Puppet Ramblings: Sweet Sixteen Halftime Show

-Jon Teitel is in Las Vegas, and I think is providing more coverage of The Tournament than everyone else other than perhaps CBS and Turner themselves.  So, check out his work!  You should ALWAYS check out his work even when he isn’t in Vegas, but definitely check out what he’s doing while he IS in Vegas!  What happens in Vegas with Teitel DOES NOT JUST STAY IN VEGAS!!!  Scroll down!  You can’t miss it!

-I hate backhanded compliments, so I hope this doesn’t sound like one.  UCLA had an incredible season.  The fact that they made it to the Sweet Sixteen without such a key player in Jaylen Clark, and then lost two other key front court guys before having to face Gonzaga, and damn near won the game is…just…WOW!!!  I know all the moods of the Bruins and their fans would have been a lot better had they won, but the level of pride the Bruins and their fans should have today should be through the roof.  I personally define toughness as one’s ability to keep fighting through adversity even when your instincts are telling you to stop.  This UCLA team showed more toughness than any other team I’ve seen at any point this season.  And, BTW, if you read or follow this site at all, you know that I’m not particularly a fan of UCLA.  I do think that UCLA and Gonzaga should have to play every year!!  The NCAA should mandate it during this year’s Summer Meetings!!  Whenever they play, it’s awesome!!

-Florida Atlantic has become just the second team in history to advance to the Elite Eight after beating a #16 seed in the Round of 32!!  (***Take THAT bit of trivia John Stalica!!!  He thinks he’s such an expert and acts so important because his team is in Kansas City!***)  Some point out that had it not been for the once-in-an-eon-upset of Fairleigh Dickinson over Purdue they wouldn’t have had such an easy path.  While that is undeniably true, we at Hoops HD actually picked FAU to knock out Purdue in the Round of 32, and I believe they would have if that’s who they had ended up playing.  People will also say had Tennessee been at full strength, and had Zeigler been able to play, Tennessee would have probably won.  Well…perhaps…BUT had Zeigler not been injured then Tennessee probably isn’t a #4 seed and FAU isn’t even playing them last night in the first place.  If FAU wins the National Championship, I think naysayers will point to something that happened in all six of their games and try to argue that they got lucky and don’t deserve it.  The truth is, FAU is in the Elite Eight because they DO deserve it!!  And if you’ve been following the other tournaments, Conference USA looks like the paper and metrics did not properly measure just how good the league actually was.

-Kansas State vs Michigan State was a great game.  I believe it is the first time the two had played since 1997.  I hope we don’t have to wait as long until they play again!  I don’t know when K State last made the Final Four, but I’m pretty sure it was somewhere around…say….FOREVER ago!!!  Earlier I mentioned that FAU is just the second team ever to advance to the Elite Eight after beating a #16 seed in the Round of 32.  The other team to do it was….KANSAS STATE!!  They beat UMBC back in 2018 after the Retrievers knocked off Virginia.  No team has ever made the Final Four after beating a #16 seed in the Round of 32!!  We will see history made on Saturday!!  (***Take THAT bit of trivia John Stalica!!  He thinks he’s such an expert and acts so important because his team is in Kansas City!!***)

-As for tonight’s games, I thought Texas should have been a #1 seed over Purdue, and had been saying that for the last month or so, but while I was proven correct (I feel I am ALWAYS correct) the one thing about the NCAA Tournament is that as much as people like us love to forecast the seeding throughout the season, nothing is less important once the games actually start.  The best team is the best team regardless of what their seed is, and Texas may be as good as anyone.  It would be a lot of fun to see them finally square off against Houston if both get through the Sweet Sixteen tonight.  I think both should, but that doesn’t mean they will.  Miami FL has been good all year and is a team I’ve liked all year, but I think Houston is just better.  Xavier has looked fantastic at times, and managed some huge wins during the regular season, so if “Good Xavier” shows up they may be able to take down Texas, but Texas just looked better on more occasions.

