A Second Can Mean So Much In A Football Game

At Saturday’s Iron Bowl, the first half seemed over. Then officials put a second back on the clock. Auburn used that second to kick a field goal, and they ended up beating Alabama by three.



DAVID GREENE, HOST:

Good morning. I’m David Greene. A second can mean so much in football. At Saturday’s Iron Bowl, the first half seemed like it was over, then officials put a second back on the clock. Auburn used that second to kick a field goal, and they ended up beating Alabama by 3. Now an Auburn dean is rubbing it in. Joe Aistrup told professors they could add a single second to final exams. He wrote, when every second counts, Auburn men and women make great things happen.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Saturday Sports: The NFL Playoffs Close In; The Maple Leafs Shake Things Up

The second half of the season is where the rubber hits the road with the NFL. So, which teams are for real? Also, having fired their coach, will the Toronoto Maple Leafs finally get their moment?



SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

And talk about methane release. Time to talk sports.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

SIMON: Just a few games left in the NFL season. Are the Buffalo Bills bound for the playoffs – the Buffalo Bills? An NFL player caught betting on NFL games. And the Toronto Maple Leafs gave their coach the boot, eh, but go on a roll.

Howard Bryant of ESPN, thanks so much for being with us.

HOWARD BRYANT, BYLINE: Good morning, Scott.

SIMON: We have the usual suspects lined up for the postseason – New England, New Orleans, Seattle. But this year, the Buffalo Bills – they’re 9-3 – crushed the Cowboys on Thanksgiving Day 26-15.

BRYANT: In Dallas.

SIMON: In Dallas, right.

BRYANT: Yeah.

SIMON: Thanks for reminding me. They haven’t won the division since 1995. What’s different?

BRYANT: Well, I think what’s different is – I think there’s a couple of things. One, they’ve got a good quarterback. Josh Allen is one of these modern read option quarterbacks who can run, throw – he’s a big guy. He looks 6’5″. And they’re playing with some belief. I think that they’re – you’ve got the ageless Frank Gore out there, as well, at running back. And it seems like they’re playing with a lot of belief here.

You know, football so much, Scott, is all about injuries and turnovers. You stay healthy, and you protect the ball, you got a chance to win. And there’s a big game coming up next month – New England and Buffalo. The Patriots aren’t that good this year. They’re not as good as they’ve been. Maybe this is the year that you can do a little bit up in New England and take them out finally.

SIMON: Arizona Cardinals safety Josh Shaw – suddenly every other player in the NFL is named Josh – has been suspended through the entire 2020 season for betting on NFL games. Legal sports betting has exploded over the last few years. Every league wants to tap that revenue stream. How can the NFL suspend a player for betting on games when the NFL enriches itself with people betting on games?

BRYANT: Well, because once again, betting is the poison pill. Whether you’re talking about Shoeless Joe Jackson or Pete Rose or Paul Hornung or any – or even Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle – remember; they were – they got…

SIMON: Right. They were…

BRYANT: …Suspended.

SIMON: …Right. They were greeters at a…

BRYANT: And they were greeters at a casino in Vegas. This is the thing – the game is supposed to be pure. And the – it’s supposed to be unscripted, live entertainment, uninfluenced. However, there’s a billion-dollar industry out there. And we’re not talking about just gambling and the point spreads that football has made billions of dollars off of for years. But now it’s been incorporated into the business model. It’s incorporated onto the business partners, whether you’re looking at all the websites talking about gambling. It’s fantasy, whether it’s FanDuel or DraftKings. It’s the states now, not just Vegas. But now you’ve got New Jersey, you’ve got New York, you’ve got all of these different states looking at new revenue streams. And there’s no way out.

At some point, this was going to be inevitable. We saw the same thing happen last year – or not last year – 10 years ago with Tim Donaghy and the NBA, the referee. And of course, the sports leagues, whether it was the NFL yesterday or whether it was the NBA 10 years ago, the first thing they said was it’s an isolated event because they want to make sure that the game is not tainted. But at some point when you bring gambling into your industry, which is what they’ve done, and they’ve embraced it, it was only a matter of time before this happened.

