The Times West Virginian

Bob Herzel

March 15, 2010

HERTZEL COLUMN - Tourney provides lifetime of memories

MORGANTOWN — Let us begin this morning with an apology, for the scope of this column really will not allow us to do justice to what follows, for this is a tale that demands a big screen, a director with a human touch and the backdrop of the city that is New York.

It could be taken as a coming-of-age film, but it is something more, for this no teen flick, but instead the story of how a West Virginia Big East championship and trip to New York can take a person from the carefree days of early adulthood and allow him to experience the meaning of life itself.

Our central character is Bryant McCarthy, an affable manager at the Boston Beanery on Patteson Drive in Morgantown who celebrated birthday No. 30 this past week. A native of Weirton who lives in Grafton, his wife, Jenny, is expecting the couple’s second child but, as he puts it, “so kindly gave me a hall pass” to join his friend, Jeremy Bragg, a local attorney whose wife, Emily, also is expecting their second child, on a journey to New York for the Big East Tournament.

McCarthy, as you might guess, has the map of Ireland drawn across his face and he’s something of a maverick, a Boston Red Sox fan heading off into a New York Yankees world. His brother-in-law is Cameron Gallaher, one of the area’s greatest all-around athletes who wrestles at West Virginia after having led Grafton to a state football championship.

“The idea,” McCarthy said of the boys trip to New York, “was to have some fun now because I have the chance to do it. With a second child on the way it probably will be another 20 years before I can do it again.”

While there are those who would try to picture McCarthy as a small-town West Virginian just getting out in the world, this would not be completely accurate, for he has lived previously in Charlotte and Phoenix, but he had never ventured into New York City and could not imagine what marvels lie ahead.

“New York is amazing,” he said and as he does you can almost picture the camera panning in on him as he stands in front of Grant’s Tomb or Central Park. “You come in, you see the Statue of Liberty, the skyline. It is huge, all those different people.

“Then there’s the smells,” he continued, and you can almost feel the camera switching to an Italian neighborhood or a Greek neighborhood or a … 

“Every other block there is a different smell … pizza, hot dogs, Mediterranean food. And the sounds. People talking different languages. There’s just nothing like it.”

This was a basketball trip, a sightseeing trip. Pizza by the slice, corned beef sandwich from a deli, St. Patrick’s Cathedral, evenings in a bar and basketball.

It was a happy time, dampened only by an endless rain that had McCarthy change clothes three times in one day, and a strong winds that whistled down the skyscraper canyons of the city.

But as happy as it was, there was also a sobbering trip to the foot of Manhattan, to the World Trade Center site.

The scene now grows dark and the rain is falling in big, sad drops like so many tears.

“Goosebumps,” McCarthy says, when asked what he felt.

He sat there and looked at the sight, at the construction that is still going on, trying to replace the steel and glass but that will never replace the memory of the buildings and lives that were so terribly erased that clear, warm, sunny morning.

“There’s this little museum,” he said, “and the place is silent.”

It sits there in the midst of this loud, maddening city, silent still to this day.

“You look at it with reverence,” he said. “You are playing your respects. It’s something I’ll never forget.”

The camera now swings to midtown Manhattan, across the street from Macy’s, to Madison Square Garden.

“It’s huge,” McCarthy says. “It’s not like Mellon Arena. It sits there and there is so much going on around it. People, ticket scalpers, everyone rushing.”

McCarthy and Bragg went to New York without tickets, expecting to pay a price for the seats they bought, but on the way up a friend contacted them and told them he had scored two tickets for all sessions and he passed it on to them for free.

It’s nice to be the birthday boy.

“You get inside and you realize immediately this is ‘The World’s Most Famous Arena,’” McCarthy says.

He looks around. There’s Bill Clinton, the former President, sitting there taking in the game. There’s Spike Lee just two sections away.

And all around, on the finals night, there’s West Virginians, Mountaineers who travel well. More than half the garden is filled with WVU people, nearly everyone except for the whacky guy dressed in orange running around yelling ‘The ‘Cuse is on the Loose.’

They also had been dispatched long before.