-Princeton’s 1-3-1 defense confused the hell out of Arizona, and confused Missouri even more.  It was a bad match-up for Mizzou, and I would have probably picked Princeton to win that game had the two played during the regular season, but Arizona, with so much size, strength, and talent underneath, should have been able to pick Princeton apart.  The way to beat that type of zone is to move the ball and feed it into the low post.  This causes the defense to make a choice of either doubling down (which means someone else is open) or not doubling down (which means the advantage is to the offense if they have high caliber post players, which Arizona did).  While it made complete since that Princeton beat Missouri (rather badly) it made almost no sense at all that Princeton won that first game against Arizona.  As for the game against Creighton tonight??  Creighton SHOULD win, but Princeton has a chance!  Creighton has good outside shooters, but if Princeton can extend just a little bit out of their zone to contest those shots, or if Creighton simply isn’t hitting, Princeton does at least have a shot.

-San Diego State is a really good team.  Alabama is an absolutely outstanding team.  As a match-up, I don’t think there is really much to deep dive into when it comes to the schematics.  I think Alabama is just better.

 

ENJOY THE GAMES!!!

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All-Access at the West Regional in Las Vegas: Gonzaga-UCLA

The NCAA tournament is about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The Sweet 16/Elite 8 are taking place in 4 cities around the country and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD is covering all of the angles so you can look forward to a cascade of coverage in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage from Las Vegas with a recap of Gonzaga-UCLA.

Gonzaga SR superstar Drew Timme was unstoppable to start the game, scoring 15 of his team’s 19 PTS during the 1st 8 minutes. UCLA FR G Amari Bailey kept his team afloat with 9 PTS of his own in the 1st 9 minutes as the Bruins edopen up a 31-21 lead, causing Gonzaga coach Mark Few to call a timeout to settle his squad down. The Bruins’ senior studs (Tyger Campbell/Jaime Jaquez Jr.) finally picked up the slack as they each scored double-digits in the 1st half. The Bruins committed exactly 1 turnover in the 1st 20 minutes, took a 46-33 lead at halftime, and looked completely in command. I used up most of my halftime celebrity sightings in Game #1 so the best I could do was…Jim Gray?

Timme kept pouring in the PTS during the 2nd half in every way imaginable: a pair of jump shots, a REB/putback, and a spin/bank shot to give him 29 of his team’s 1st 50 PTS and cut the deficit to 54-50, causing UCLA coach Mick Cronin to call a timeout of his own to stop the bleeding. The 2-time-defending WCC POY started the 2nd stanza 6-6 from the field but finally found a teammate to shoulder some of the burden in the form of Malachi Smith. The Chattanooga transfer had only scored 13 PTS combined in his 2 tourney games last week in Denver, but he rolled a pair of double-sixes tonight with 12 big 2nd half PTS including a jumper with 9 minutes left to give his team a 61-59 lead and a 3 from the top of key to finish off a huge run and take a 72-62 lead that appeared to have finally finished off the Bruins. NOT SO FAST MY FRIENDS!

The Zags only made 8-16 FTs in the 2nd half, which gave Jaquez a chance to show off his own conference POY skills. He had a coast-to-coast dunk, a corner 3, an old-fashioned 3-PT play, and then a layup with 32 seconds left to bring his team most of the way back as they trailed 75-73. Timme was the hero of the 1st 39 minutes, scoring 36 of his team’s 1st 72 PTS while tying Brandon Clarke’s school record for most PTS in a tourney game. However, he almost turned into the goat after missing a pair of FTs with 25 seconds left that would have made it a 2-possession game…and then things got VERY interesting.

