In
1946, CCNY returned to their previous level of success and entered its final regular
season game with a record of 13-4. Few
sportswriters or fans gave CCNY a chance against the No. 1 ranked NYU team,
which had a record of 18-1 and had won 13 consecutive games. The build-up to the game reminded many
writers of the 1934 CCNY-NYU game and “fans started camping out in front of the
ticket booths” four hours before tickets went on sale at 9:00am. The ticket demand led to nine arrests for
“ticket speculation” and the temporary suspension of ticket sales at 9:20am
because the “line had become so long and so out of hand.” Eventually, “ten mounted policemen and a
detail of foot police restored order.”
By 3pm, “16,000 tickets” had been sold.[1]
In
a surprising upset, CCNY defeated NYU by a score of 49-44 and set off a wave of
celebration. According to the New
York Times, “within fifteen minutes after the game ended, a band of about
1,000 C.C.N.Y. rooters massed near the Garden” and paraded through the streets
with “a ‘casket’ painted in black and covered with NYU pennants and
lettering.” When the “marchers” reached
Broadway, they “started a huge snake dance which caused a traffic tie-up and
created an uproar as motorists sounded their horns in an effort to break
through.” The parade entered Times
Square and “then headed for the Hudson
[River] to dispose of the casket.”[2]
The
intense celebration reflected the belief among CCNY students and fans that the
victory would result in an invitation to the NIT. Considering the school’s absence from post-season
tournaments since 1942, many hoped this would revitalize the basketball program.
Yet, the day after CCNY’s victory, the
NIT announced that Rhode Island State and not
City College
would be the tournament’s final entrant.
Students, furious with the decision, “assailed the tournament committee
for what they termed publicity ‘exploitation’ in creating the impression that
City would receive a berth if it defeated N.Y.U.”[3] Students condemned Garden promoters and NIT
officials for using the promise of a tournament berth to increase fan interest,
and thus profit, in the CCNY-NYU contest.
Letters of protest to Ned Irish stated that the tournament committee
should have named Rhode Island
State before the
game. The ticket demand for the game,
the celebration following the CCNY victory, and the angry response to the
team’s exclusion from the tournament indicated the popularity of CCNY within New York basketball and the intense passions involved in
college basketball at Madison
Square Garden .
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