
Robert Smith, proudly wearing his Red Lake Warriors T-shirt, blended into the sea of red that filled Williams Arena Thursday. He sat next to his wife and three of his five children, believing the Warriors boys' basketball team could string together something magical the way he and his teammates did 20 years ago.
Smith was a senior starting guard in arguably the best game in boys' basketball state tournament history. In 1997, Red Lake rallied from a 14-point deficit with 75 seconds left in regulation to force overtime against Wabasso in the Class 1A semifinals. Wabasso survived for the 117-113 victory, but the game became the cornerstone of the Red Lake basketball community.
"I can't forget that," Smith, 38, said while watching Red Lake fall behind in its quarterfinal matchup against Minneapolis North Thursday. "We never give up. I feel like we won even if the 'W' wasn't on the board."
Like the 1997 Warriors, the current team and its fan base never gave up Thursday despite eventually losing 93-46. The fans were chanting "Red Lake" with 1:07 to play trailing by 47 points. That is something Smith and his teammates instilled in the Warriors basketball program.
"I'm glad Red Lake is building this tradition of coming down here," he said. "It's a big step coming to state and we're always proud of our boys no matter how they do. Even with scores like those, you just never give up and keep playing."

Red Lake embraced that same attitude in the 1997 semifinals when it trailed Wabasso for three quarters and by 19 points entering the final quarter. Even the 14-point deficit it faced with 1:15 remaining in the game couldn't stop the Warriors.
Gerald Kingbird scored 13 points in 57 seconds, including a long three-pointer with 17.7 seconds remaining, to tie the game 105-105.
Trudy Kingbird, no relation to Gerald, recalled the score, the shot, and the atmosphere in detail on Thursday as if the game was last week.