Bailey made a huge 3 with 12.2 seconds left to give his team a 76-75 lead as the UCLA fans went nuts and Coach Few drew up 1 final play to try to win it. Jalen Suggs was not walking through that door, but Las Vegas native Julian Strawther was all aces as he drilled a deep 3 to take a 78-76 lead with 7.2 seconds left, then made a FT to put the cherry on top, and when Tyger Campbell missed a desperation 3 at the buzzer Gonzaga celebrated yet another dagger to the soul of Westwood in a 79-76 instant classic. I did not get a lot of good photos while up high in the overflow media seating but after hustling down toward the locker room I got some nice shots of the Bulldogs running off the court after their remarkable win:

In the postgame press conference I asked Drew Timme if he tried to put the team on his back as a guy who has only lost 12 games in his college career. He said that they just got hit in the mouth and had to battle/fight. The ball kept finding him in the 1st half so he kept shooting/scoring, and in the 2nd half the whole team rallied with Malachi Smith scoring a lot of PTS. It is the story of their year: the 1st half was not their “best 20” but they dug deep and kept fighting because while they might be down but are never out. I wondered if Coach Few saw any similarities to his last game as an assistant coach in the 1999 West Regional (Gonzaga faced UConn in the Elite 8 after Casey Calvary’s game-winning tip-in to beat Florida in the final seconds of the Sweet 16). He shut that idea down because “it was like 125 dog years ago”! He told his team that they would celebrate tonight’s win in the locker room…but as soon as they walked out the door their focus would shift to UConn, who he thinks is playing as well as anyone in the tourney.

That is a wrap on 1 of the most exciting games that I have ever attended, so if the Elite 8 has even half the drama then it will be must-see-TV on Saturday night!

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All-Access at the West Regional in Las Vegas: Arkansas-UConn

The NCAA tournament is about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The Sweet 16/Elite 8 are taking place in 4 cities around the country and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD is covering all of the angles so you can look forward to a cascade of coverage in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage from Las Vegas with a recap of Arkansas-UConn.



Welcome to T-Mobile Arena!

Do not even think about sneaking in because there are a LOT of police outside:

Sadly, there is absolutely nobody protecting my seat because it is WAY up high.

The control booth appears to have more buttons/monitors than NASA preparing to launch a space shuttle.

The last time these 2 teams met was in the 3rd place game at the PK-80 Invitational in November of 2017 when Mike Anderson’s Razorbacks ran roughshod over the Huskies in a 102-67 win. Let’s tip it off:

The good news for Arkansas was that their super-frosh duo of Anthony Black/Nick Smith combined for 16 PTS in the 1st half. The bad news was that the hero of the Kansas game (Devo Davis) picked up 2 quick fouls within the 1st 2 minutes and ended up making exactly 1 shot before halftime. The worst news was that Adama Sanogo dominated the paint, including a layup to give his team a 34-17 lead and force Arkansas coach Eric Musselman to call a timeout just 12 minutes into the game. The Huskies maintained that margin as they went into the locker room with a 46-29 halftime lead, while I went searching for (and finding!) some celebrity sightings:

Razorback alum John Daly with a big old beard:

UConn assistant coach Luke Murray’s father Bill:

Head coach Dan Hurley’s Hall of Fame father Bob Sr.:

The 2nd half was more of the same, with Sanogo making a ton of layups (finishing with 18 PTS/9-11 FG in 24 minutes) and his teammate Jordan Hawkins making a ton of threes (finishing with 24 PTS/9-9 FT in 28 minutes), as UConn cruised to an 88-65 win.

In the postgame press conference I asked Coach Hurley if winning a Sweet 16 game by 23 PTS with his son on the court and his father/family in the stands and his college coach doing radio on press row was the greatest day of his life. He did not take the bait and said that the best days of his life were meeting his wife Andrea and later marrying her: “Some other guys just say that but I mean it!” As a player it was not a joyride for him, and he later got fired as an assistant at Rutgers in 2001, but he is proud of the way that he has proved myself at every level that he has coached at:

That is a wrap for Game #1, check back later for a recap of Gonzaga-UCLA.