SIMON: Toronto Maple Leafs fired their coach 23 games into the season. There’s so much talent on that team between Auston Matthews and William Nylander, but they’re languishing in fourth place. How do they expect to turn things around? Because the last time they were in the Stanley Cup, the Richard brothers were playing.

BRYANT: (Laughter).

SIMON: And Stan Mikita was on the ice.

BRYANT: That’s right, 1967. Well, the way you do it, obviously, you should make that coaching change. Obviously Mike Babcock, there was a lot of emotional warfare going on with that team. And hopefully you bring in Sheldon Keefe – maybe he’s not the long-term answer. But certainly you’re hoping to get those guys going. You’ve got Matthews, got Nylander, you’ve got Mitch Marner. They’ve got a good team. They were supposed to be Stanley Cup contenders this year, and maybe making that coaching change is going to get them going. We’re still not even at the All-Star break; lots of time left.

SIMON: ESPN’s Howard Bryant, thanks so much for being with us. Happy Holidays, my friend.

BRYANT: Thank you. You, too.

(SOUNDBITE OF KATHLEEN EDWARDS SONG, “HOCKEY SKATES”)

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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He Was A Horse That Never Won A Race. So Why Would Someone Steal Him?

The graphic novel Grand Theft Horse tells the story of a trainer who rescues a horse from its villainous owner. Based on actual events, journalist Taylor Haney set out to learn how much of the story is true. Above, a scene from the novel.

Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin


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Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin

The Hollywood Park stables were quiet that night. Gail Ruffu had planned it that way.

It was around midnight on Christmas Eve, 2004, days before the winter racing season would start at Santa Anita Park, about 30 miles away in the Los Angeles suburb of Arcadia.

It would be easy for Ruffu, a horse trainer, to slip into the Hollywood Park stables without anyone noticing.

It would be easy to find the horse she once trained, Urgent Envoy. He was in a barn just across the road from her own. She could lead him into a trailer, talk her way past a guard and drive away. And that’s exactly what she did.

“I figured, whatever it takes, even if I go to jail, I have to save this horse’s life,” Ruffu said.

Gail Ruffu photographed at a horse boarding barn near her home in Los Angeles in 2007.

Brian Vander Brug / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images


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Brian Vander Brug / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Ruffu had trained a handful of horses before, but Urgent Envoy was special. Over the previous year, she helped transform him from a dangerous rebel into a gentle athlete. It seemed he was her one shot to train a winner.

For 15 years, I knew a similar version of this night at Hollywood Park. I had been told that my father, Steve Haney, had hired Ruffu to train his first racehorse. When he fired her, she stole the horse. My dad was the victim.

Since 2004, when Gail Ruffu took Urgent Envoy from the Hollywood Park stables, the horse’s whereabouts have been unknown to all but Ruffu and her confidants. Above, Urgent Envoy trots in a paddock on Aug. 18, 2017.

Courtesy of Gail Ruffu


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Courtesy of Gail Ruffu

But then last year, an unexpected discovery changed everything. I stumbled on a graphic novel called Grand Theft Horse. Written by Ruffu’s cousin Greg Neri, it paints a much darker narrative. In this version, as in real life, my father is an attorney. But here he is portrayed as a fiend, while Ruffu is the heroine who must save Urgent Envoy from certain death.

The villain in the novel is Bud Clayton, a blond, angular lawyer with a mobster’s name. He’s a picture of greed, and a foil for Ruffu’s best intentions. He’s bent on racing his horse with an injured leg.

“I don’t care if all four of his legs break off,” Clayton says in one scene. “Run him now or I will take him away from you.”

The picture was far from flattering, but as Neri told me, it was based on an extensive review of documents and hours of interviews with Ruffu and others who knew her best. But none with my father.

I wasn’t sure what to think. It was hard to believe my dad could have resembled this villain, Bud Clayton. I had to know the truth.

