disbelief.
That set up the heroics of Jenkins, the junior forward who North Carolina inexplicably left open. Jenkins inbounded the ball on the opposite baseline and no Tar Heel ever picked him up. No one knew it better than Jenkins, who trailed Arcidiacono up the floor screaming, “Arch! Arch! Arch!” Jenkins’s shot led to another cascade of orange seat cushions and perhaps changed the world order of historic Villanova victories. “This one is No. 1,” Massimino said. “We’re No. 2.”
Massimino, of course, was the coach when Villanova pulled off the seminal title-game upset in NCAA tourney history over Georgetown. It’s remembered as the Perfect Game because the Wildcats shot 78%, and they still remain the lowest seed to ever win the tournament.
The current Villanova players know all about the '85 team. In the foyer of their practice facility there’s a screen where anyone can push a button and see highlights from that fateful night. The song “One Shining Moment” plays in the background as Ed Pinckney runs the floor, Harold Jensen doesn't miss a shot and Dwayne McClain slashes the lane. “Coach is adamant guys understand the history of Villanova basketball,” Wildcats assistant coach Baker Dunleavy said. “They’ve seen those highlights a bunch. They know the guys who played in the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. That’s something we take a ton of pride in.”
That pride became reciprocal on Monday night. Nine of the members from that 1985 Villanova team sat in Section 109. They cheered on improbable hero Phil Booth, a reserve guard who scored 20 points off the bench. They witnessed Arcidiacono join Pinckney as the Final Four's Most Outstanding Player. And they hugged and hollered when Jenkins’s shot went in. “I almost jumped through the roof,” Massimino said.
• WATCH: "One Shining Moment" from 2016 NCAA tourney
The 1985 Wildcats joined the party on the floor after Jenkins’s heroics, two sun-kissed teams exchanging hugs as they waded through confetti. Pinckney wrapped his arms around his old coach, putting to life the trendy Nova T-Shirt spotted around Houston all week: “I Wanna Party Like It’s 1985.” Pinckney smiled at history repeating itself. “This is a beautiful thing to be a part of,” he said. “When we get to the Royal Sonesta Hotel, we’re all going to go crazy.”
It didn’t take long for Wright to find Massimino in the postgame celebration. They walked together on the court to do an interview with former Georgetown coach John Thompson on Westwood One, a fitting nod to the past. Wright then walked Massimino back across the court, one arm of a tailored pin-striped suit plastered over the shoulder of another tailored pin-striped suit. Wright escorted Massimino to the party at the base of the ladder where the Wildcats gathered to wait their turn to cut down the nets. “Somebody has to give you the opportunity,” Wright said of his former boss. “Then they have to spend the time with you to reach you. He did that for me. To share this with him, our Villanova people love him. He’s a magical figure.”
This victory now gives Wright the same status. One historic shot now gives Villanova two shining moments. The biggest upset on Monday night may be that Villanova managed to match its own resplendent history.
1. What was the final school of the NCAA National Championship game?
2. What happened in the 1985 NCAA Championship game that made that game so remarkable to the history of the Villanova's Men's Basketball program?
3. Who was the coach of Villanova's 1985 team?
4. Has there ever been another championship game in the history of the NCAA to have a buzzer beater?
5. Which player from North Carolina hit a three-pointer with 4.7 seconds to go?
6. Do you think this game will be remembered as the greatest NCAA Championship game of all time? Why?
But at the tight-knit Philadelphia school where basketball defines the university’s image and athletic culture, Monday night’s improbable ending will forever be paired with the incredible upset by the 1985 team, a No. 8 seed which toppled No. 1 Georgetown. Thirty-one years later, on Monday night, the No. 2 seeded Wildcats one-upped No. 1 North Carolina’s late-game theatrics to deliver this new Perfect Ending.
• WATCH: Villanova students on campus celebrate national championship
“In a national championship game, to hit a shot at the buzzer, I mean, I haven’t seen many better than that,” Villanova Coach Jay Wright said of Jenkins.
What made Jenkins’s shot so remarkable is that it somehow managed to top the double-clutch shot from North Carolina guard Marcus Paige, who tied the game with 4.7 seconds remaining. Paige’s three-pointer will redefine the standards of difficulty for late-game heroics. He leapt in the air on the right wing, moved the ball around in the air to avoid an onrushing Arcidiacono, scissored his legs and shot the ball over Villanova’s Mikal Bridges while falling down. The shot going in was so remarkable that dozens of fans hurled orange seat cushions in the air, as if the basketball gods were crying from the heavens in disbelief.
That set up the heroics of Jenkins, the junior forward who North Carolina inexplicably left open. Jenkins inbounded the ball on the opposite baseline and no Tar Heel ever picked him up. No one knew it better than Jenkins, who trailed Arcidiacono up the floor screaming, “Arch! Arch! Arch!” Jenkins’s shot led to another cascade of orange seat cushions and perhaps changed the world order of historic Villanova victories. “This one is No. 1,” Massimino said. “We’re No. 2.”
Massimino, of course, was the coach when Villanova pulled off the seminal title-game upset in NCAA tourney history over Georgetown. It’s remembered as the Perfect Game because the Wildcats shot 78%, and they still remain the lowest seed to ever win the tournament.
The current Villanova players know all about the '85 team. In the foyer of their practice facility there’s a screen where anyone can push a button and see highlights from that fateful night. The song “One Shining Moment” plays in the background as Ed Pinckney runs the floor, Harold Jensen doesn't miss a shot and Dwayne McClain slashes the lane. “Coach is adamant guys understand the history of Villanova basketball,” Wildcats assistant coach Baker Dunleavy said. “They’ve seen those highlights a bunch. They know the guys who played in the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. That’s something we take a ton of pride in.”
