Cutting the nets down jim valvano biography
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My goal, what I want to do each year, is to win a national championship, I want to cut the nets down.
Cutting down the nets
Celebratory tradition in basketball
Cutting down the nets is a celebratory tradition in basketball wherein a coach or player removes the net from one of the backboards after winning a game.
In college basketball in the United States, it is usually done after winning a conference tournament, regional title, or national championship game.[1]
History
Sports historians believe the tradition of cutting the nets first started in Indiana high school basketball in the 1920s and 1930s.[2] The tradition first came to men's college basketball in 1947, when the NC State Wolfpack won the Southern Conference Championship.[1] Following the tournament win, Wolfpack coach Everett Case had his players hoist him up so he could cut down the net to keep as a souvenir.
Case had previously coached in Indiana, where he had cut down the nets on four occasions.[3] The tradition then began to spread to the rest of college basketball.