Missing in Main Action: Big Ben Failed to Ring in National Postseason Play

Naturally, it would be unfair to include "one-and-done" players from last season as coronavirus prevented them from participating in national postseason competition. But you can go back to Big Ben to assess whether he a freshman phenom or flop. Five seasons ago, LSU's Ben Simmons was the first NCAA consensus All-American in 38 years (since Minnesota's Mychal Thompson and Portland State's Freeman Williams in 1978) to leave college after failing to appear in either of the two principal national postseason tournaments during their career. After previously occurring frequently, Army's Kevin Houston (1987) had been the last All-American of any type to miss the NCAA tourney and NIT. Houston, Thompson and Williams comprise three of 23 four-year players among all A-As in this dubious category. Thompson is among a total of 50 such players from Big Ten Conference members.

Simmons plus fellow All-Americans Kay Felder (Oakland) and Markelle Fultz (Washington freshman two years ago) might have made bigger names for themselves in college if they had participated in national postseason competition prior to declaring early for the NBA draft. Fultz, briefly a teammate of Simmons with the Philadelphia 76ers, became the 126th standout from a member of an existing power league (26 of them consensus) on the following alphabetical list of All-Americans, including Kevin Love's father (Stan Love/Oregon A-A in 1971), who never competed in the NCAA playoffs or NIT since the national-tourney events were introduced in the late 1930s:

No Postseason All-American Position School Year(s) All-American
Alvan Adams C Oklahoma 1974 and 1975
Jim Ashmore G Mississippi State 1957
Chet Aubuchon G Michigan State 1940
*Don Barksdale C UCLA 1947
Leo Barnhorst F-C-G Notre Dame 1949
John Barr G Penn State 1941
*Walt Bellamy C Indiana 1961
Gale Bishop F-C Washington State 1943
Bruno Boin F-C Washington 1957
George BonSalle C Illinois 1957
Wally Borrevik C Oregon State 1944
*Vince Boryla F-C Notre Dame/Denver 1949
Fred Boyd G Oregon State 1972
*Frank Burgess G Gonzaga 1961
Jim Burns G Northwestern 1967
Lawrence Butler G Idaho State 1979
*Leo Byrd F Marshall 1959
Bob Calihan C Detroit 1939
Dan Callandrillo G Seton Hall 1982
Joe Capua G Wyoming 1956
Tom Chilton F East Tennessee State 1961
*Doug Collins G Illinois State 1973
Russ Critchfield G California 1967
Billy Cunningham F North Carolina 1964 and 1965
*Chuck Darling C Iowa 1952
A.W. Davis F Tennessee 1965
Charlie Davis G Wake Forest 1971
***Terry Dischinger C-F Purdue 1960 through 1962
Bill Ebben F Detroit 1957
Paul Ebert C Ohio State 1952 through 1954
Frank Ehmann F Northwestern 1955
Bob Faris F George Washington 1939
Bob Faught C Notre Dame 1942
Kay Felder G Oakland 2016
Ken Flower G Southern California 1953
**Darrell Floyd G-F Furman 1955 and 1956
*Chet Forte G Columbia 1957
Don Freeman F Illinois 1966
**Robin Freeman G Ohio State 1955 and 1956
Markelle Fultz G Washington 2017
Terry Furlow F Michigan State 1976
*Dave Gambee F Oregon State 1958
*Dick Garmaker F Minnesota 1954 and 1955
Bill Garrett C Indiana 1951
Ed Gayda F Washington State 1950
Harold Gensichen F Western Michigan 1943
Ralph "Toddy" Giannini G Santa Clara 1940
Joe Gibbon F Mississippi 1957
Chester "Chet" Giermak C William & Mary 1950
**Otto Graham F Northwestern 1943 and 1944
**Dick Groat G Duke 1951 and 1952
**Dale Hall F Army 1944 and 1945
*Ralph Hamilton F Indiana 1947
Bill Hanson F-C Washington 1962
Vince Hanson C Washington State 1945
Bill Hapac F Illinois 1940
Jules "Skip" Harlicka G South Carolina 1968
Jerry Harper C-F Alabama 1956
*Spencer Haywood F-C Detroit 1969
**Fred Hetzel F-C Davidson 1963 through 1965
Joe Hobbs G Florida 1958
Paul Hoffman F-C Purdue 1947
Kevin Houston G Army 1987
Frank Howard C-F Ohio State 1957
**Bailey Howell F-C Mississippi State 1958 and 1959
Lou Hudson G-F Minnesota 1965 and 1966
*Dick Ives F Iowa 1944 and 1945
*Chester "Chet" Jaworski G Rhode Island State 1939
Ron Johnson C Minnesota 1959 and 1960
Vinnie Johnson G Baylor 1979
Paul Judson G Illinois 1956
Rich Kelley C Stanford 1975
*Walt Kirk G Illinois 1945
**Leo Klier F Notre Dame 1944 and 1946
Ed Koffenberger C-F Duke 1946 and 1947
Tom Kondla C Minnesota 1967
Ron Kramer C Michigan 1957
Dennis "Mo" Layton G Southern California 1971
Kevin Loder F Alabama State 1981
Stan Love C Oregon 1971
Jeff Malone G Mississippi State 1983
John Mandic C Oregon State 1942
Julius McCoy F Michigan State 1956
Banks McFadden C Clemson 1939
George McGinnis F Indiana 1971
*Jim McIntyre C Minnesota 1948 and 1949
Mark McNamara C California 1982
Carl McNulty C Purdue 1952
Chuck Mencel G Minnesota 1953 and 1955
Mike Mitchell F Auburn 1978
*Bill Mlkvy F Temple 1951
**Glen Max Morris C-F Northwestern 1945 and 1946
Jack Murdock G Wake Forest 1957
Phillip "Red" Murrell F Drake 1958
Don Nelson F-C Iowa 1961 and 1962
*Johnny Neumann F-G Mississippi 1971
Paul Neumann G Stanford 1959
Albert "Ab" Nicholas G Wisconsin 1952
Don Ohl G Illinois 1958
Frank Oleynick G Seattle 1975
Dick O'Neal C Texas Christian 1957
Bernie Opper G Kentucky 1939
**Kevin O'Shea G Notre Dame 1947 through 1950
Robert Parish C Centenary 1974 through 1976
Roger Phegley G-F Bradley 1978
Ricky Pierce F-G Rice 1982
Lou Pucillo G North Carolina State 1959
Dave Quabius G Marquette 1939
Ray Ragelis F-C Northwestern 1951
Jimmy Rayl G Indiana 1962 and 1963
Bob Rensberger G Notre Dame 1943
John Richter C North Carolina State 1959
Bill Ridley G Illinois 1956
Eddie Riska F Notre Dame 1941
Flynn Robinson G Wyoming 1965
Mike Robinson G Michigan State 1974
Wil Robinson G West Virginia 1972
Gene Rock F-G Southern California 1943
Marshall Rogers G Pan American 1976
Joe Ruklick C Northwestern 1959
**Dave Schellhase F Purdue 1965 and 1966
Harv Schmidt F Illinois 1957
Dave Scholz F Illinois 1969
Danny Schultz G Tennessee 1964
**Frank Selvy F Furman 1952 through 1954
*George Senesky F-G St. Joseph's 1943
*Bill Sharman G Southern California 1950
Gene Shue F Maryland 1953 and 1954
*Ben Simmons F-G Louisiana State 2016
Gary Simmons G Idaho 1958
Ralph Simpson F-G Michigan State 1970
Meyer "Whitey" Skoog F-G Minnesota 1949 through 1951
Doug Smart C-F Washington 1957 through 1959
Chris Smith C Virginia Tech 1960
Don Smith C Iowa State 1968
Glen Smith F Utah 1952
Forrest "Frosty" Sprowl F Purdue 1942
Bill Stauffer F-C Missouri 1952
Terry Teagle G-F Baylor 1982
Gary Thompson G Iowa State 1957
**Mychal Thompson F-C Minnesota 1977 and 1978
Rudy Tomjanovich F Michigan 1969 and 1970
Gene Tormohlen C Tennessee 1959
Walt Torrence G-F UCLA 1959
John Townsend F Michigan 1938
Vic "Slick" Townsend G-F Oregon 1941
Dick Van Arsdale F Indiana 1965
Tom Van Arsdale F Indiana 1965
Ernie Vandeweghe F Colgate 1949
*Grady Wallace F South Carolina 1957
Lou Watson F-G Indiana 1950
Nick Werkman F Seton Hall 1963
Paul Westphal G Southern California 1971 and 1972
*Murray Wier G-F Iowa 1948
Richard "Buzz" Wilkinson G Virginia 1955
*Freeman Williams G Portland State 1977 and 1978
Max Williams G Southern Methodist 1960
Sam Williams F Iowa 1968
*Mark Workman C West Virginia 1951 and 1952
George Yardley F Stanford 1950
Rich Yunkus C Georgia Tech 1970 and 1971