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All-Access at the West Regional in Las Vegas: Arkansas band member Noah Boggs Riley

The NCAA tournament is about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The Sweet 16/Elite 8 are taking place in 4 cities around the country and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD is covering all of the angles so you can look forward to a cascade of coverage in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage from Las Vegas with Arkansas band member Noah Boggs Riley.

You were born/raised in Fayetteville: what made you choose Arkansas? Growing up in Northwest Arkansas, I have fond memories of my parents taking me to Razorback football/basketball games. It was an exhilarating experience and something that I will never forget. I always remember looking down at the field or in the stands when the band was performing and telling myself, “That is going to be me one day!” I decided a long time ago that I was going to be a Razorback and I have never regretted it. They have a beautiful campus and I have received a high-quality education.

You have been playing the trombone for about 10 years: how did you 1st get into it, and what is the best part? In the Fayetteville School District, we are allowed to join the band in the 7th grade and learn an instrument. I originally was not going to do band because I wanted to learn more about media. However, my parents had a different plan for me. My brother was in the band before me so we already had a trombone in our house: it was strongly suggested that I do band and at least try it out for a year. Little did I know that decision would have such a huge impact on my life and who I am now. I tried it out for a year and fell in love with playing music. I continued all the way through high school: I was a section leader to start and later became a drum major. Coming to college, I was worried that the time commitment was going to be overbearing, but after I joined I knew that I could juggle it all. College band has given me more once-in-a-lifetime opportunities/experiences than a regular student. Imagine traveling to Buffalo and seeing Niagara Falls for the first time or going to San Francisco and taking a boat ride under the Golden Gate Bridge with your best friends. That is what being in a band and playing music has given me: the chance to travel across the states to create music and gain new experiences.

You play in both the Razorback Marching Band and the Hogwild Band: what is the biggest difference between playing at a football game vs. playing at a basketball game? There are many differences when it comes to playing at these two events, but the main difference is how intimate the games are. Playing at a football game, the audience loves to watch our pre-game when we form the big “A” on the field and high-march up and down the field. The crowd goes crazy, but there is a clear separation between the performers and the crowd. In Hogwild, we are one with the audience and enhance the crowd’s hype/energy because we are able to interact with the crowd while we perform. The intimacy within the basketball game creates a bi-directional energy of hype.

You are majoring in Human Development and Family Sciences in the Bumpers College: why did you choose those subjects? I originally was a biochemistry major but then decided that was not the path I was meant to fulfill. After taking a few classes in the degree, I discovered that I wanted to hone in on my interpersonal skills and help create connections, not only with others but within themselves as well. I realized that I could create a larger change by studying this than I ever could in biochemistry. These skills/practicing/learning may seem like human nature, but we as a society have lost some of these “natural” skills and need help redirecting the focus from our busy lives.

What is the post-graduation plan? It is still up in the air. I can do a lot with this degree but am not sure where to direct my focus. I definitely know that I want to go to Graduate School after I complete my bachelor’s degree. I could see myself getting my masters in higher education, counseling, or human development and family sciences. Any 1 of these degrees will set me up for success and help me better the lives of the people in my community.

You are part of Kappa Kappa Psi (the National Honorary Band Fraternity) and Alpha Epsilon Kappa (an organization you created for people in your major to network and serve local families/the community): how much importance do you place on community service? I think the least someone can do is give back to the community and people who have given so much to them. Service in general really boils down to having empathy and love for others and being willing to go above and beyond for someone else. It involves selflessness, an attitude of giving, and putting the needs of others before your own while striving to make a difference in this world. It is important as humans to look out for each other.

It sounds like your band duties take up a majority of your time: how do you balance your work in the band with going to class/having a social life? I am the “band kid” and most of us have excellent time management skills because we have to in order to survive. One thing about band is that it is a community. I may be performing my duties for the band, but I am doing it all with my friends (who I call my family). You have your support network and the accountability to get everything done. Everyone you surround yourself with has the same priorities/ambitions that you do, which makes it easier to stay caught up on everything and have a good time while doing it.