Grand Theft Horse, a graphic novel written by Greg Neri, portrays Gail Ruffu removing Urgent Envoy from another trainer’s barn at Hollywood Park around midnight on Christmas Eve, 2004. In the novel, Ruffu is a hero who rescues the horse from certain death.

Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin


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Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin

Racing deaths

If Ruffu’s recollections were true, it would mean my dad had been part of a grave problem with horse racing.

Since last December, 37 horses have died at Santa Anita during racing or training. The latest death came earlier this month at one of horse racing’s most prestigious events, the Breeders’ Cup, held this year at Santa Anita. Before a prime-time television audience, Mongolian Groom suffered a devastating leg fracture during the event’s marquee race, the $6 million Breeders’ Cup Classic. He was loaded onto an equine ambulance, driven away and euthanized.

The spate of deaths at Santa Anita, while not out of the ordinary relative to past years at the track, has drawn renewed attention to a broader racing culture that has been decried by critics for putting profits ahead of equine health. Painkillers and performance enhancers are regularly administered to horses, critics charge, which can mask injuries and clear the way for horses that are already at risk to compete. In the case of Santa Anita, a strenuous racing schedule and the effect of unusually wet weather on the track itself may also have played a role.

Last year, the sport saw 493 deaths in the United States and Canada, according to the Jockey Club’s Equine Injury Database. But that number does not include deaths from injuries sustained during training.

The problem is one that Ruffu has agonized over for most of her career. She says horses are raced too young, too often, too medicated and all for the prestige and payout that comes with victory.

“A million-dollar purse for one race? People are willing to throw away several dead horses trying to get that,” Ruffu told me.

“Horse whisperer”

In her career as a trainer, Gail Ruffu says she has agonized over the use, or overuse, of medication in horse racing, as illustrated in the graphic novel Grand Theft Horse.

Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin


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Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin

Ruffu and my dad weren’t always enemies. They met in 1999 when Ruffu needed a lawyer. My father took her case.

Ruffu had filed suit against several California horse racing entities. She had been banned from the Santa Anita, Del Mar and Hollywood Park tracks for nine months, the San Gabriel Valley Tribune reported. Her unorthodox training methods and habit of distributing flyers at the track got her in trouble. The fliers said two-year-olds were too young to race in the Breeders’ Cup. A judge sided with Ruffu and she was reinstated.

At the time, my dad called Ruffu a “horse whisperer.”

“The people who are in control of the horse racing establishment don’t know how to do things Gail’s way,” he told the Tribune. They parted ways amicably, and he mentioned maybe owning a horse with her someday.

In 2003, an opportunity came up when Ruffu found a horse that had already injured two stablehands.

“I heard of a horse that nobody wanted because he was a bit of an outlaw,” she laughed. “Of course, that’d be the one for me. That’s my specialty.”

She called my father, Steve Haney. He brought in three other investors and together they bought the horse for $5,000. That July, they made a deal with Ruffu. They would bankroll the horse, and in return for her labor Ruffu would get a 20% stake. They renamed the horse Urgent Envoy, after his sire, Urgent Request.

Gail Ruffu and the author’s father started out on good terms. The above scene from Grand Theft Horse shows him as on board with Ruffu’s training philosophy.

Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin


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Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin

“We really put our trust in Gail,” my dad recalled. “She had some kind of different ideas. Certainly in the beginning we all believed in her.”

It took nearly a year for Urgent Envoy to race. Ruffu wanted to bring him up slowly to avoid injuries.

A typical horse trainer and her veterinarian might turn to medication to relax muscles, ease pain from inflammation or control bleeding. The list of approved medications for racehorses includes controversial drugs like furosemide — commonly known by the brand name Lasix — that Ruffu says are designed to hide problems and keep equine athletes in the race. Rather than treating her horse with medications, Ruffu says she would stop training until she was sure the horse had recovered even from minor issues, so they did not become injuries.

“She told us the horse needed more time, but we were paying her monthly to take care of the horse,” my dad said. “At some point we wanted to see that come to fruition.”