*Number of times named an NCAA consensus All-American.

On This Date: Former College Hoopers Made News in April 13 MLB Games

Extra! Extra! As a new season gains steam, you cano read news all about memorable major league baseball achievements, moments and transactions involving former college basketball players. Numerous ex-college hoopers had front-row seats to many of the most notable games and dates in MLB history.

Ivy League hoopers Bill Almon (Brown) and Tony Lupien (Harvard) made MLB news on this date. Baseball is portrayed as a thinking man's game but only 4% of active MLB players earned college diplomas. Unless you habitually pore over the content at baseballlibrary.com, baseballreference.com and nationalpastime.com, following is an April 13 calendar focusing on such versatile MLB athletes:

APRIL 13

  • Montreal Expos SS Bill Almon (averaged 2.5 ppg in half season for Brown's 1972-73 basketball team ending school's streak of 12 straight losing records) stroked four hits in a 5-4 win against the Philadelphia Phillies in 1980.

  • In his first MLB game in 1954, Detroit Tigers 2B Frank Bolling (averaged 7.3 ppg for Spring Hill AL in 1950-51) belted a homer off Baltimore Orioles P Don Larsen.

  • San Diego Padres RF Tony Gwynn (All-WAC second-team selection with San Diego State in 1979-80 and 1980-81) and two teammates establish a MLB record by each hitting a homer as the first three batters in the bottom of first inning of their 1987 home opener against San Francisco Giants RHP Roger Mason (multiple-year letterman in late 1970s for Saginaw Valley State MI).

  • St. Louis Cardinals 2B Tommy Herr (hooper with Delaware's freshman team in 1974-75) went 3-for-3 and scored three runs in a 1985 contest against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

  • Boston Red Sox C Duane Josephson (led Northern Iowa in scoring in 1962-63 and 1963-64 under coach Norm Stewart) opened the scoring with a second-inning, two-run homer off Denny McLain in a 5-3 victory against the Washington Senators in 1971.

  • 1B Tony Lupien (Harvard hoops captain in 1938-39) awarded on waivers from the Boston Red Sox to the Philadelphia Phillies in 1944.

  • St. Louis Cardinals CF Wally Moon (averaged 4.3 ppg with Texas A&M in 1948-49 and 1949-50) swatted a homer against the Chicago Cubs in his first at-bat en route to becoming 1954 N.L. Rookie of the Year.

  • INF-OF Tony Phillips (New Mexico Military juco hooper in 1977-78 as teammate of eventual Drake All-American Lewis Lloyd) traded by the Detroit Tigers to the California Angels in 1995.

  • Detroit Tigers RHP Jeff Robinson (two-time NAIA All-District 3 hoops honoree in early 1980s left Azusa Pacific CA as school's No. 9 all-time scorer) hurled a four-hit shutout against the Minnesota Twins in 1989.

  • St. Louis Cardinals closer Lee Smith (averaged 3.4 ppg and 1.9 rpg with Northwestern State in 1976-77) set MLB record for most career saves in 1993 (mark subsequently broken).

  • Chicago White Sox DH Jim Thome (played junior-college hoops for Illinois Central in 1988-89) smacked a homer in his fourth consecutive contest in 2006.

  • RHP Jim Wilson (hoops letterman for San Diego State's 1942 NAIA Tournament participant) purchased from the Milwaukee Braves by the Baltimore Orioles in 1955.

  • California Angels RF Dave Winfield (starting forward with Minnesota's first NCAA playoff team in 1972) collected 15 total bases and six RBI on three homers, a double and single in a 15-9 verdict over the Minnesota Twins in 1991.

Big Shoes to Fill: Time Will Tell For Successors Hubert Davis and Jon Scheyer

Time will tell if successor Hubert Davis and Jon Scheyer were the proper choices to succeed Roy Williams at North Carolina and Duke, respectively. Much is made of the struggles for an individual when succeeding a coaching legend such as active mentors as Purdue's Matt Painter (Gene Keady), Maryland's Mark Turgeon (Gary Williams) and Florida's Michael White (Billy Donovan). But only 10 of the successors on the following list posted losing marks during their tenures compared to twice as many of the predecessors.

Syracuse, where Mike Hopkins previously was coach-in-waiting to replace Jim Boeheim, was likely the next example showing how celebrated coaches lay a solid foundation that can't possibly be messed up. But Hopkins got antsy waiting for Boeheim to finally hang 'em up and chose to become Washington's bench boss. Rick Pitino joined Gene Bartow, John Brady, Mike Davis, Bill Guthridge, Joe B. Hall, Dick Harp, Jack Kraft, Pete Newell, John Oldham and Lou Rossini as coaches who took teams from the same institution to the Final Four after replacing an icon.

Davis and Scheyer probably will learn it's not all peaches and cream inheriting a stable program. Before guiding South Florida to the NCAA playoffs in 2012, Stan Heath compiled a modest 82-71 record with Arkansas in five seasons from 2002-03 through 2006-07 after succeeding Nolan Richardson. Richardson (389-169 mark with the Hogs from 1986-2002), John Beilein (278-150 with Michigan from 2008-19) and Steve Fisher (386-209 with San Diego State from 2002-17) and their successors didn't quite make the following list regarding the level of success for successors of legends who won more than 400 games at DI level for a single school:

Coaching Legend School Record Tenure Successor Record Tenure
Phog Allen Kansas 588-218 1908, 09 & 20-56 Dick Harp 121-82 1957-64
Dale Brown Louisiana State 448-301 1973-97 John Brady 192-139 1998-2008
Howard Cann NYU 409-232 1924-58 Lou Rossini 185-137 1959-71
Lou Carnesecca St. John's 526-200 1966-70 & 74-92 Brian Mahoney 56-58 1993-96
Pete Carril Princeton 514-261 1968-96 Bill Carmody 92-25 1997-2000
Gale Catlett West Virginia 439-276 1979-2002 John Beilein 104-60 2003-07
John Chaney Temple 516-253 1983-2006 Fran Dunphy 270-162 2007-19
Denny Crum Louisville 675-295 1972-2001 Rick Pitino 416-143 2002-17
Ed Diddle Western Kentucky 759-302 1923-64 John Oldham 146-41 1965-71
Don Donoher Dayton 437-275 1964-89 Jim O'Brien 61-87 1990-94
Billy Donovan Florida 467-186 1997-2015 Michael White 123-75 2016-21
Hec Edmundson Washington 488-195 1921-47 Art McLarney 53-36 1948-50
Fred Enke Arizona 511-318 1926-61 Bruce Larson 137-148 1962-72
Jack Friel Washington State 495-377 1929-58 Marv Harshman 155-181 1959-71
Taps Gallagher Niagara 465-261 1932-43 & 47-65 Jim Maloney 35-38 1966-68
Slats Gill Oregon State 599-392 1929-64 Paul Valenti 91-82 1960 & 65-70
Don Haskins Texas-El Paso 719-353 1962-99 Jason Rabedeaux 46-46 2000-02
Lou Henson Illinois 421-226 1976-96 Lon Kruger 81-48 1997-2000
Tony Hinkle Butler 549-384 1927-70 George Theofanis 79-105 1971-77
Nat Holman CCNY 423-190 1920-60 Dave Polansky* N/A N/A
Hank Iba Oklahoma State 655-316 1935-70 Sam Aubrey 18-60 1971-73
Gene Keady Purdue 512-270 1981-2005 Matt Painter 355-184 2006-21
Frank Keaney Rhode Island 403-124 1922-48 Robert "Red" Haire 57-42 1949-52
Bob Knight Indiana 659-242 1972-2000 Mike Davis 115-79 2001-06
Guy Lewis Houston 592-279 1957-86 Pat Foster 142-73 1987-93
Dave Loos Austin Peay State 402-392 1991-2017 Matt Figger 76-51 2018-21
Phil Martelli Saint Joseph's 444-328 1996-2019 Aaron McKie 19-28 2020 & 21
Shelby Metcalf Texas A&M 438-306 1964-90 Kermit Davis Jr. 8-21 1991
Ray Meyer DePaul 724-354 1943-84 Joey Meyer 231-158 1985-97
Lute Olson Arizona 590-192 1984-2007 Kevin O'Neill 19-15 2008
Clarence "Nibs" Price California 449-294 1925-54 Pete Newell 119-44 1955-60
Adolph Rupp Kentucky 875-190 1931-72 Joe B. Hall 297-100 1973-85
Alex Severance Villanova 413-201 1937-61 Jack Kraft 238-95 1962-73
Dean Smith North Carolina 879-254 1962-97 Bill Guthridge 80-28 1998-2000
Norm Stewart Missouri 634-333 1968-99 Quin Snyder 126-91 2000-06
Jerry Tarkanian UNLV 509-105 1974-92 Rollie Massimino 36-21 1993 & 94
John Thompson Jr. Georgetown 596-239 1973-99 Craig Esherick 103-74 1999-2004
Gary Williams Maryland 461-252 1990-2011 Mark Turgeon 221-113 2012-21
Roy Williams North Carolina 485-163 2004-21 Hubert Davis TBD since 2022
John Wooden UCLA 620-147 1949-75 Gene Bartow 51-10 1976 & 1977
Ned Wulk Arizona State 405-273 1958-82 Bob Weinhauer 44-45 1983-85

*CCNY de-emphasized its program after the 1952-53 season.

NOTE: Olson formally announced his retirement less than a month before the 2008-09 season when the Wildcats compiled a 21-14 record under Russ Pennell.

On This Date: Former College Hoopers Made News on April 12 MLB Contests

Extra! Extra! As a new season shifts into high gear, you can read news all about memorable major league baseball achievements, moments and transactions involving former college basketball players! Numerous ex-college hoopers had front-row seats to many of the most notable games and dates in MLB history.

Two small-college hoopers from Pennsylvania - Dick Hall (Swarthmore) and Lynn Jones (Thiel) - made MLB news on this date. Baseball is portrayed as a thinking man's game but only 4% of active MLB players earned college diplomas. Unless you habitually pore over the content at baseballlibrary.com, baseballreference.com and nationalpastime.com, following is an April 12 calendar focusing on such versatile MLB athletes:

APRIL 12

  • RHP Rich Beck (listed on Gonzaga's basketball roster in 1961-62) was purchased from the Philadelphia Phillies by the New York Yankees in 1965.

  • In his initial MLB appearance in 1961, San Francisco Giants INF Ernie Bowman (East Tennessee State hoops letterman in 1954-55 and 1955-56) scored the game-winning tally as a pinch-runner in a 2-1 victory against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

  • RHP Dick Hall (averaged 13.5 ppg from 1948-49 through 1950-51 for Swarthmore PA Middle Atlantic States Conference Southern Division champions) traded by the Kansas City Athletics to the Baltimore Orioles in 1961.

  • In 1961, San Francisco Giants C Tom Haller (backup forward for Illinois in 1956-57 and 1957-58 under coach Harry Combes) stroked his first MLB hit, a homer off Pittsburgh Pirates P Vern Law.

  • A pinch-hit homer by OF Lynn Jones (averaged 10.4 ppg for Thiel PA from 1970-71 through 1973-74) accounted for the Detroit Tigers' only runs in a 6-2 loss against the Toronto Blue Jays in 1981.

  • Cleveland Indians rookie CF Kenny Lofton (Arizona's leader in steals for 1988 Final Four team compiling 35-3 record) swiped four bases against the Boston Red Sox in the opener of a 1992 doubleheader.

  • Detroit Tigers 3B Tony Phillips (New Mexico Military juco hooper in 1977-78 as teammate of eventual Drake All-American Lewis Lloyd) went 4-for-4 in a 1990 game against the Boston Red Sox.

  • Seattle Mariners RF Leon Roberts (grabbed one rebound in four basketball games for Michigan in 1970-71 under coach Johnny Orr) contributed a sacrifice fly and two solo homers, including game-winning blast in bottom of the 10th inning, in 3-2 win against the Toronto Blue Jays in 1980.

  • Detroit Tigers RHP Jeff Robinson (two-time NAIA All-District 3 hoops honoree in early 1980s left Azusa Pacific CA as school's No. 9 all-time scorer) won his MLB debut, allowing only one run in seven innings in a 7-1 victory against the Chicago White Sox in 1987.

  • After a pair of rainouts, 1B-OF Norm Siebern (member of Southwest Missouri State's back-to-back hoops NAIA Tournament titlists in 1952 and 1953) socked a decisive eighth-inning HR to give the New York Yankees a season-opening 3-2 win over the visiting Boston Red Sox in 1959.

  • Pittsburgh Pirates RHP Kent Tekulve (freshman hooper for Marietta OH in mid-1960s) commenced a streak of 12 relief appearances in a row without allowing an earned run in 1978.

  • Pittsburgh Pirates LHP Bob Veale (scored 1,160 points from 1955-56 through 1957-58 with Benedictine KS) outdueled San Francisco Giants P Juan Marichal, 1-0, in 1965.

  • San Diego Padres RF Will Venable (All-Ivy League first-team selection as junior and second-team choice as senior averaged 9.3 ppg under Princeton coach John Thompson III from 2001-02 through 2004-05) scored four runs against the Atlanta Braves in 2010.

Harry Experience: Combes' All-American Haul is Overlooked Achievement

Let's see if you genuinely want to be guided by data. Only seven individuals have coached more than 15 All-Americans with one major college. Eight years ago, Duke's Mike Krzyzewski broke a tie with Kentucky's Adolph Rupp and moved atop this list.

