Current:Home > MarketsNevada men's basketball coach Steve Alford hates arena bats, Wolf Pack players embrace them -Mastery Money Tools
Nevada men's basketball coach Steve Alford hates arena bats, Wolf Pack players embrace them
View
Date:2025-04-13 10:54:20
The bats almost stole the show at Nevada's season-opening basketball game Tuesday night.
Nevada won the game 77-63 over Sacramento State, but the bats swarming and diving at Lawlor Events Center were featured on national social media outlets later Tuesday and again Wednesday.
Play was halted briefly in Tuesday night's game with about five minutes left as several bats dived around the court and stands at Lawlor Events Center. As the final seconds ticked off, the bats returned, but play was not stopped.
Nevada coach Steve Alford is not a fan of the bats, saying it is embarrassing for a Division I program to have to endure that. And he hates halting play, regardless of whether his team is playing well.
He wondered what his college coach, Bobby Knight, would have thought about the bats.
"There was a lot of things that came to mind. There was a time I thought about throwing a chair," Alford said, alluding to when Knight, his coach at Indiana, threw a chair on the court during a game. "The bat thing is getting pretty embarrassing and it needs to be fixed. It's uncalled for. We are a big-time basketball program and we shouldn't be dealing with bats."
Bats have been an issue at Lawlor in recent seasons, although there were not many instances last year, if any.
"It can't happen. I don't want stoppage of flow, whether we're doing well or we're doing poorly, it's not something that should be happening," Alford said.
A Nevada Athletics spokesperson told the Gazette Journal that the facilities crew is working to mitigate the bat problem.
Nevada associate head coach Craig Neal was waving a towel at the bats during the stoppage in Tuesday's game, possibly trying to persuade them back to the rafters at Lawlor. After the game was over and fans had cleared the arena, workers were on the court with big nets trying, in vain, to capture the bats.
But Wolf Pack players Jarod Lucas and Hunter McIntosh are both fans of the bats, saying they have become part of the Wolf Pack's identity and give a sort of home-court advantage to the team.
"It's home-court advantage. It's a little bit of our identity, this early in the season. We embrace it. We like it. It's cool," McIntosh said. "It's unique."
Bats are a protected species in Nevada. But bats can be a threat, carrying diseases like rabies, which is almost always fatal in humans. It doesn’t even take a bite or a scratch to get rabies; the deadly virus can be found in bat drool.
veryGood! (81172)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Will Tiffani Thiessen’s Kids follow in Her Actor Footsteps? The Saved by the Bell Star Says…
- Rural America faces a silent mental health crisis. My dad fought to survive it.
- Chiefs’ Travis Kelce finds sanctuary when he steps on the football field with life busier than ever
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Israelis protest as Netanyahu pushes back over Gaza hostage deal pressure | The Excerpt
- Naomi Campbell remains iconic – and shades Anna Wintour – at Harlem's Fashion Row event
- USC surges, Oregon falls out of top five in first US LBM Coaches Poll of regular season
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- Variety of hunting supplies to be eligible during Louisiana’s Second Amendment sales tax holiday
Ranking
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Police say 11-year-old used 2 guns to kill former Louisiana mayor and his daughter
- JD Vance’s Catholicism helped shape his views. So did this little-known group of Catholic thinkers
- The Reason Jenn Tran and Devin Strader—Plus 70 Other Bachelor Nation Couples—Broke Up After the Show
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Stock market today: Wall Street tumbles on worries about the economy, and Dow drops more than 600
- The CEOs of Kroger and Albertsons are in court to defend plans for a huge supermarket merger
- Rapper Eve Details Past Ectopic Pregnancy and Fertility Journey
Recommendation
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
US Open: Frances Tiafoe and Taylor Fritz will meet in an all-American semifinal in New York
Federal judge decries discrimination against conservative group that publishes voters’ information
Selling the OC’s Alex Hall Shares Update on Tyler Stanaland Relationship
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Mountain lion attacks boy at California picnic; animal later euthanized with firearm
Bears 'Hard Knocks' takeaways: Caleb Williams shines; where's the profanity?
'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice' review: Michael Keaton's moldy ghost lacks the same bite