How does your school decide who gets to go to the NCAA tourney, and what will it mean to you to see your group doing its thing in front of a national TV audience? Our director of the Hogwild Band (Chase Jones) decides who gets to attend the NCAA tournaments. There are multiple factors such as attendance throughout the season, the audition we had at the beginning of the season, and instrumentation. It is also based on our availability. We have had some members who were only able to go on 1 trip this season while other members have been on every trip that we have taken. Being able to go on these trips is an honor that I never thought I would have. It means so much to have the opportunity to be the face of the University of Arkansas. It connects all of the Razorbacks across the nation, and for us to be on the sideline cheering on our team feels like we are the voice of all these Razorbacks. We are One Razorback!

Last weekend you beat Illinois/Kansas in Des Moines: how was it, and how excited is everyone on campus now that you are in the Sweet 16? To beat a 1-seed and the defending national championship was a crazy experience. The little sliver of Arkansas fans in attendance were as loud (if not louder) than all of the KU fans in the entire arena. It was a good feeling to see the team finally click together and produce such an incredible game. Everyone on campus is still going wild that we are in Las Vegas about to start the Sweet 16. Our fans never lost faith in our team even during the low points.

Any predictions for the Razorbacks vs. Connecticut on Thursday in Las Vegas? Hogs by 90…always!

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The Hoops HD Report – Sweet Sixteen Edition

A repost for those who may have missed it.  We preview all of the Sweet Sixteen match-ups after recapping the first two rounds!!

Chad and the panel recap the first weekend of the NCAA Tournament.  There are always surprises, but this year we seemed to have more surprises than we were expecting!  The most notable is Fairleigh Dickinson’s win over Purdue.  It is so surprising that perhaps the second biggest surprise was Fairleigh Dickinson’s win over Texas Southern in the First Four.  For the third year in a row, a 15 seed is in the Sweet Sixteen as Princeton knocked out both Arizona and Missouri.  Only two of the 1 seeds made the Sweet Sixteen, and other teams really had to sweat to hold on.  We go over all of the action from the first two rounds, preview the upcoming Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight games, and more!

And for all you radio lovers, below is an audio only version of the show…

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All-Access at the West Regional in Las Vegas: UCLA drum major Nellie Kamenitsa-Hale

The NCAA tournament is about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The Sweet 16/Elite 8 are taking place in 4 cities around the country and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD is covering all of the angles so you can look forward to a cascade of coverage in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage from Las Vegas with UCLA drum major Nellie Kamenitsa-Hale.

You are from Oak Park, IL: what made you choose UCLA? I knew that I wanted to go to school far away from home: not because I do not love home but because I wanted to experience something completely different and new. I also wanted to go to a serious, academically-challenging university, but did not really want to go to a private school. On top of that, I wanted big-time sports and a marching band! That list really made UCLA the perfect storm for me because it checked every single box, combined with the beautiful weather of course. No winter after growing up in Chicago: yes please!

You are majoring in Public Affairs: why did you choose that subject? I like to describe my major as a sort of applied sociology, which drew me in since I have always been more interested in social sciences than science or math. My professors/classes really explore the way our society works, how specific ethnic or socioeconomic groups face radically different challenges within our society, and what tools we can use to improve those challenges for specific groups. I do not really want to go into policy/politics but I do love my major and the way it has forced me to look beyond the surface of our societal issues.