The first race for Urgent Envoy came on June 16, 2004. It was a clear day at Hollywood Park. His jockey wore green and white. Urgent Envoy wore a red saddle cloth.

But nothing seemed to go right that day. My father recalls the jockey had trouble getting the horse into the starting gate.

“The jockey was terrified and just did a horrible job of riding him,” Ruffu said.

Video of the race shows Urgent Envoy drifting away from the rail on the backstretch and swinging wide in the final turn. After nearly a year of training and at least $17,000 in costs, Urgent Envoy had finished dead last.

Steve Haney, a litigator and trial attorney, poses for a portrait at home in La Cañada Flintridge, Calif., Saturday, Nov. 23, 2019.

Rozette Rago for NPR


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Rozette Rago for NPR

Showdown at Santa Anita

Urgent Envoy was scheduled to race again three weeks later. In training, Ruffu said he developed a sore shin. It was a bump on the leg. A veterinarian recommended rest, so she pulled him from the race. Better not to risk a fracture.

“Your father and his partners threw a fit,” Ruffu said. She continued, paraphrasing them, “We’re not waiting any longer. You can just give him some drugs and run him anyway.”

By the middle of July, Ruffu was out. She would keep her 20% stake in Urgent Envoy, but the other four owners had voted to remove her as trainer.

My dad denied wanting Urgent Envoy to run while injured. He said Ruffu was removed when the owners lost confidence in her due to concerns about her training methods and the fact that she had never won a race. They were bringing on a new trainer, Richard Baltas, who is now one of the top trainers in North America by purse earnings.

“If we’re going to put money into this thing, let’s go with somebody who’s got a little bit more of a proven track record,” he said, summarizing their thinking. “Which Gail didn’t have.”

Two days after sending a letter to Ruffu delivering the news, they arrived at her barn at Santa Anita to take Urgent Envoy. The owners asked the stewards, who oversee rules at the track, to transfer him to the new trainer’s barn. The stewards verbally approved, in a process Ruffu would later argue was improper. The Arcadia Police Department, track security and my dad came to oversee the transfer on July 17. Ruffu stood between them and the horse.

What happened next is in dispute.

Grand Theft Horse portrays an intense confrontation. A towering, burly man in a tank top pushes Ruffu aside and snatches the horse’s reins. A man in uniform grabs Ruffu’s arm. She tries to take back the reins, and in response the burly man wallops her on the arm with his fist. The uniformed man restrains her on the ground.

“They literally attacked me,” Ruffu told me. “They grabbed me and held me down by my arms in the dirt while they went in and took the horse.”

This version of the story floored me. Would my father just stand by while guards hit and grabbed an outnumbered woman?

When I showed my dad the scene in Grand Theft Horse, he chuckled.

“That didn’t happen,” he said. He recalled a security guard having to grab the reins from Gail, but no physical confrontation.

“There was no big guy,” he said. “Gail wasn’t arrested or apprehended, or from what I recall, even physically restrained.”

There is a record of that day, but it doesn’t clarify much. Ruffu filed a report with the Arcadia police. She told officers she tried to grab the horse’s halter and a handler hit her arm and then walked the horse to a van. The handler, backed up by a witness, told police that when Ruffu grabbed the halter, he pushed — not hit — her arm away because the horse “began to rear and become extremely agitated,” the report says.

Grand Theft Horse portrays Urgent Envoy being removed from Ruffu’s barn in an intense physical confrontation. Steve Haney says Ruffu was never hit or restrained and that Santa Anita Park security took the horse’s reins from Ruffu in order to keep the horse from rearing up and hurting itself.

Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin


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Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin

“The gloves were off”

After Urgent Envoy was moved, the bump on his leg grew worse. An X-ray showed a stress fracture. Following a veterinarian’s advice, Baltas, the new trainer, turned Urgent Envoy out to pasture. There would be no racing or training.

According to an investigation by the California Horse Racing Board, when Urgent Envoy returned from pasture in December 2004, an X-ray showed the stress fracture was still healing. Baltas put the horse on a 30-day walking regimen to rehabilitate it, the investigation found.

