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Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt gives Loyola Chicago a teamtalk before a game in 2013
Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt gives Loyola Chicago a teamtalk before a game in 2013. Photograph: Chicago Tribune/MCT via Getty Images
Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt gives Loyola Chicago a teamtalk before a game in 2013. Photograph: Chicago Tribune/MCT via Getty Images

101-year-old Sister Jean inspires Loyola to upset No 1 seed Illinois in NCAA Tournament

This article is more than 3 years old
  • Loyola Chicago spring upset in college basketball’s crown jewel
  • Sister Jean predicted team had a ‘great opportunity’ to win
  • Oral Roberts become only second No 15 seed to reach Sweet 16

Loyola Chicago carried out 101-year-old superfan Sister Jean’s plans to a T on Sunday, moving to the Sweet 16 with a 71-58 win over Illinois, the first No 1 seed bounced from college basketball’s crown jewel, the NCAA Tournament.

Later in the day, there was another upset as Oral Roberts, fresh from a remarkable victory over No 2 Ohio State, continued their run of upsets with a last-gasp win over Florida. The team became only the second No 15 seed in the history of the tournament to reach the Sweet 16.

For Loyola, Cameron Krutwig delivered a 19-point, 12-rebound masterpiece and the quick-handed, eighth-seeded Ramblers led wire to wire against a team led by Ayo Dosunmu, who is tipped as a future NBA star. They befuddled a powerful Illinois offense to bring back memories of their last magical run in the tournament.

Sister Jean's prayer called for Loyola to hold Illinois under 30% from 3-pt range and you better believe it happened. pic.twitter.com/0Zyimv1Olk

— CBS Sports (@CBSSports) March 21, 2021

The team’s 2018 trip to the Final Four was headlined by Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, the venerable team chaplain, who received her Covid-19 vaccination and clearance to travel to Indianapolis to see what inspiration she could provide in 2021.

Loyola celebrate their win over the Illinois Fighting Illini on Sunday. Photograph: Kirby Lee/USA Today Sports

Before taking in most of this game from the luxury suite sitting in her wheelchair and decked out in her trademark maroon and gold scarf, Jean delivered a pregame prayer that could have been stripped straight from a coaching handbook.

“As we play the Fighting Illini, we ask for special help to overcome this team and get a great win,” she said. “We hope to score early and make our opponents nervous. We have a great opportunity to convert rebounds as this team makes about 50% of layups and 30% of its three points. Our defense can take care of that.”

From her mouth to their ears.

It’s a turn of events that Sister Jean could see happening. Before the game, she suggested Loyola, who won 25 games and the Missouri Valley Conference this season, might have gotten a raw deal with a No 8 seeding that matched them against one of the tournament’s four No 1 seeds early on in the competition.

There was another shock on Sunday as No 11 seed Syracuse beat No 3 seed West Virginia, 75-72.

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