by Wayne23 » Sun Apr 03, 2022 2:52 pm
1/12: At 8-6, 4-1 Pitt. Their starting PG has been out for weeks with a broken leg but it hasn't seemed to hurt them much. Pitt is in a 2 way tie for 3rd, one back of us and Syracuse. They're 2-1 vs. ranked teams. They have an excellent C and good guards, but they only score 0.8 more than their opponents. They are the best rebounding team we've faced this year but they turn it over.
1/13: Close early. We're up by 7 after 10. The guards are on fire. They come back. 34-38 at the half. We blew a 9 point lead. 10 for Marn, 8 for Webb. -7 for the bench. They're shooting 48.1% to our 31.4% and that's the difference. They go on a run. We're down 13 with 10 left.
74-73. HUGE comeback. Nat Gard, playing hurt, hit a 17 footer in the final second. We were down 16 with under 5 minutes to play.
18, 4, 5 for Webb, 18, 5 for Marn, 14, 5 for Tiny. Amazingly enough. The only time Gard played was the last 7.3 seconds, I just checked when I put him in. He can have a hot hand. He was our 3rd option on the final play but the first two were covered so he took the shot. Amazing!
-15 RBs, -18 from the line. The refs did all they could to screw us but it wasn't enough; 20 fouls on us, 8 on them. 10 threes helped us.
1/14: We had a blackout in the middle of most people's sleep cycle. We've been through this enough times that we knew what to do but the Romm absolutely panicked. We could hear them literally screaming. Many of them found their way out of the ship, I'm assuming with help from their other ships, but we found 11 dead Romm. When we gambled and went to the bridge their ships were gone.
“I call this emergency Council meeting to order to discuss the fortunate accident of the blackout.”
“It was no accident.”
“What's that, Mick?”
“It was no accident. I pulled the plug, so to speak.”
(pandemonium)
“Please explain, Mick.”
“I noticed, a few weeks ago, that they didn't like dim light. If they were somewhere that was less than brightly lit they looked uncomfortable.
“I started turning out lights in certain areas to see how they would react. Every time, they avoided the dark areas, even if they had to take a very long way around.
“When they arrested me I was trying to pull the plug. I told them there was a power failure on deck 20, where they never go, and I was trying to fix it. They didn't know whether to believe me or not so they locked me up.
“Eventually they turned me loose, who knows why?”
“By that time I was convinced that absolute darkness would freak them out. I watched for patterns of when they were in certain areas. I had never found them near the main power supply at 3:00 a.m. So I went there at that time and pulled the plug. One of them was just rounding a corner as the lights went out. A few seconds earlier and I would have been caught.
“Anyway. Turns out I was right. Seems like they're petrified of the dark. I don't think we'll see them again.”
Mick got a standing ovation!
The Council is having our robotic medics dissect the Romm bodies to see what we can learn.
But the main thing is we are FREE!!! There's no way to describe how great that feels!
1/15: A thorough inspection of the ship shows that we're in a real mess. The Romm were doing only the bare minimum to keep the ship operational, and nothing regarding growing crops.
The Council has placed the ship in full emergency mode. All hands are working 7 days a week, 12 hours a day in order to get the ship back to where it needs to be, and we are using as much robotic help as we can. The best estimates are that if we're lucky we'll be back to something like normal in a month.
For now, food is limited so food choices will be limited. People are taking this pretty well knowing that in time we'll have our excellent dining halls back up to speed.
Kelly Geer has announced that she hopes to run the dining hall competition in April but that's not certain, by any means.