“I gave it the proper time off,” Baltas told me.

But Ruffu was unconvinced and growing more panicked by the day.

“I began to suspect that they might be about ready to try to get an insurance policy payoff by going ahead and killing him,” she said.

“That’s crazy,” my father said. “I would never want any person or animal to die so I could make money.” Besides, he said, the owners never had an insurance policy on Urgent Envoy.

It ended up not mattering. On Christmas morning, Urgent Envoy was gone, and the owners received an email from Ruffu. It read: “Merry Christmas, boys.”

“The gloves were off,” my father said. “She wasn’t just stealing our horse. She was rubbing it in our face.”

What followed next was years of insults, investigations and legal battles. Like Captain Ahab in Moby-Dick, they chased their revenge at all costs. The Hollywood Park Board of Stewards suspended Ruffu’s training license and ordered her to return Urgent Envoy. The district attorney in Inglewood, Calif. charged her with a felony count of grand theft horse.

In November 2006, a jury acquitted Ruffu. She fired back by suing the owners for breach of contract, but lost that suit in 2009 and was again ordered to return the horse. She ignored the order.

By the time the civil suit was over, Urgent Envoy was eight years old — past his prime racing age.

“I always felt if we got him back, that we could turn the story around and it would win a big handicap stakes race and be the subject of a Hollywood motion picture,” my dad said, smiling. “That was my hope. And after a few years, I slowly gave up that hope.”

Ahab

The district attorney in Inglewood, Calif. charged Ruffu with a felony count of grand theft horse, as portrayed in the above scene from Grand Theft Horse. She was acquitted in November 2006.

Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin


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Courtesy of Greg Neri and Corban Wilkin

What are two enemies willing to lose to right a perceived wrong?

For my father and his co-owners, the fight to win back a horse that finished its one and only race in last place cost, by his estimate, $100,000. Gail Ruffu defied judges, lost her license and her livelihood for more than six years. The California Horse Racing Board let her reapply for her license in 2011.

Neither time nor distance has changed how either one feels about the past. Even now, 15 years after Urgent Envoy was taken, both told me they do not regret their actions, only that they trusted each other.

I had thought, perhaps naively, that time would have changed their perspectives, eased the animosity. Instead, having lost so much in this fight, they held on tightly to what they still had: their stories.

Ruffu doesn’t think about what happened as theft. She sees it as a rescue and says she was willing to sacrifice her career because of her love for Urgent Envoy. She still has him — he’s 18 now — but she keeps him in a secret location, afraid someone might steal him away in the middle of the night.

A groom walks a horse in the stables at Hollywood Park in Inglewood, Calif.

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images


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Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

I want to believe this caution is just Ruffu being paranoid. But then I have to remind myself about how my father told me that when he heard about the graphic novel, he spoke with the only other living buyer of Urgent Envoy, his 82-year-old father (my grandfather) about getting a trailer and taking him back.

“I just think it’s the right thing to do,” he said. “It’s not really a practical decision. I just hate to see a wrong go unpunished.” He concedes, “I think she’s won, and I’m a sore loser.”

Talking to my dad, now 62, I could understand how hard it must have been to give up the fight. To lose your case in court, to spend years in litigation with no tangible results, to chase your stolen property and never get it back: these things can torment a successful trial lawyer.

I felt how badly he wanted to recover his dream. Still, if I ever have a Gail Ruffu of my own in life, I would hope I could learn from his story, to know when I’d lost a fight, to forego revenge and walk away sooner.

While working on this story, I came across a video by Neri, Ruffu’s cousin and the author of Grand Theft Horse, that was posted online to help promote his book.

In the video, you see Ruffu lead an enormous horse to a paddock. The horse rolls around, scratching its back in the dirt.

In the background, Neri quietly utters a code name: “Ahab, a.k.a. Urgent Envoy.”

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Powerhouse Duke Falls To Stephen F. Austin University With Buzzer-Beating Layup

Stephen F. Austin forward Nathan Bain (23) and guard David Kachelries (4) celebrate Bain’s game-winning shot against Duke in overtime Tuesday in Durham, N.C.

