Indiana Basketball – Game with Iowa Postponed as Assembly Hall Ceiling Panel Falls

by Kent Sterling

With a full Assembly Hall, almost certain death would have been the result for at least one sitting where the ceiling panel broke seats.

With a full Assembly Hall, almost certain death would have been the result for at least one sitting where the ceiling panel broke seats.

Thank God the metal plate that crashed from the rafters of Assembly Hall’s south end fell when it did.  Reminders about keeping the importance of Indiana Basketball in perspective don’t need to come with the loss of life during a game.

Six and a half hours later, and at least one death would have been the likely result.

Click here to follow Kent on Twitter

Indiana athletic Director Fred Glass spoke with ESPN an hour ago about what measures will be taken to determine the cause, and make sure there is no need for fans at future games to look toward the ceiling to pray for anything but a Hoosier win, “Well, we’ve had our university engineer here, we’ve actually had an outside consulting engineer review too.  It’s pretty speculative at this point, but they think it’s probably weather related issue that forced that plate out.

“They advised us not to hold the event tonight,” Glass said.  “Of course, safety is our number one priority, so we won’t hold the game tonight.  We’ll see about the women’s game tomorrow night and so forth, but we’re going to work around the clock to evaluate the problem, fix the problem.  We think we’ll have a good evaluation by the engineer as soon as midday tomorrow.

“We’ll have an outside consulting engineer here, Glass continued.  They will make visual inspections from the floor.  We’ll bring in special equipment so they can get up right next to the facing that appears to be the issue to do a physical and visual inspection.  They will make a determination of what the causes are, and then we’ll fix it.”

What will determine when this game will be rescheduled?

“The information from the engineers, Glass told ESPN.  “We’ll get out of their way, and make the resources available for all the right people to get in as quickly as they can, and then as soon as we get the information back from them and get it fixed and get it all clear, we’ll look to work with Iowa and the Big Ten to reschedule the game, and of course we have our women’s game tomorrow night too, and we’ll make a determination about that as quickly as we can.”

The men’s team doesn’t have another game at Assembly Hall until March 2nd against Ohio State, so there should be plenty of time for workers to address any non-profound structural issues that might give fans reason for worry.

Life is all about timing.  Thankfully, Indiana’s timing was solid six hours before fan started to show up to watch the Hoosiers try to end its three-game losing streak.

7 thoughts on “Indiana Basketball – Game with Iowa Postponed as Assembly Hall Ceiling Panel Falls

  1. Matterhorn

    Kent, you failed to report that Freddie declined playing game at Bankers life, but Iowa was willing to stay and play. I’m sure he has some excuse, but it just basically screws Iowa by making them travel here again. This is what happens when you have a non athlete as your athletic director.

    Reply
    1. Pauly Balst

      Oh please, get some grey matter-horn. So the answer is screw the students and season ticket holders by playing in Indy at the last minute? I’m sure Iowa gets it, surely the Big Ten has protocol in the event of something like this. What do you do in an act of God type event? Shit happens. Deal with it. I’d much rather have an attorney AD at a time like this than a former ass wipe athlete like Ricky Greenspan.

      Reply
      1. Jerry

        I don’t know if there is a given protocal here. I think going to BL’s the next night causes too much confusion,,,,,however, since we suck and Iowa is a serious contender, we ought to do as much as is realistic to accomodate them otherwise……..

        Reply
        1. Pauly Balst

          This is confusing, may require reading multiple times to comprehend:

          “PER BIG TEN CONFERENCE POLICY (pause), Indiana and Iowa have 72 hours to mutually agree to a reschedule date”.

          Why is it so difficult to comprehend that with multimillion dollar TV and radio contracts, advertisers, promotions, security, concessions, paid attendance, travel for teams, support, VIPs, media, referees, students, refunds, liabilities, on site emergency services, honorees, announcers, cameras, conflicts with teams and facilities, etc, etc, and on and on, that the Big Ten does not have basic contingency planning and policy for their product?

          Reply
    2. kentsterling Post author

      I failed to report nothing. The logistics of moving a game are a bit more complex than putting players on a bus, and rolling out a ball. Much better for everyone to have cooler heads prevail and to do things right, rather than reflexively agree to something that borders on impossible.

      The possibility was a non-story.

      Reply

Leave a Reply to kentsterling Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *