Baseball is the so-called American pastime, but to Hoosiers and to our Illinois neighbors, it’s basketball that gets a community’s blood pumping. And no form of roundball does that any more intimately than high school basketball, whether boys or girls. College hoops is great, but nothing quite beats the packed, overheated confines of a high school gym when a tight game turns on every possession, every shot, every rebound, every pass, every defensive position. The sing-song of cheerleaders, the shrillness of a ref’s whistle, the squeak of gym shoes on hardwood, the shouted instructions from the benches, the aroma of popcorn — those form a Midwestern tableau unlike any other.
That is what makes the Pizza Hut Wabash Valley Classic, which finishes this year’s tournament at 8 tonight in the championship game, such a special event.
The event is — well — a classic success story. Its creators — re-creators, actually — set out a dozen years ago to generate the same kind of allure that attended the grand old Wabash Valley Tournament that ran from 1916 to 1972. That old tournament, which peaked at 124 teams in 1947, took two weeks to play. Over the life of the tourney, 157 Indiana schools and 31 Illinois schools took part. It was one of America’s top high school sporting events.
A re-created tournament would never have worked at that size these days — families are too busy, schools have consolidated, other school activities would compete. So, a reasonable facsimile took form. The Wabash Valley Classic began in 2000 with 12 schools, a field that has grown to 16 and eight games a day for the first three days of the four-day tournament. In a span of 12 hours per day, the eight games are played in an amazingly efficient flow of on-time start times.
The driving force behind the tournament is and has been Gary Fears, president of the title sponsor, Wabash Valley Pizza Huts Inc. If you know Fears, you know he lives and breathes this classic and has great reason to be proud of what has grown in a dozen years to being one of the nation’s best scholastic sports events. It gives him great pride each year to award the championship trophy. Fears would be the first to say he has great partners in the Wabash Valley Classic Committee — athletic directors, coaches, administrators, players and fans from all of the schools that have been involved in the classic since 2000. There’s plenty of praise to go around.
If you haven’t taken in any of the classic games yet this year, you have four more chances.
Four games are scheduled today: Bloomfield vs. Terre Haute South at 3:30 p.m., Casey vs. Shakamak at 5 p.m., Marshall vs. West Vigo at 6:30 p.m. — and Sullivan vs. Terre Haute North at 8 p.m. for the Classic trophy.
The games are being played at Terre Haute North Vigo High School this year. The cost is a mere $6.
And for that you will get to experience what we hope are close, well-played games characterized as much by sportsmanship as by athleticism, as much by community building as by partisanship. And to whichever team’s players emerge with keepsakes of tournament net goes the distinction of having their names written into a re-created and valued piece of Hoosier history.
Editorials
EDITORIAL: Another slice of Classic history
Hoops tourney again part of Hoosier lore
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EDITORIAL: Sen. Lugar’s compelling message
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EDITORIAL: Reviewing the landscape
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EDITORIAL: GOP changed; Lugar didn’t
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EDITORIAL: Fight against child abuse demands ongoing attention
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EDITORIAL: A ‘giant’ for his hometown
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EDITORIAL: Curbing corruption a worthwhile crusade
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EDITORIAL: The politics of Primary 2012
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EDITORIAL: Noteworthy in the news
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EDITORIAL: Hoosier Republicans should stick with Richard Lugar
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EDITORIAL: Matt Branam: 1954-2012
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EDITORIAL: A transplant from St. Ann’s
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EDITORIAL: Pragmatic approach to downtown development benefits community
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TRIBUNE-STAR EDITORIAL: A salute to pride of ’55
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EDITORIAL: A match of Mitt and Mitch?
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EDITORIAL: Drilling for fairness
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EDITORIAL: Noteworthy in the news
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EDITORIAL: Be fair, consistent, but keep smokefree ordinance on track
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EDITORIAL: No need to sing the blues
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EDITORIAL: Traps abound in online world
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EDITORIAL: Towering response




