Basketball stars recount the miracle play that went viral
It鈥檚 amazing how one missed shot can change your life.
Life was pretty good for Sam Borst-Smith 鈥17 before February 7. The English major from San Pedro, California, a suburb of Los Angeles, had started all but one game for the men鈥檚 basketball team and was the Yellowjackets鈥 leading scorer. He was also one of their top free-throw shooters, making 80 percent of his shots.
That all became a footnote the first Sunday in February. Borst-Smith went to the free throw line with Rochester trailing Chicago 76-73 and just 2.7 seconds left in overtime at the University鈥檚 Palestra.
He swished his first free throw. 76-74.
Then, he knew he had to intentionally miss the second free throw to give the Yellowjackets a chance at winning the game.
Borst-Smith fired the basketball off the front end of the rim. It bounced back to him, and he passed it to teammate Mack Montague 鈥17, a financial economics and psychology double major from Westport, Connecticut, on the left wing. Montague swished a 3-point shot before the buzzer sounded, giving Rochester a most improbable win and sending players and fans into a frenzy.
Video of the play quickly went viral, with 80,000 hits on YouTube the first day. It aired on ESPN鈥檚 SportsCenter and was second on the sports network鈥檚 鈥淭op 10 Plays of the Day.鈥 Number 1 came from another game played that day 鈥 the Super Bowl between the Denver Broncos and the Carolina Panthers.
Rochester鈥檚 stunning play was written about in the New York Post and on FoxSports.com. Popular sports websites like Deadspin and Bleacher Report ran the clip, and the YouTube hit count surged to 600,000. Montague has a friend in France who said the shot aired there. The play also ran on Australian TV.
Then, a German public TV station contacted Rochester sports information director Dennis O鈥橠onnell asking for permission to air the play. In a nation known more for soccer than basketball, the clip quickly amassed 500,000 hits.
But the best was saved for last. O鈥橠onnell and assistant Scott Sabocheck nominated Borst-Smith for the national State Farm Assist of the Year Award (). He overwhelmed the competition in the early rounds, then cruised to victory in the finals, beating players from two highly successful Division I teams 鈥 Kentucky鈥檚 Tyler Ulis and Michigan State鈥檚 Denzel Valentine.
Borst-Smith will fly to Houston on Thursday morning, and his unlikely play will be shown to the crowd at NRG Stadium that evening. ESPN will also broadcast the video of the shot during its live coverage of the 2016 Slam Dunk & 3-Point Competition on Thursday, March 31 in Houston, site of the Division I men鈥檚 Final Four. The show runs from 9-11 p.m.
Broadcast schedule of the 2016 College Slam/3-Point Shooting contests in Houston, Texas on ESPN and its affiliates:
Live: Thursday, March 31: 9:00-11:00pm ET on ESPN
Friday, April 1: 1:00-3:00am ET on ESPNU
Friday, April 1: 8:00-10:00am ET on ESPNU
Saturday, April 2: 2:00-4:00pm ET on ESPN
Saturday, April 2: 5:30-7:30pm ET on ESPN2
Sunday, April 3: 5:00-7:00pm ET on ESPNU
Monday, April 4: 4:00-6:00am ET on ESPNU
Tuesday, April 12: 7:00-9:00pm ET on ESPN2
Saturday, April 16: 7:00-9:00pm ET on ESPN2
The video has been seen more than 1 million times. How many times have YOU seen it?
Sam: Hundreds, probably. I鈥檓 still watching it here and there. Not as much as I was the first week, but I鈥檒l go and check it out, usually on my phone or desktop. I鈥檒l be on my Facebook and see it pop up, and I鈥檒l have to go watch it again.
Mack: Same with me. My parents made a little YouTube account with a clip to the link, so I can see it anytime I want. Keep alive the memory.
Mack, you鈥檝e never made a buzzer-beating shot before, right?
Mack: Never. But I鈥檝e practiced countless times in the driveway like any kid, counting down 鈥3-2-1鈥︹ and pretending I鈥檓 an NBA superstar.
Let鈥檚 go to the play itself. Sam, you bounce the ball three times, roll it in your hands and set yourself to shoot. Did you think the Chicago players knew what you were up to?
听Sam: I think they knew I was going to miss. I don鈥檛 think they knew how I was trying to miss. If they got the rebound, it was going to be game over. Fortunately for us, we got the ball back and got the shot off. But I definitely think they saw it coming.
You didn鈥檛 exactly do what your head coach, Luke Flockerzi, hoped.
