The greatest time of the year
[APRIL 13, 2000]  Is there anything better than this time of year?  The end of the college basketball season and the road to the Final Four is purely hoops heaven.  Then you start off the baseball season with a Cardinals-Cubs series!  With the possible exception of an Illini-Indiana, Illini-Michigan or an Illini-Iowa grudge match, there’s not a better rivalry in sports. I don’t care what the Bosox, Yankees, the NBA or the NHL will tell you, it just doesn’t get any better than the Birds and the Cubbies mixing it up! And if the NCAA basketball tournament and the start of the major league baseball season are not enough for you, why not try on the Masters golf tournament for size?

Some local residents and I just got back from Augusta National, and it is assuredly one of the prettiest places on earth.  I don’t know much about plants, flowers and trees, but I do know enough to tell you that TV does not do the azaleas and the dogwoods justice.  They are simply gorgeous.  That, coupled with a field that includes the best golfers in the world, makes for the ultimate links experience.

For today’s feature, I decided to go away from our normal Q & A format and just give a few reflections on these events and what I’ve observed these past few days.  Let’s start with the college basketball tournament.

College basketball and Final Four reflections

The old adage, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” certainly rings true when addressing the state of college basketball.  This year’s Final Four had about everything except the University of Illinois in it, and probably the only way it could have been any more exciting was if the Illini had been there!  First of all, only one #1 seed advanced.  The rest of the seeds were a #5 and two #8’s.  I could see some of you picking maybe a UNC as a sentimental rather than a knowledgeable bracket choice (I mean you could probably even argue their selection to the dance to begin with); but if you picked them along with a middle-of-the-pack Badger team, you should probably quit your day job immediately! – You are probably psychic!  And if you picked all those other upsets, you are just an outright prognosticator.

As much as Illini fans hate to admit it, you have to feel that Michigan State and Florida were pretty solid picks.  I saw Florida play a lot of games this year, and the only time I saw them lose was when they didn’t shoot it well.  Of course, we saw the Spartans up close and personal twice, and we knew before the rest of the country that they were by far the best in the land (although I would like to have seen the outcome of our last game with them if Bradford wouldn’t have broken his nose…we were going toe-to-toe with them until that unfortunate injury).  Actually, the so-called basketball experts (if you can call Billy Packer an expert – as for me, I would just as soon hear some of our own local broadcasters than some of those guys that have been on the air) said that it took away from the tournament that only one #1 seed advanced to the final weekend.

I couldn’t disagree more. This year’s Final Four makeup is what college basketball is all about.  I think LCC coach Randy Kirk said it best, “When they get down to 32 teams, any one of them can win it.”  Syracuse had the eventual champs on the ropes and didn’t finish them off.  So, State said thank you very much, and went on and won the title!  Wisconsin lulled opponent after opponent to sleep along with the rest of the nation until the clock struck midnight.  And what might have become of the Boilers and 12th year player Brian Cardinal if they hadn’t had to play yet another Big Ten team to advance to Keady’s first-ever Final Four?

What can you say about the Florida Gators?  I did not want Lon and the boys to have to play them, and I will probably hold a grudge against Butler forever because of it.  Coach Kruger is just too nice of a guy to have to put up with all of that “he left Florida to go to greener Illinois pastures” talk.  As disappointed as he and all of us were after that game, once again he handled the whole situation with class (warning to the rest of the world: the Illini are coming tra-la-la-la….sung to the tune of the “Cardinals are coming tra-la-la-la”).  The Crocks were laying for us and it was over early.  They beat us in every phase of the game.  But, they beat everyone that way…until they met our Big Ten brothers.

I was so happy that once again the Big Ten conference showed why it is THE toughest conference in the country night after night.  There are NO gimmies in the Big Ten.  

Wisconsin might not have even received an invitation to the dance if they hadn’t beaten Indiana in their final game, but there they were at the RCA Dome.  I take my hat off to the Big Ten and to the Spartans…for once again, the best basketball in all the land is right here in the Midwest!

 

The 2000 Masters

As I mentioned in the opening paragraph, there are few places on earth any more beautiful than the Augusta National golf course.  The colors and fragrances are out of this world.  We saw the players that you would want to see: Arnie, Jack and Tiger.  We even wished Duval good luck…little did we know that he would need all of it and more!

The course was in immaculate condition this year.  The rough was a little longer, but Augusta rough is like the fairways at most courses that we play.

 


[PGA tour player Phil Mickelson
on the practice putting green]

 

As we walked the grounds we spotted several curious things.  Dennis Paulson spent hours on the putting greens.  Perhaps that’s why he was the first round leader.  After struggling the next two days, he had a good enough finish to be invited back next year. Vijay Singh was the first guy on the practice tee and the last guy off it.  Do you think there is some correlation to the fact that this Masters’ champion is pretty good?  The Golden Bear was hitting all of his shots solid, and of course he had another fine tournament.  Phil Mickelson looked as if he were on fire, every part of his game in a zone.  He and Duval seemed to get a few bad breaks at the worst possible time, and it was their undoing.  Loren Roberts may be the finest putter that doesn’t get much publicity, but he will…in the LDN. That guy is amazing!  Did you see some of the putts he made?  Long sidewinders, downhill rockets that had to find the holes or end up in Outer Mongolia, and all to make up for his lack of distance off the tee.  I came away from this year’s tournament with a new respect for him and for Singh.

 


[Jeff with former Lincoln Mayor John Guzzardo and Brad Neal in front of the main scoreboard at Augusta National]

The greatest thing I took away from this year’s Masters was the fun and love of the game that is rarely seen in these serious competitors.  Golf has long been known as not the most fan friendly of all sports.  As a matter of fact, last time I went to Augusta I was a little disappointed in the attitude of many of the players.  Not this year.

Two players that really stuck out were Nick Price and Jean Van de Velde.  I had never thought of Price as a fun-loving kind of golfer before.  This year I followed him for a few holes and found that he has a refreshing sense of humor.  He was playing with Singh and Jesper Parnevik, and he was cracking jokes before and after each of those guys hit.  In between he was launching jarts to within a few feet of the pins.  He is truly an amazing player.  Perhaps Van de Velde encapsulated best what golf and sports should truly be all about.  He is demonstrating that even within the scope of heated competition, you can still have fun doing it and you can still make it fun for all those around you.

Do you even remember Jean Van de Velde?  He was the guy that had a bad final hole and it cost him the British Open last year.  Because of the ugly way in which he finished that tournament, he has been the butt of thousands of jokes.  He and his wife, who follows him from hole to hole, have been ridiculed, harassed and laughed at, at every tournament since that fateful day.  But here’s the amazing thing…you would never know that he was the player that experienced that train wreck.  His countenance and personality are not that of a man of disappointment, despair and bitterness, but rather of optimism.  He was out enjoying one of the greatest games ever invented on arguably the world’s greatest course on a beautiful day.

I’ve heard it said that he remarked to someone, “Isn’t it great.  We get paid to play golf.”  He’s the kind of guy that I want to hang out with.  I doubt that Tiger needs another guy on his bandwagon anyway.  But to go through what Van de Velde went through and to still embrace golf and life the way that he does is simply refreshing.  If you would like to join me on the Van de Velde bandwagon, just let me know, because he and I think it truly is the greatest time of the year!

 

[Jeff Mayfield]

 

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