Chaminade’s Tony Randolph and Virginia’s Ralph Sampson sat court-side
last month at Lahaina Civic Center, laughing and joking and having a
great time watching Chaminade play the Giant Killer role again as the
Division 2 Silverswords beat D-I powerhouse Texas in the Maui
Invitational.
Randolph and Sampson are good friends these days, nearly 30 years
since they battled head-to-head in the game often dubbed “The Biggest
College Sports Upset of All Time.”
It was Dec. 23, 1982, when tiny Chaminade stunned No. 1-ranked and
unbeaten Virginia at what was then called the HIC (now the Blaisdell) in
Honolulu.
“What do I remember? I remember losing,” Sampson tells a national
television interviewer, laughing. “They played well. You have to give
them credit.”
“We had beaten crosstown rival Hawaii (a couple of games prior to the
Virginia upset),” Randolph says. “That gave us confidence.”
Randolph, at 6-foot-7, and Sampson, at an imposing 7-foot-4, are both
native Virginians and had played together many times in what Randolph
called “street ball” back in their hometown. “I knew I could play him,”
he says. “I just had to be quick and shoot from the outside. Sometimes
you have those games when you feel like it’s going to be your night. The
rim was like an ocean, and everything was falling in.”
Randolph scored 19 points on 9-of-12 shooting in Chaminade’s 77-72
victory for the ages. “The game has a life of its own,” he says now.
“People still talk about it. They never forget.”
Over the years, Randolph says he has heard from people as far away as
New Zealand, Germany, Japan and many small towns around the United
States.
After playing some pro ball overseas and spending 21 years working
with troubled youths in the Hawaii Family Court system in Honolulu,
Randolph has a new home at Saint Francis School in Manoa. He’s in his
second year as the dean of discipline there, and also assistant boys
varsity basketball coach.
“The kids here are wonderful. It’s such a good place,” he says. “The
job enables me to work with kids, which I love. There are some good
athletes here, and we were successful last year (winning the ILH D-2
championship). This year, we’ve already beaten some D-I teams, so we’re
excited.”
Time rarely goes by when someone doesn’t again bring up Ralph Sampson or The Upset.
“They come up and say ‘How did you guys do it?’” he says. “It’s so
important to so many people. There’s a movie in the process about the
game – it’s affected so many lives.”
The Upset is a part of Tony Randolph, and so are the Islands.
“I came to Hawaii, fell in love with it, met my wife here and we’ve
lived here the rest of our lives. I feel truly blessed and humbled to
have been a part of it.”
Yes, 30 years later – and forever – Chaminade has still beaten Virginia. The Giant Killers live on.
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