McCarthy finds himself sitting in front of a guy from Elkins who scored his tickets from, let’s just say, an official from Marion County.

The crowd is electric, the beers are flowing. McCarthy is there watching Notre Dame play Pitt, knowing he wanted his Mountaineers to play the Panthers in the next round but just unwilling to root for them, so he helps root the Irish home.

And then the Mountaineers play three magnificent games to the championship, Da’Sean Butler doing heroic things. It is more than McCarthy or Bragg can imagine, more than they ever expected for these are games West Virginia just normally hasn’t won during their life experiences.

They party deep into the night.

The camera now switches to a car driving through the rain on Interstate 78, it zeroes in on the two men as they pop another Advil. All you hear is the motor and the rain, then a sudden clap of thunder.

They look at each other and smile, and begin singing “Country Roads.”

Fade back to real life.

E-mail Bob Hertzel at bhertzel@hotmail.com.

 

Text Only
Bob Herzel
  • Streaking Louisville visits WVU

    Everyone has focused on West Virginia University’s rivalry with Pittsburgh as a potential victim of the move to the Big 12 by the Mountaineers, but there is another rivalry that almost certainly will be coming to an end, and while the feelings are not as bitter, the games often are as hard-fought and tense.

    February 11, 2012

  • Verbal agreement: $20 million to Big East

    West Virginia University and the Big East have reached a verbal agreement that will allow the Mountaineers to join the Big 12 on July 1 and play all sports in that conference this year, according to a source and published reports.
    A total of $20 million will go to the Big East to allow WVU to skip the 27-month waiting period stipulated in conference bylaws and to cover the damages caused by possibly playing with just seven members this season.

    February 11, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Mountaineers of past won’t forget Brawl

    It is difficult to write about a story that is just beginning but that will never end, that being, of course, West Virginia University’s move to the Big 12 from the Big East, a move that may well signal the end of the Backyard Brawl.

    February 11, 2012

  • WVU, Big East reach agreement

    West Virginia University and the Big East have reached a conditional agreement that will allow the Mountaineers to join the Big 12 on July 1 and play football there next season, the Charleston Daily Mail reported Thursday night, citing an unidentified source.

    February 10, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: This WVU team different from previous squads

    Games may be won or lost under glaring lights of a college arena, filled with faithful fans and the prying eye of the ever-present, unblinking television camera, but teams are built in a far different way.
    They come together in a gym that smells of sweat and yesterday’s hotdogs.

    February 10, 2012

  • Notre Dame stops WVU, 55-51

    If Kevin Jones could have scored 20 points against Notre Dame on Wednesday night before a disappointing crowd of 9,258 in the Coliseum he would have joined Jerry West and Hot Rod Hundley in the West Virginia record books.

    February 9, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: It’s unfair to consider Truck villain

    The zero next to Truck Bryant’s name stood out like an obscene gesture during a Super Bowl halftime show.
    Some even said he was M.I.A. as West Virginia University lost a heartbreaker, if not a season-breaker, to Notre Dame, 55-51.

    February 9, 2012

  • Jones nears milestone as Notre Dame visits WVU

    That it is a crucial game in a season that seems to have nothing but, today’s 9 p.m. visit to the Coliseum by a streaking Notre Dame team comes with a historical footnote in the history of West Virginia University basketball.
    Kevin Jones enters the game having scored 20 or more points in nine consecutive games.

    February 8, 2012

  • WVU source: Battle to join Big 12 nearing conclusion

    Indications were growing that West Virginia University’s battle to leave the Big East and join the Big 12 in time for the 2012 season was about to be won, possibly as early as today.
    A source within the Mountaineer athletic department said on Tuesday that the matter was nearing a conclusion and also told the Times West Virginian that West Virginia would be reinstating a golf team to compete in the Big 12.

    February 8, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: WVU, Irish strikingly similar

    Consider, if you will, that it is Nov. 25 past, that the West Virginia University basketball team is running a routine drill four games into its season, getting ready for the Akron game when Kevin Jones goes down in a heap on the floor, his ACL torn, his season over.

    February 8, 2012

Featured Ads
Special Editions