Reserve Christian is in the Final 4 in the Class C playoffs.
Their next game is noon on Wednesday, 3/5.
Here is the bracket--
http://www.lhsaa.org/brackets/2007-08 Brackets/2008BasketballBoys.pdf
The other top team in the Class C Finals is
Atlanta
Atlanta is presently 38-0 and ranked #1 in Class C.
http://www.thetowntalk.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080301/SPORTS02/803010361/1006/SPORTS
http://www.2theadvocate.com/columnists/fambrough/16159912.html
Louisiana's State Finals are called the Top 28, because the final four teams in each of their SEVEN classes (1A, 2A, 3A, 4A, 5A, B, C),
all come to the same location
(at Louisiana-Lafayette's
CAJUNDOME) and they play basketball from dawn to late night until it's all over!
http://www.2theadvocate.com/sports/16159237.html
"Reserve Christian is the defending Class C champion and is making its eighth tourney appearance. RCA has five state titles.
Atlanta (38-0) is the only unbeaten team in the seven-class field. Atlanta battles Athens, the 2007 runner-up, in a Class C semifinal Wednesday."
---ps---one last question I have is why does the NCAA allow the team
nickname "Cajun" and even allow them to call their arena the "Cajundome"?
There are actually some "Cajuns" who are offended by this!!
The term "Cajun" was (and to some degree still is) a derogatory name for the
French people who populated southern Louisiana, and is little different than
calling Indiana "Injuns", Germans "krauts", or Polish people "pollacks".
The word "Cajun" is a slang term for "Acadian", a term referring to French
settlers from Acadia (a loose term for the community of French settlers in
Nova Scotia and Northern Maine...that later relocated in Quebec)
Most experts on the subject will tell you that "Cajun" is a derogatory term
like "Chink" and the "N"-word, although the very people to which it refers (the
French descendants) now seem less offended by it and even use it
themselves, but that's to a large degree, because of the commercial value to
things that are "Cajun"....such as foods and spices.
http://louisiana.wedding.net/culture.html