Stopped in the Middle of a Memory: 2004 vs. Kentucky

Feb 27, 2016; Starkville, MS, USA; A general overview of Humphrey Coliseum during the first half of the game between the Mississippi State Bulldogs and the South Carolina Gamecocks. Mandatory Credit: Matt Bush-USA TODAY Sports
Feb 27, 2016; Starkville, MS, USA; A general overview of Humphrey Coliseum during the first half of the game between the Mississippi State Bulldogs and the South Carolina Gamecocks. Mandatory Credit: Matt Bush-USA TODAY Sports /
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In a basketball game vs. Kentucky in 2004, State fans were cut off from a great memory.

Yesterday I was listening to Cole Swindell’s “Middle of a Memory” because I always listen to country music on my Friday afternoon drive home. The song got me thinking about some times when MSU left me in the middle of a memory.

In the song, the main character had just had a ‘love at first sight’ type of experience with a girl, and after a minute of dancing her friends snatch her away….presumably to never be heard from again. He spends the song lamenting about how he thought meeting her could have been a moment they’d remember for the rest of their lives, but instead she left ‘in the middle of a memory’.

My first thought as this relates to MSU sports was the 2004 home game vs. Kentucky on the hard court. Let’s recall the experience:

I was a student at Mississippi State at the time, and I never saw anything like this. At that time (not sure how it is now), students went to the Bryan Building on Monday to get their “free” tickets for all the home basketball games that week. This game was on a Tuesday.

When I arrived at the Bryan Building it was 8:00 A.M. Monday morning. The line was 100 yards short of the Hump. Seriously. Usually, a casual stroll to the ticket office at any time Monday got you a ticket. 30 minutes after I arrived the line was so far behind me I couldn’t see the end of it. Luckily, I got a ticket…and I learned my lesson that I would be arriving at 4:00 AM in all future weeks. Photo evidence from the fantastic @MSUHistory twitter account:

Mississippi State was on a tear behind the power of Lawrence Roberts. The Dawgs were 13-0 and had just come off a road win at Ole Miss and a 18 point thumping of Arkansas on Saturday. Excitement was building (especially after another dismal 2-10 football season).

It was an 8:00 tip, I got to the game 3, 4, 5 hours early. I don’t know exactly, but I do know that I sat on concrete in the freezing cold for long enough that standing for two hours was a welcomed pleasure. Even as early as we got there, we still were unable to procure our “lucky” seats (which probably affected the outcome of this memory). The Hump was glorious, almost everyone wore white…it was quite a sight (this was one of the first “white-outs”).

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Kentucky came out swinging and led MSU by 18 in the first half. The Bulldogs were doing all they could to catch up and they only got it to single digits a couple of times until late into the second half. The exciting offense of Timmy Bowers, Winsome Frazier and Lawrence Roberts got State the lead, 64-63, with two minutes left.

Both teams traded buckets and it was 66-65 MSU. Frazier came to the line with a chance to extend the lead with :31 left, but he missed the front end of a 1-and-1. Roberts got the rebound but he too missed the free throw. Kentucky got the ball back and everyone’s heart was in their throat.

With :02.5 left, UK was set to inbound the ball near their bench. Cliff Hawkins lobbed it to Chuck Hayes near the rim but Roberts got a hand on it. For a split second it seemed like State had held on defense until Erick Daniels charged in with a buzzer-beating tip-in. Oh, the humanity.

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The Hump went from it’s highest volume ever to complete silence in 2.5 seconds. It was a sickening feeling. It didn’t disrupt the season, however, and MSU went on to a SEC Championship. Both teams bowed out of the NCAA tournament in the 2nd round.

Put simply, the first 39 minutes and 57 seconds of regulation were the most fun I’d ever had at a basketball game, to this day. But the ending backs it down the list of MSU games I’ve attended. Coulda shoulda woulda been the time of our lives, but State lost in the middle of a memory.