National championship banner steals the show at Late Night in the Phog

By Matt Tait     Oct 14, 2022

Nick Krug
Allen Fieldhouse erupts as the 2022 NCAA Championship banner is unveiled during Late Night in the Phog on Friday, Oct. 14, 2022.

There have been all kinds of memorable moments at all kinds of Late Nights over the years, but very few were like Friday night at Allen Fieldhouse.

The teams scrimmaged, the fans cheered and the atmosphere was wild and crazy, befitting of a season tipoff party.

But at 8:10 p.m., the moment that everyone at Late Night in the Phog was waiting for arrived. A new national championship banner officially went up inside Allen Fieldhouse. Technically, it was the third banner to be unveiled on Friday night. They also sent up another Big 12 title banner and the 2022 Final Four banner.

But the one everyone wanted to see — white with blue letters, measuring 9 feet wide by 13 feet tall — was uncovered in the north rafters, high above the student section, to a rousing ovation and some big emotions from a whole bunch of people.

“You come here to try and do that and being able to actually see that come to fruition was very special,” former Jayhawk Mitch Lightfoot said after seeing the banner drop and collecting his championship ring.

Added KU coach Bill Self of the banner unveiling: “That was the coolest part of the night to me. There’s few people and few programs that get a chance to experience what these guys have done. Even though there’s a winner every year, there’s not many programs that have had the success that we’ve had over time. Getting one (national title) was special, but during every introduction for the last 12 or 13 years, I’ve watched Mario (Chalmers) make that shot. It’ll be nice to have that shot in the introductory video but (not be) the one that caps it. Because we’ll certainly have something else we can go to now.”

Lightfoot was one of four former players — Jalen Coleman-Lands, Chris Teahan and Remy Martin — who returned for the night, with Christian Braun, Ochai Agbaji and David McCormack sending videos to play on the video board. They were joined by several members of the 2008 national title team in a joint ceremony on the court that honored KU’s two most recent national championship teams.

“It’s unreal,” Lightfoot said. “The brotherhood of it and those guys being friends with me is kind of crazy. To think how far I’ve come in my basketball journey to be here is so special and something I’ll never forget.”

The event officially got going just before 6 p.m., when Lightfoot and Teahan appeared on stage to welcome the crowd to Late Night after a countdown clock featuring images from last season hit zero on the video board.

It wasn’t until midway through the event that Kansas coach Bill Self first appeared, but he made it crystal clear what the night was about.

“Before we turn the page (to another season), let’s honor the start of the season, let’s honor the people that came here before us and let’s have a hell of a good time,” Self said. “And I hope Shaq puts on a great show.”

About 90 minutes later, Shaquille O’Neal, the man they call DJ Diesel, did just that, appropriately starting his 45-minute set with a portion of “We Are The Champions” before rocking the arena to close the night.

Before the banner and ring ceremonies, the KU women’s and men’s team were introduced to the crowd, about an hour apart, with pyrotechnics and a booming introduction on the stage. Many of the women came out carrying the flags of their home countries. In addition to having 11 players back from last year’s NCAA Tournament team, Brandon Schneider’s team features six international players.

Schneider, who is entering his eighth season at KU, addressed the crowd while wearing the No. 47 KU football jersey of Lonnie Phelps. While on stage, Schneider set the bar high for his 2022-23 team before their scrimmage.

“They are climbers,” he said. “And they’re going to do big things this season. They will be in the Top 20. They will contend for a Big 12 title. And, come this March, they will be prepared to make some noise in the NCAA Tournament.”

Sanna Strom (7 points), Holly Kersgieter (6) and Zakiyah Franklin and Chandler Prater (5 apiece) led the white team past the blue team in the women’s scrimmage. Mia Vuksic led the blue squad with eight points in the 27-14 loss.

The men’s team first took the floor at 6:51 p.m., and its first official act as defending champs was an intense game of Simon Says versus one of the two event hosts, who claimed to be a world champion Simon Says player. After eliminating half of the squad, the host crowned Jalen Wilson, Bobby Pettiford, Joe Yesufu, Kyle Cuffe Jr., KJ Adams, Michael Jankovich and freshman walk-on Wilder Evers as world champions on a night dedicated to celebrating the team’s recent national championship.

That paved the way for the player introductions, scrimmage and remarks by Self, who proclaimed Lawrence, Kansas, as “the place to be.”

Self’s speech, which was longer than normal, paid tribute to the event and the start of the 2022-23 season. As is customary, Self also lost a little money, giving up $10,000 apiece to two KU students during the half-court shot contest.

The first student, Prairie Village sophomore Emma Ryan, picked Mario Chalmers to shoot her shot. After two warm-up tries and a mulligan, Chalmers — the hero of the 2008 title game — drained his fourth shot, sending the crowd into a frenzy.

Next up, KU junior Yalone Woodruff, of Henderson, Kentucky, chose to shoot the shot himself. On his third try, he drilled it. That one sent both the current Jayhawks and the crowd into a frenzy, as they rushed him to celebrate.

It’s events and memories like those — and a mountain of a man like Shaq rocking that crowd — that make each Late Night in the Phog unique.

Of course, the scrimmages are fun, too. In the men’s game, redshirt junior Jalen Wilson went the entire game without attempting a 3-point shot and then buried two in the final minute, including the game winner with 4.6 seconds to play.

“I think it ended exactly the way it should end,” Self said. “You have your best returning player make a shot at his last Late Night.”

That shot pushed the white team to a 32-31 win over the blue team. Wilson led the white squad with eight points, while KJ Adams Jr. added seven and Dajuan Harris and Ernest Udeh Jr. added six apiece.

Senior walk-on Michael Jankovich led the blue team with nine points — on 3-of-3 shooting from 3-point range — and Cam Martin and Zuby Ejiofor added six apiece, as well.

The blue team, which also featured freshman Gradey Dick and Texas Tech transfer Kevin McCullar Jr. led 22-15 at one point, but Harris’ four assists and Wilson’s late heroics helped the white team pull out the victory.

“We love seeing you all here; I missed you all so much,” Wilson told the crowd at the end of the player portion of the night. “We appreciate you all coming here (and) none of this would be possible without the support and love from you all, every single day. There’s always going to be ups and downs in the season, but what always stays up is you all. You all support us no matter what and we wouldn’t have none of this without you. We’re all winners, we’re all champions, this is all bigger than us, man. Thank you. We love you all.”

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Written By Matt Tait

A native of Colorado, Matt moved to Lawrence in 1988 and has been in town ever since. He graduated from Lawrence High in 1996 and the University of Kansas in 2000 with a degree in Journalism. After covering KU sports for the University Daily Kansan and Rivals.com, Matt joined the World Company (and later Ogden Publications) in 2001 and has held several positions with the paper and KUsports.com in the past 20+ years. He became the Journal-World Sports Editor in 2018. Throughout his career, Matt has won several local and national awards from both the Associated Press Sports Editors and the Kansas Press Association. In 2021, he was named the Kansas Sportswriter of the Year by the National Sports Media Association. Matt lives in Lawrence with his wife, Allison, and two daughters, Kate and Molly. When he's not covering KU sports, he likes to spend his time playing basketball and golf, listening to and writing music and traveling the world with friends and family.