They were the biggest, baddest team in the country. "We took no prisoners," recalls coach John Thompson
of his 1985 Georgetown Hoyas
, in Perfect Upset: The 1985 Villanova
vs. Georgetown NCAA
Championship ( HBO
, March 28). But on April Fools' Day, 1985--in a game people watched, says former New York Daily News
columnist Mark Kriegel, "expecting Villanova
to get smoked"--the little team that could beat the No. 1 Hoyas
66--64, becoming the lowest-seeded national champion ever. (The Wildcats
were a No. 8 seed.) "We didn't miss," says center Ed Pinckney
, of a team that made 22 of 28 shots against the Hoyas
' defense, which had Patrick Ewing
in the middle. Nothing makes a better story than an underdog tale, and the one-hour Upset does not disappoint. (It's not all uplifting, though. Guard Gary McLain
admitted to SI
in 1987 that he'd been wired on cocaine during certain games--although, he says in Upset, not on April 1.) Upset has not only a terrific game as its payoff but also great characters: the 6'10" Thompson
, who, says USC critical studies professor Todd Boyd, "put the fear of God in you"; and Villanova
's roly-poly Rollie Massimino
, who "by the end of the game," says then Big East
commissioner Dave Gavitt
, "looked like he'd been in a Maytag washing machine." -- Nancy Ramsey