You have played clarinet since the 4th grade: how did you 1st get into it, and what is the best part? In my school district every kid had the chance to start learning an instrument in 4th grade. My older brother and I grew up playing piano so we already knew how to read music, and we both knew that we would start an instrument in 4th grade. He started playing the tenor saxophone so I was partial to the woodwinds already when it was time to make my choice. I loved clarinet right away and was so competitive that I was always trying to be the best and audition for higher-level bands and ensembles in school. I started private lessons in 5th grade and had the same teacher through my senior year of high school. Having her as well as so many incredible music teachers throughout school really helped nurture my love for music/band: I have always loved how beautiful it is to have the power to create music. Clarinet gets a bad rap sometimes because it is not the most in-your-face sound, but my favorite part is definitely just how beautiful the sound can be. The feeling of being the one responsible for creating that music is absolutely what keeps me coming back for more.

How difficult was it to spend part of your band years at UCLA on Zoom? During my first year, we had a full football season and almost a full basketball season of band, so I did get the gist of what the UCLA Band is and how it works…but that second year on Zoom definitely sucked! I missed band, but for me it was more the general state of COVID and everything being online that felt so awful all of the time. Band was just one of many experiences that we were losing at the time. Once I realized that band, sports, and so many of the things I loved to do would be so different, I managed to suck it up/wait it out. We just tried to make the most of the time we had, even if it was virtual, so staying connected online during that time was important, even though it was not as fun as being on the field together.

What does being a drum major entail? Just about anything/everything you can think of! Drum majors look different at lots of schools: many colleges use drum majors as visual performers who participate in their shows, typically twirling a baton and actually out on the field with the band. Here at UCLA, our four drum majors function much more as student leadership connecting the band with the directors. Our official job during performances is to conduct the band so we are the ones on the sidelines waving our arms during football games. When the band is stationary during “gigs” (e.g., in the stands at football games, all basketball games, any other performances outside of football games), the drum majors are the ones deciding what songs the band plays, and we are responsible for communicating that information to the band and actually starting the music. Behind the scenes, we also play a big role that even the other members of our band do not get to see. During rehearsals and gigs, I am constantly observing the band for any problems or complaints, making sure that problems of any/every sort get addressed in a timely manner, answering endless questions, communicating important problems back to the directors, and communicating the directors’ instructions back to the band. Being the middle person between our one director and the 250-person band is truly insane sometimes, especially in an activity like marching band where everyone needs to be on the same page at the same time in order for performances to work out smoothly.

Rather than a stereotypical “band geek” you are a huge sports fan: did your parents really pull you out of middle school to watch an Indiana game in the 2013 NCAA tourney?! Yes! I am sure they were sensible about it. It had to have been like 2:30 pm on the day before Spring Break or something…but we had to watch IU play, even if it was just at home on the TV! They were a 1-seed that year with guys like Cody Zeller/Victor Oladipo: such a fun team. We were always watching the Hoosiers in the postseason so we could not miss that game. When the B1G Tournament was in Chicago we would be there, although I think my parents drew the line at actually traveling last-minute across the country for NCAA tourney games. March Madness has always been a big deal in our house and I love the first weekend especially: there is a different game on every channel and you more-or-less care about all of them because of your bracket! In high school I would pull up the games during school on Thursdays/Fridays so that I did not miss anything. Sometimes the teachers even gave up on getting their students’ attention during a close game and would just put it on for the room: we were often pretty insistent. It is just such an immersive fan experience; how can you not love it?! I have always been a sports fan since I was super-little. I used to have dreams about old Chicago Cubs players in elementary school because I would recite their names trying to fall asleep at night! As I got older, I would always do my homework at night with whatever sports game I could find to be my background noise. My sophomore year of high school, my parents and I went to a Cubs NLDS game at Wrigley Field in the evening, then my dad and I hopped onto the train to Soldier Field for the Bears’ home opener that same night! All of the boys were so jealous of me at school the next day. I am pretty sure that Bears’ game was Mitch Trubisky’s home opener (and first home loss) but I might be mistaken. All of my family are sports fans but my dad and I are the ones who have really bonded over sports. He inspired my love for sports through softball, and to this day if there is a game on while we are at home, you can bet that we will be parked on the couch watching it. We have a running joke complaining about crazy uniforms and sometimes weird courts or fields that we jokingly take personal offense to (e.g., Oregon’s ridiculous forest court!). We call it “uniwatch.” In our family group chat, someone will pop in with a “uniwatch” and tell everyone else to turn on whatever game they are watching to show off some terrible color or logo on a team’s uniform so that we can complain about it together.

