Boeheim’s tirade worth it

By Ashley Walls
Sports Editor

The score was 60-58 at the Cameron Indoor Stadium on Feb. 22. No. 1 Syracuse had possession, and the Orange were in the perfect position to tie things up with a two or, better yet, win the game with a three. 

Syracuse senior C. J. Fair drove baseline to the rim over No. 5 Duke’s defense, but the referees thought Fair’s drive was a little too aggressive. They called him for a charge with 10.4 seconds left in the game, and that’s when the chaos began. 

Immediately after the whistle blew, Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim – who has yet to crack more than two smiles in his 38 seasons of coaching the Orange – half-stomped and half-stormed towards the referees with visible smoke coming out of his ears. 

To put it plainly, he went ballistic. The referees called a double-technical foul on the normally-calm coach, and Duke took advantage of the change of events. Upon Boeheim’s ejection from the game, Duke’s Quinn Cook made three free throws to make the score 63-58 with 10.4 seconds left. Duke won the game 66-60.

But while Jim Boeheim’s actions cost Syracuse a loss to a team they’d beaten in overtime earlier this season, his moves proved to Syracuse fans that basketball is about a little more than winning. 

Yeah, Duke won. Yeah, Syracuse fans wish they’d prevailed against their budding rival. But I think Boeheim’s paternal-like actions showed Syracuse fans that he wasn’t going to stand by and watch injustice happen. 

Though disagreeing with a charge call isn’t an injustice in everyone’s eyes, I applaud Boeheim’s choice to vouch for his players, whatever the call was. I applaud Boeheim for thinking about his players more than he considered himself, and I applaud Boeheim for ultimately showing basketball fans everywhere that coaching is less about winning and more about caring about your players.

 

The Asbury Collegian is an Asbury University publication. The paper is staffed entirely by Asbury students who seek to write on topics of interest to the University and the surrounding community.