Sam: No (laughs). Coach wanted me to miss the free throw to the right or left side of the rim, but I went against his wishes and tried to hit it right off the front. Sorry, Coach Flockerzi.
Mack, what did you think was going to happen? Did you know Sam was trying to miss?
Mack: Yeah, I knew exactly what should happen, but I didn鈥檛 know how it would occur. The way it happened, with Sam throwing it off the front of the rim, was kind of a magical moment.
Sam, you had a similar situation at Emory University on Jan. 9, needing to miss a free throw to give your team a chance. It didn鈥檛 work out that day, as Rochester lost 78-75.
Sam: I think I missed left at Emory. We still had a chance, but the Emory guy who got the rebound was just a bit longer and in better position.
The bounce off the rim and back to you wasn鈥檛 perfect.
It was a little to your left, and you had to jump to grab it. What were you thinking then?
Sam: To be honest, I wasn鈥檛 thinking at all. It was a spur of the moment thing. It wasn鈥檛 a big thing that it came off to the left. In basketball, you鈥檙e always moving laterally anyway.
You guys are best friends . Sam, how much of a comfort was it to see it was Mack on the left side?
Sam: Honestly, I couldn鈥檛 have asked for anyone better. We see each other every morning. He lives right next to me. The next morning, we were like, 鈥楧ude, did we actually just do that?鈥 Who better than Mack to make it.
Mack, you shot immediately. Were you worried the buzzer would go off before you got the ball out of your hand?
Mack: It鈥檚 hard to worry at a time like that. I kind of was just focused on winning the game.
Were you surprised the Chicago player next to you wasn鈥檛 guarding you closer? He didn鈥檛 seem to take off after you until it was too late.
Mack: It鈥檚 funny, his coach yelled something at him just as Sam was taking the shot, warning him about the play. (The player) looked back at his coach, so I think he was kind of distracted, and that gave me an edge. It was kind of a break for me.
As soon as the ball swished through, Sam rushed over to Mack and the two of you body-slammed in the air. Mack fell down and Sam nearly did. Talk about your emotions at that moment.
听Sam: I wasn鈥檛 thinking at all. Those are the kinds of moments when you just let loose, when you can鈥檛 control your emotions. I know right when I hit Mack, I started running away from everyone else. I don鈥檛 know why, but that鈥檚 what happened.
How many times have you tried to duplicate that play since it happened?
Sam: Dozens, probably. I know we did for a couple of media shoots. It was nowhere as perfect as the one against Chicago.
Do you think in 100 shots you could do it?
Sam: Maybe, but probably not as good as that one shot.
Let鈥檚 talk about the aftermath of it. This is Super Bowl Sunday, and you guys wind up the No. 2 play of the day on ESPN after the Super Bowl. All the hits on YouTube, the media coverage . . . could either of you have dreamed it would go outside of the Palestra and go viral?
Mack: As soon as the game ended, our coach said 鈥榃e have to go cut this clip and send it to ESPN.鈥 I just laughed. As if we鈥檇 ever be on ESPN. It literally was a dream come true.
One of the crazier things that happened was a German public television station aired the clip, and 500,000 people in Germany watched it. How do you explain that?
One of my good friends from my high school back in L.A. is from Germany. I told him, 鈥楬ey, we got on this news station, have you ever heard of it? He said (the play) was a huge deal in Germany.
Then you鈥檙e entered in the State Farm Assist of the Year contest and you win easily against players from Kentucky and Michigan State, two pretty good basketball programs.
I鈥檓 very blessed and grateful to have so many friends and family members supporting me. It鈥檚 just a really good feeling.
Now you鈥檙e heading to Houston, site of this weekend鈥檚 Final Four. Is this a pinch-me-I鈥檓-still-dreaming moment?
Sam: I never thought I鈥檇 do to the site of the Final Four. It just shows what sports can do for you.
What has been the reaction on campus?
Mack: I think definitely a week or two after the play happened things were crazy. People would come up and introduce themselves, and we鈥檇 never seen them before. Or friends that we hadn鈥檛 talked to since fifth grade that contacted us through Facebook.
Sam: I鈥檝e met some new people, made some new friends, and had people say hi to me I鈥檝e never met before.
Mack鈥檚 shot won the game, but the missed free throw has kind of changed your life, Sam. How ironic is that?
Sam: I don鈥檛 think I鈥檝e ever been praised for missing a shot before. I guess there鈥檚 a first time for everything. But if it wins us games, that鈥檚 all that matters.
Mack: This is the one shining moment of our college career, so far.