... and, like most sequels, it wasn't as good as the original.
The original, of course, starred the late Robert Montgomery Knight in one of his most iconic roles, Angry Seating Dude. In that one, he sailed an orange molded plastic chair across the Assembly Hall floor in the middle of a game against archrival Purdue, prompting his immediate rejection and unleashing 40 years of chair jokes, memes and even a dependable laugh line from Knight himself, who puckishly said he was only trying to provide seating for a little old lady.
The sequel?
Well, it happened last night up in Wisconsin, where Green Bay lost another college basketball game to Robert Morris, and another basketball coach threw another chair. This time it was Doug Gottlieb, former ESPN yakker and now the head coach of Green Bay, which stands 4-6 on the season after going 4-28 in Gottlieb's first year.
Last night, his Phoenix were sailing toward a W when, with a smidge fewer than four minutes to play, everything came part like wet single-ply. Down 11 with 3:54 left, Robert Morris rallied to cut the lead to two with 35.7 seconds left, forced a 10-second violation and splashed a three-ball to take the lead, then won it on a layup with 2.4 seconds showing after Green Bay tied the game with a free throw.
An understandably annoyed Gottlieb stalked off the floor, spied a blameless chair in the entryway and threw it against the wall.
Voila. "Chair 2."
And, look, even though it didn't have the dramatic je ne sais quoi of the original, it did raise awareness about an issue vital to ... well, at least a couple people, maybe: Furniture abuse in college basketball.
Of course, you can say two incidents in four decades isn't much of an issue, but even one abused chair is too many. This is why Gottlieb needs to be severely punished for his actions, and Green Bay needs to institute a Chair Abuse Awareness Program with funding from, I don't know, Barcalounger or La-Z Boy or someone.
"OK, now you're just being silly, Mr. Blob," you're saying now.
Perhaps. But I bet that chair doesn't think so.
Green Bay was up by 11 with 3:54 left in the game before Robert Morris launched a late rally. With its lead cut to two with 35.7 seconds to go, Green Bay was called for a 10-second violation when it couldn't advance the ball past midcourt. After Robert Morris hit a go-ahead 3 and Green Bay went 1-of-2 from the free throw line to tie the score, Nikolaos Chitikoudis scored the winning layup for Robert Morris with 2.4 seconds to play.