That pride became reciprocal on Monday night. Nine of the members from that 1985 Villanova team sat in Section 109. They cheered on improbable hero Phil Booth, a reserve guard who scored 20 points off the bench. They witnessed Arcidiacono join Pinckney as the Final Four's Most Outstanding Player. And they hugged and hollered when Jenkins’s shot went in. “I almost jumped through the roof,” Massimino said.
• WATCH: "One Shining Moment" from 2016 NCAA tourney
The 1985 Wildcats joined the party on the floor after Jenkins’s heroics, two sun-kissed teams exchanging hugs as they waded through confetti. Pinckney wrapped his arms around his old coach, putting to life the trendy Nova T-Shirt spotted around Houston all week: “I Wanna Party Like It’s 1985.” Pinckney smiled at history repeating itself. “This is a beautiful thing to be a part of,” he said. “When we get to the Royal Sonesta Hotel, we’re all going to go crazy.”
1. What was the final school of the NCAA National Championship game?
2. What happened in the 1985 NCAA Championship game that made that game so remarkable to the history of the Villanova's Men's Basketball program?
3. Who was the coach of Villanova's 1985 team?
4. Has there ever been another championship game in the history of the NCAA to have a buzzer beater?
5. Which player from North Carolina hit a three-pointer with 4.7 seconds to go?
6. Do you think this game will be remembered as the greatest NCAA Championship game of all time? Why?
12 comments:
1. The final score was 77-74; Villanova beat North Carolina.
2. In 1985, the Villanova team was the No. 8 seed and beat the No. 1 seed Georgetown.
3. Rollie Massimino was the 1985 coach.
4. Yes, in the 1983 NC State vs Houston National Championship game there was a buzzer beater.
5. The UNC guard Marcus Paige hit the three-pointer with 4.7 seconds to go.
6. It will probably be remembered as the greatest because it was not only a buzzer beater, but a buzzer beater in response to an extremely hard three-pointer that tied the game. The circumstances and story behind this buzzer beater is more memorable than any other.
Michael Tran
1. 77-74
2. won there first national championship
3. Rollie Massimino
4. yes
5. Marcus Piege
6. yes. because both teams were going back and forth and it ended with two big threes.
1. Nova and UNC
2.Chris Jenkins hit a buzzerbeater 3 to win the game, before the two teamns were about to go in OT.
3. Rollie massimino
4. Yes
5. Marcus Paige
6. Yes because the two teams fought as absolutely hard as they could.
Haydn McGriff
1. Villanova
2. They shot almost 80% from the field.
3. Rollie Massimino
4. No
5. Marcus Paige
6. Yes because of the late game heroics from both Paige and Jenkins.
Chinguun Erdenesuren
Nayeer Ullah
1. What was the final school of the NCAA National Championship game?
Final school was Villanova beating UNC 77-74
2. What happened in the 1985 NCAA Championship game that made that game so remarkable to the history of the Villanova's Men's Basketball program?
In 1985, Lorenzo Charles caught Derreck Whittenburgs airball and dunked it in for the win.
3. Who was the coach of Villanova's 1985 team?
Rollie Massiminio
4. Has there ever been another championship game in the history of the NCAA to have a buzzer beater?
There has been no 3 point buzzer beater in the history of the tournament
5. Which player from North Carolina hit a three-pointer with 4.7 seconds to go?
Marcus Paige
6. Do you think this game will be remembered as the greatest NCAA Championship game of all time? Why?
No because the George Mason upset over UCONN was an unprecedented upset for the turn of the century.
1. Villanova wins 77-74
2. They pulled a huge upset against the #1 seed during the tournament.
3. Rollie Massimino
4. Yes there were.
5. Lorenzo Charles
6. I don't think it will be the greatest of all time but I do think it will be up there. I believe there are more greater moments that involved greater players.
Malcolm Amobi
77-74
A number 8 seed Villanova beat the number one seed georgetown
Massimino
Yes there has been by North Carolina state
Marcus Paige
This will be remember as one of the greatest because it was such an intense game and just when everyone thought it was going to overtime Jenkins made the buzzer beating three which is so rare.
Ryan Warshaw
Period 1
1. Villanova: 77 North Carolina: 74
2. the No. 8 seed Villanova upset the No. 1 seed Georgetown
3. Rollie Massimino
4. yes
5. Marcus Paige
6. yes because when i watched the game personally you could tell who would win. it was very evenly matched
Kiana Johnson
1; 77-74.
2; The number 8 seed toppled the number 1 seed.
3; Rollie Massamino.
4; No.
5; Marcus Paige.
6; Yes, because it ended with a buzzer beater and back to back 3's.
Hansen Nguyen
Pd. 1
1. Villanova
2. The No.8 seed upset the No.1 seed
3. Rollie Massimino
4. No
5. Marcus Paige
6. Yes, because there were multiple clutch plays and shots and the No.2 seed beat the No.1 seed
Phillip Garrett
1) Villanova won 77-74 over UNC
2) In 1985 Villanova also did an upset on Georgetown
3) Rollie Massimino
4) Yes
5) Marcus Paige
6) Yes because the game ended because of a buzzer beater.
Villanova 77-74
No8 beat no 1 g town
Rollie massimino
No
Marcus Paige
Yes, buzzer beater
Muneeb mirza
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