Gerry Broome/AP


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Gerry Broome/AP

There were two sure bets heading into Tuesday night’s basketball matchup between perennial powerhouse Duke University and Stephen F. Austin State University. One: Duke would dominate. Two: Few people outside of Nacogdoches, Texas, could confidently say where the smaller school’s campus is located.

But after a stunning overtime buzzer-beating layup, not only did the unranked Lumberjacks shock the No.1 Blue Devils in a nail biting 85-83 finish, but Stephen F. Austin did something no other college basketball program outside the Atlantic Coast Conference has done in nearly two decades — beat Duke on its home floor.

The final sequence unfolded in dramatic fashion. With the game tied at 83 and 14 seconds left in overtime, Duke corralled a rebound after a missed shot from the wing. Duke swung the ball out to top of the 3-point line to set up for the final shot.

? UPSET ALERT ?

Stephen F. Austin ends No. 1 Duke’s 150-straight non-conference home game win streak! #AxeEm pic.twitter.com/6HkBavqEB0

— NCAA March Madness (@marchmadness) November 27, 2019

Duke drove toward the basket, and a bounce pass got deflected. Players scrambled for the loose ball.

The Lumberjacks’ Gavin Kensmil dived for it, wrested control and, from the seat of his pants, flipped the ball to his teammate Nathan Bain. With 3.1 seconds left, Bain sprinted the three-quarters of the court toward his hoop with nothing but open floor in front of him.

With .07 seconds left, Bain elevated with Duke’s Jack White leaping virtually simultaneously to try to swat away his layup from behind. By the time the two men came crashing down to the floor, it was over. Bain’s layup was good and the Lumberjacks had a win for the ages.

Stephen F. Austin’s Bain watches the game-winning basket as Duke forward Jack White attempts to defend.

Gerry Broome/AP


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Gerry Broome/AP

The faces of Duke fans crumpled in unison.

The Blue Devils were projected to win by more than 27 points, ESPN reports. The sports network also adds that Stephen F. Austin was at one point trailing by 15 points, when it fought back and tied the game with under 20 seconds remaining in regulation. After the game Bain explained how the final seconds of overtime unfolded from his vantage point, according to ESPN:

“I saw my teammate grab it, and I looked up at the clock. We had about 2.6 seconds,” Bain told the network. “I was like, ‘I have to get on my horse.’ I went as fast as I can to try to lay it up. It’s like a layup drill. I could feel the dude on my back, and I just prayed it [would] go in.”

Duke forward Matthew Hurt (21) and guard Cassius Stanley (2) react following the team’s loss to Stephen F. Austin in overtime.

Gerry Broome/AP


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Gerry Broome/AP

The win over Duke is easily the most significant win in Stephen F. Austin’s history, according to The Associated Press. It adds:

“This Duke team didn’t have the feeling of invincibility that some of its predecessors had, in part because it committed at least 16 turnovers in three of its first six games. The Blue Devils’ offense was completely flummoxed at times by the Lumberjacks’ unrelenting pressure, and as a result, their run at No. 1 will end after two weeks.”

With Tuesday’ loss, Duke is the third top-ranked team to lose this season. And it’s not even Thanksgiving.

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No. 1 Duke Suffers Stunning Loss To Lumberjacks

Duke has one of the most storied programs in all of men’s college basketball. That didn’t matter Tuesday night when the Blue Devils were beaten by unranked Steven F. Austin State University.



RACHEL MARTIN, HOST:

Good morning. I’m Rachel Martin. Duke has one of the most storied programs in all of men’s college basketball; they’ve won the national championship five times. The Lumberjacks from Stephen F. Austin State University in Texas have only won two games ever during March Madness. They really had no hope of beating the nation’s No. 1 team last night, but…

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

ERIC COLLINS: Yes, the Lumberjacks have done it.

MARTIN: In overtime, Nathan Bain stole the ball and hit a layup at the buzzer to topple the mighty Blue Devils.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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