Valley alum and former NFL player Justin Hartwig met fans after the Tigers' basketball games tonight |
By RON MALY
Valley's fans thought they had Dowling's basketball teams right where they wanted them.
The night began with a heart-stopping sophomore game.
The girls' game followed, matching 8th-ranked Dowling against No. 13 Valley. The Tigers won it, 48-44.
Two big deals left.
Valley's No. 1-ranked and unbeaten boys' team would take on Dowling, and Justin Hartwig, a Valley graduate and longtime National Football League center who played on the Pittsburgh Steelers' 2009 Super Bowl championship team, would appear at the Bill Coldiron Fieldhouse at halftime and following the boys' game.
The trouble was, Dowling's boys turned in a superb performance and handed Valley its first loss, 66-49, thereby preventing Tiger fans from classifying it as a perfect Friday night.
Oh, well, you can't win 'em all, 6th century B.C. Chinese philosopher Confucius and a lot of basketball coaches since then have always said.
Valley had to play without 6-foot 4-inch Peyton Long, who has a knee injury. But even the presence of Long might not have prevented a Tiger loss tonight.
Dowling was that good.
The Maroons had size, shooting, rebounding and coaching.
Anyway, Hartwig gave a stirring halftime speech to the huge crowd, presented Valley football coach Gary Swenson and other school officials a gold football [pictured at the right] and met with fans after the game at a reception.
The football presentation was part of the NFL's Super Bowl High School Honor Roll initiative, which recognizes schools and communities that contributed to Super Bowl history.
High schools worldwide will receive one football for each player or head coach who graduated from their school and was on an active Super Bowl roster.
The Honor Roll initiative, which will become an annual Super Bowl tradition, is one way the NFL is celebrating the upcoming Super Bowl 50 through the "On the Fifty" campaign.
Hartwig graduated from Valley in 1997. He played on two Tiger teams that made it to the state playoffs, then was a player at the University of Kansas and was drafted in the sixth round of the 2002 NFL draft.
He was the starting center for the Steelers in their 2009 Super Bowl victory.
Available at the reception tonight were football-shaped cookies and a Steelers cake [pictured below].
I made sure I ate a piece of the cake, and I also had one of the cookies.
Both were delicious.