Lew Perkins has to be smiling.
Perkins, the son of Orthodox Jews from Chelsea, MA, is a 6-foot, 7-inch, bear of
a man.
A former basketball star at the University of Iowa, Perkins has been athletic
director of Wichita (Kansas) State, the University of Maryland, and the
University of Connecticut over the past 30-plus years. For the past nine months,
he has held down the same position at the University of Kansas.
Two of these four schools have played key roles in the current NCAA National
Basketball Tournament, more commonly known as March Madness.
The Madness begins with the 64 best Division 1 men's basketball teams, and the
64 best women's basketball teams in America. In separate tournaments, they began
play during the second week of March, in venues all over the country. The rule
of the tournaments is simple: win or go home. After the first games, the field
of 64 is cut to 32 and then 16. The next week the tournaments are down to their
respective Sweet 16's, followed by the Elite 8's. And in the last week, the last
surviving teams clash in what is called the Final Four.
On Monday, April 5, there were just two teams left in both tournaments. In the
men's tournament, it was Georgia Tech and UConn. In the women's tournament,
played the following night, it was to be UConn versus the University of
Tennessee. No university ever played for both National Championships in the same
year, and most certainly, no university has ever worn both the men's and women's
crowns at the same time.
During his days as athletic director of Connecticut (1989-2003), Perkins guided
the Huskies from two so-so programs to the elite of college basketball. He also
ruled over successful men's and women's soccer programs, and changed the
football program from a mediocre team of modest abilities into a team ready to
take its place in Division 1A, this fall. Perkins builds sports dynasties.
Under his guidance, both Huskies' basketball teams have won the NCAA
championship, the men twice (1999 and 2004) and the women three times (1995,
2002 and 2003). If the women win on April 6, it will be a three-peat; three
years in a row.
Perkins also gets the credit for caressing, cajoling, and bullying the
Connecticut State Legislature into building 40,000 seat football stadium at a
cost of $90-million, not on the school's campus in Storrs, but 25-miles away, in
East Hartford, at the junction of I-84 and I-91. A lesser man could not have
sold the idea, much less have made it a reality.
Also, during his 13-year tenure in Storrs, he oversaw the building of Gample
Pavilion, a 10,000-plus seat amphitheater for basketball, despite the fact that
both teams divide their seasons between Gample and the Hartford Coliseum in
downtown Hartford, just a few city blocks away from the state capitol. The
Coliseum sits 16,000-plus, and both play every home game of their respective
seasons to full houses.
Last June, he was lured to Kansas, once a great sports school that has fallen on
hard times. He could have remained in Connecticut for as long as he wanted. But
the call to build another national sports program was too much to ignore.
Already, in his first year, the Jayhawks basketball team made the NCAA
championships, won it's first three games and finally went down to elimination
in the Elite 8. It is a good base to build on, and certainly to use to recruit
some of the best athletes in the country.
It won't take long, perhaps three to five years, before Kansans learn to say Lou
Perkins? Alavai!
There was another story about a basketball championship that was not only bad
news, if true, it is totally offensive to Jews everywhere, and especially those
Jews who lost family and loved ones in the Holocaust.
According to a story in another online Jewish news magazine, "Jewish News,"
ESPN, reported that proceedings have begun against two (former) members of a
Lithuanian basketball team that beat a German team in 1941, and were rewarded
with a prize of killing up to 10 Jews. The identity of the men, believed to be
living in Connecticut, have not been divulged. But allegedly, the United States
government is moving to have them deported back to Lithuania, if not as war
criminals, then for lying on their entry questionnaires.
The article credits the Simon Wiesenthal Center for developing the information
on the two men, and locating them in the United States. A Vilnius-based
prosecutor, Rimvydas Valentukevicius, is also investigating the claims.
It is not common, but sometimes people do the right thing for the right reasons.
Officials at the University of Miami and the University of Louisville, have
rescheduled their football game scheduled for Sept. 16, Erev Rosh Hashanah. The
game has been moved to Thursday, Oct. 14.
The move followed complaints from fans and officials of both schools.
The move also necessitated that Miami move another home game, against Louisiana
Tech, scheduled for Oct. 16, That game will be played on Sept. 18th, the second
day of yom tov, although no time has been announced yet. It is not
uncommon for schools in Florida to play their games at night because of the
extreme summer heat.
Game conflicts in every sport exist because television time (translates into
money) is dear, and schedulers refuse to recognize religious holidays. I also
believe their callousness exist because few players of any religion are so
religious that they refuse to play on those dates.
Some people may remember that Sandy Koufax, one of only two Jewish players in
the Hall of Fame, refused to play a World Series game against the Minnesota
Twins because it coincided with Yom Kippur. Two radio announcers for the Twin
Cities team took him to task on the air, questioning his sense of priorities. A
public outcry ensued and the two announcers were forced to make a public
apology.
I am not moved by forced apologies.
In Jewish sports news from the athletic field in the past month, former Big East
track champion Joe Mendel took 6th place in the 400-meter dash at the World
Indoor Championships in Budapest in March. The 22-year-old Jersey native owns a
personal best outdoor time of 45.94 seconds. |