Last June your band got to play at the opening of the 100th Season of the Hollywood Bowl: where does that rank among the highlights of your career? The Hollywood Bowl was so incredible! That was such a fun experience and was so cool for lots of the band members who never had a spring quarter before. After football and basketball season are both over, there are not as many band commitments or chances to perform, so it was just a great opportunity to bring the whole band together during that chunk of time. Combine that excitement with a superstar like Gwen Stefani and a famous stage like the Hollywood Bowl? Just wow: it was a totally awesome experience.

How does your school decide who gets to go to the NCAA tourney, and what will it mean to you to see your group doing its thing in front of a national TV audience? Anyone in the band can sign up for a trip but only a few get selected: our numbers are limited by the NCAA or Pac-12, depending on the trip. Our directors pick our trip rosters based on a number of things. A lot of it has to do with the number of “gigs” a person does (e.g., in the stands at football games, all basketball games, any other performances outside of football games), since almost all of these performances are optional, and I am sure that seniority matters a fair amount too. The directors get the final say so all that band members can really do is participate throughout the year and hope they get rewarded for it. It is so amazing to see/hear our band on national TV. It is always fun to get a bunch of texts/notifications from family and friends sending snippets of the band from TV broadcasts or on the edges of the camera during the game itself. Last week in Sacramento, people could see the band on TV during almost every possession on our side of the court! Lots of people reached out to say they saw us. The extra attention just makes me want to produce our best sound while we are playing and our best energy while we are cheering so that we can truly show the fans all of the amazing things that this ensemble represents.

Last weekend you beat UNC-Asheville/Northwestern in Sacramento: how was it, and how excited is everyone on campus now that you are in the Sweet 16? That trip was totally awesome. We stayed right by the arena in a nice central area of Sacramento with a lot of cool places to hang out and watch basketball. It was a great place to be for those first two rounds when there are just so many games to watch. Being at the actual games, too, was just incredible. It is totally insane to be so close to the team bench and hear the guys and Mick Cronin cheering or yelling their reactions to the game. The atmosphere in those March games are a little weird, since the arenas do not really buzz with the student energy that we normally have in Pauley Pavilion, but that just means the band has to be extra loud for the entire time! We are totally screaming ourselves hoarse trying to start cheers for every single trip up and down the court while also celebrating big plays. When the fans get quiet, it feels like we are the only noise in the whole arena, and we take that responsibility seriously. Even if the fans are not making noise, the band is there to support the team 100% of the time, no matter if we are in Pauley, Las Vegas, Portland, Philly, or Sacramento. It is hard to tell how excited everyone is since it is Finals Week here in Westwood. Everyone seems appropriately pumped up on social media, at least. Outside of school, I work at a nearby elementary school and a lot of those kids are Bruins fans. They were super-excited about the Bruins moving on and some of them even saw me on TV with the band!

Any predictions for the Bruins game vs. Gonzaga on Thursday in Las Vegas? I do not want to jinx anything! It seems like making a positive prediction is just asking the universe to prove me wrong. I think that if our guys play their best then they have a great shot of moving on and avenging our previous losses…but it is March and anything can happen, especially between two teams with as much history as UCLA/Gonzaga. I was actually at the Final Four in Indianapolis in 2021 and watched that Jalen Suggs’ 3-PT shot in real time (www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sx3LuhZOFn8): it was awful. I am sure that the guys who remember it are just itching for revenge, and the rest of us are ready for some vengeance too, so I hope we can get it done.

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