Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/325716
with his team's showing. He was so hap-
py, in fact, that he dropped a quote from
the 1998 comedy "The Waterboy" in the
post-tournament
news conference.
Of course the NCAA Wrestling Cham-
pionships are my obvious answer, so
here's an o<-the-path honorable mention
that may well pay future dividends: Penn
State baseball racked up two triple plays
in one game May 16 vs. Michigan State. It
was only the third time in college or pro-
fessional baseball history that a team has
accomplished such a feat, and it made the
"SportsCenter" list of top 10 plays that
night. Said head coach Rob Cooper, "Any-
time that many people are touched by it,
especially high school-aged kids who
we'll be looking at in the future, I think it's
a powerful thing for our program."
MOMENT TO FORGET Penn State bas-
ketball overtook Rec Hall in a return to
its old stomping grounds Dec. 14 for an
out-of-conference matchup vs. Prince-
ton. On the surface, it seemed like a
great idea. And when more than 6,100
fans showed up, it seemed even better.
Then PSU wound up squandering a 20-
point second-half lead and went on to
lose in overtime, 81-79. What was sup-
posed to be a fun novelty quickly mor-
phed into sour defeat, complete with a
hangover that extended well into the Big
Ten season, as PSU went on to lose seven
of its next eight games.
■
LOU
PRATO
CONTRIBUTING
WRITER
MOMENT TO REMEMBER
Football has
been the king on campus for most of Penn
State's existence, but it wasn't football
that gave the school one of its crowning
achievements on Oct. 11, 2013. On this
Friday night of the annual Homecoming
weekend, a raucous standing-room crowd
of 6,370 saw Penn State's one-year-old
Division I ice hockey team play its ;rst
game in the new Pegula Ice Arena.
This was the climax of more than 100
years of work by students, coaches and
administrators to make ice hockey a ma-
jor intercollegiate sport. The electrifying
atmosphere inside the arena that night
rivaled any previous indoor sports event
ever
at the Armory, Rec Hall or the Bryce
Jordan Center. The crazy enthusiasm of
the students had something to do with
it. They stood throughout the night in
their special section at the south end of
the arena, screaming and yelling as they
harassed and tried to intimidate the vis-
iting team from the U.S. Military Acade-
my. No one was prouder that night than
alumnus Terry Pegula, whose $100 mil-
lion gi= provided the ;nances for the
men's and women's varsity programs
and the construction of the arena, and
Joe Battista, the former player and coach
of Penn State's club hockey team, who
dedicated much of his adult life to
bringing Division I hockey to Penn State.
The excitement was not limited to the
game itself, as the fans congregated in
the hallways and restaurants beforehand
and during the two intermissions to rave
about the new ice palace. Down on the
ice, the Nittany Lion team made the
night complete with a 4-1 victory over
the Cadets. At the time, I wondered if
the fervor of the crowd and exhilarating
atmosphere was an aberration. However,
as the weeks went by, the passion of the
hockey partisans hardly diminished. Ice
hockey had come of age at Penn State.
MOMENT TO FORGET The football
version of a mugging by Ohio State at
the Horseshoe the night of Oct. 26 will
never be forgotten. However, it was
equally disappointing to see the Penn
State men's basketball team blow a 20-
point lead over Princeton with 10 min-
utes remaining in the hyped "Return to
Rec" game on Dec. 14. For a while, it was
like old times in the bandbox of Rec Hall.
In the end, the 81-79 overtime loss was
another setback for the school's ever-
struggling basketball program. ■
RYAN
SNYDER
RECRUITING
REPORTER
MOMENT TO REMEMBER
Maybe it's
just me, but this is an easy one. In
roughly 50 seconds, Christian Hacken-
berg went from star of the future to star
of
the present, leading Penn State on an
80-yard drive with less than a minute to
play against Michigan.
Allen Robinson's catch at the 1-yard
line with 30 seconds to go will always be
the highlight that sticks with Nittany
Lion fans, but to me, it was the compo-
sure that Hackenberg showed in those
couple of plays that basically summed
up and validated his entire recruitment,
which I followed closely.
There have been plenty of other mem-
orable games in Penn State's long foot-
ball history and there are no doubt more
to come.
But to me, this past year was all about
those 50 seconds. Even if the Lions had
lost the game in overtime, their rally at
the end of regulation would have stood
on its own as a testament to Hacken-
berg's vast potential. To say that the fu-
ture is bright, well, that would be an un-
derstatement.
MOMENT TO FORGET Penn State's
dismal loss to Ohio State at the Horse-
shoe is an easy pick, but the game
against Indiana stood out to me even
more. A=er getting o< to a tough start,
the Lions were able to recapture the mo-
mentum early in the third quarter when
Hackenberg hit Robinson for a 26-yard
touchdown.
What followed was a complete col-
lapse, as Penn State allowed 21 unan-
swered points in the fourth quarter,
showing a lack of leadership and a re-
liance on youth that at times througout
the season proved costly. Indiana went
on to defeat Penn State for the ;rst time,
ending a 16-game losing streak with a
44-24 romp.
Bill O'Brien may turn out to be every
bit the coach that NFL experts believe
him to be, but he and his sta< had
enough talent at their disposal to beat
Indiana that day. I felt as though every-
one gave up in the fourth quarter. To
me, the Lions' lack of e