[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 48 (Thursday, April 11, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H1916]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING THE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE CARDINALS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Kentucky (Mr. Yarmuth) for 5 minutes.
Mr. YARMUTH. Madam Speaker, I rise to honor the University of
Louisville Cardinals, who went to a second straight Final Four this
season and returned home national champions.
Going into the NCAA tournament, the question was whether the Cards'
stifling defense would be enough to win it all. Well, we'll never know,
because the country's best defense became the best offense too,
shooting 52 percent to a tournament best 79.5 points per game. That's
more than crazy. It's ``Russdiculous.''
They said he never met a shot he didn't like; but during the past
month, Russ Smith hardly took a shot he couldn't make, setting
Louisville's new tournament-scoring record and earning the respect and
affection of a city. The All-American, regional MVP, and defensive
phenom no longer cares who's scoring, as long as the jersey reads
Louisville.
When these guys say the team motto ``Louisville First, Cards
Forever,'' they mean it. We saw it when the team rallied around their
injured teammate, Kevin Ware, as he courageously repeated, ``I'm fine,
just win the game,'' before being carted off the court during the Elite
Eight. We saw it when they came together to ``Win for Ware.'' But
before that, the Cards won with Ware. On this team, Kevin was one of
eight Cardinals to score double figures in a tournament game. That
doesn't even include the players who set this team off on some of the
year's most unlikely and electrifying rallies.
Walk-on Tim Henderson scored six of his season's 22 points in 45
seconds to cut a late 12-point Final Four deficit in half. All year,
Stephen Van Treese snatched rebounds from future NBA big men, denied
them in the paint, and set precision picks strong enough to stop a
truck. And freshman Montrezl Harrell provided a constant spark off the
bench, his unrelenting effort the only thing close to matching his
natural ability.
Peyton Siva embodies the ``Louisville First'' spirit. Happier setting
up his teammates than knocking it down himself, Peyton reminded the
Nation he can also drop 18 points on the Player of the Year in the
championship game. Unselfish, but a thief, he'll graduate with the
school record for steals in a season and career.
Big man Gorgui Deing is unselfish, too. Louisville's record-setting
shot-blocker and monster rebounder used his jump shot to pull defenders
and find teammates for six assists in the championship game--three to
Chane Behanan, who tied Louisville's single-season dunk record,
officially making him the latest doctor of dunk. Cutting down the nets
in Atlanta was great, but they should give Chane the backboards because
he owned them all night.
{time} 1030
This team also showed tremendous perseverance. Wayne Blackshear
overcame two shoulder injuries to reach the starting lineup. And it's a
good thing: he hit threes to start the Cards' scoring in both
championship halves.
But the Final Four's breakout star was its most outstanding player,
Luke Hancock, who scored his career-high in the semifinal and then
broke it 2 days later. Luke didn't use the force; he was a force. And
nothing would stop him from winning for his father, for Kevin Ware and,
as always, for Louisville.
That's what Coach Rick Pitino taught this team, the master motivator,
who's done everything this week but cartwheels on the Moon, built a
team and mentored men we should be proud of.
And like Pitino, Jeff Walz will tell you this isn't about one person
or even one team. It's about a program and a community. Trust him. That
mad scientist led U of L's women to four straight NCAA tournament
upsets, including what is considered to be the biggest upset in college
basketball history.
Behind the jaw-dropping plays of Shoni and Jude Shimmel,
sharpshooting of Antonita Slaughter, tenacity and skill of Sara
Hammond, Sherrone Vails, and Bria Smith, and the unbelievable toughness
of Monique Reid and Shelby Harper, the national runners-up crashed
nearly every party around.
These players and coaches define an extraordinary program. Only three
coaches in NCAA history have gone to a men's and women's basketball
final in the same season. Louisville is the first to add a BCS Bowl
victory to the mix.
But if you think it's the last, you don't know Athletics Director Tom
Jurich. With sparkling new facilities, outstanding coaches, and stellar
student athletes in competition and class, Tom has every U of L sport
at the top of their game and climbing.
The university and the community have thrived along with them,
continuing a proud tradition that began with Peck Hickman and rocketed
to the top under the great Denny Crum.
I'm honored to congratulate the University of Louisville for its
unparalleled winning streak, capped off by the Cards' third Men's
Basketball National Championship. Go Cards.
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