In one of the most overlooked achievements in NCAA history current Champaign bench boss Brad Underwood should know about, Harry Combes amassed 16 different All-Americans in his first 19 of 20 seasons as Illinois' mentor from 1947-48 through 1966-67. No other coach accumulated more than 13 All-Americans in his first 20 campaigns with a single school - North Carolina's Dean Smith (13 in first 20 seasons), Indiana's Bob Knight (12), Krzyzewski (12), Rupp (12), Indiana's Branch McCracken (11), Arizona's Lute Olson (11), UCLA's John Wooden (10) and Syracuse's Jim Boeheim (eight) - until former Illini mentor Bill Self (Kansas) bypassed them several years ago. No definitive word as of yet regarding how many of the A-As arrived donning Adidas gear via suspicious Self-less circumstances investigated by NCAA. Recruiting the Chicago metropolitan area isn't a panacea for the Illini, which should remember how 22 different major-college All-Americans in less than 30 years in an earlier era came from Illinois high schools located in towns featuring populations smaller than 20,000.

As a means of comparison, keep in mind inactive NCAA Division I national coaches of the year P.J. Carlesimo, Perry Clark, Tom Davis, Eddie Fogler, Jim Harrick, Marv Harshman, Clem Haskins, Maury John, Jim O'Brien, George Raveling, Charlie Spoonhour and Butch van Breda Kolff combined for 17 All-Americans in a cumulative 251 years coaching at the major-college level. Moreover, prominent active coaches Tommy Amaker, Mike Anderson, Randy Bennett, Brad Brownell, Mick Cronin, Ed DeChellis, Travis Ford, Frank Haith, Jim Larranaga, Fran McCaffery, Bob McKillop, Dan Monson and Tubby Smith have combined for fewer All-Americans than both Combes and Self. John Calipari has collected 11 A-As in his first 12 campaigns with Kentucky. Following is list of the seven coaches with most different All-Americans at one university:

Coach All-Americans With Single Division I School School Tenure With Most All-Americans
Mike Krzyzewski 34 All-Americans in first 41 seasons with Duke 1980-81 through 2019-20
Adolph Rupp 23 in 41 seasons with Kentucky 1930-31 through 1971-72 except for 1952-53
Dean Smith 22 in 36 seasons with North Carolina 1961-62 through 1996-97
Bill Self 18 in first 18 seasons with Kansas 2003-04 through 2019-20
John Wooden 18 in 27 seasons with UCLA 1948-49 through 1974-75
Bob Knight 17 in 29 seasons with Indiana 1971-72 through 1999-00
Harry Combes 16 in 20 seasons with Illinois 1947-48 through 1966-67

NOTE: Respected retired mentors Gale Catlett, Mike Deane, Bill Henderson, Shelby Metcalf, Stan Morrison, Bob Polk, Charlie Spoonhour and Ralph Willard never had an All-American despite at least 18 seasons coaching at the major-college level.

On This Date: Former College Hoopers Made News on April 11 MLB Contests

Extra! Extra! As a new season gains momentum, you can read news all about memorable major league baseball achievements, moments and transactions involving former college basketball players! Numerous ex-college hoopers had front-row seats to many of the most notable games and dates in MLB history.

Eventual MLB managers in the news as players on this date after previously competing as college basketball hoopers included Roger Craig, Dallas Green, Gil Hodges, Davey Johnson and Bill Virdon. Baseball is portrayed as a thinking man's game but only 4% of active MLB players earned college diplomas. Unless you habitually pore over the content at baseballlibrary.com, baseballreference.com and nationalpastime.com, following is an April 11 calendar focusing on such versatile MLB athletes:

APRIL 11

  • RHP Roger Craig (forward with North Carolina State's 1949-50 freshman basketball team) released by the Cincinnati Reds and promptly signed as a free agent by the Philadelphia Phillies in 1966.

  • RHP Dallas Green (Delaware's runner-up in scoring and rebounding in 1954-55) purchased from the Philadelphia Phillies by the Washington Senators in 1965. Returned to the Phillies a month later.

  • In 1932, utilityman Harvey Hendrick (Vanderbilt hoops letterman in 1918) traded with P Benny Frey and cash by the Cincinnati Reds to the St. Louis Cardinals for holdout OF Chick Hafey, the previous year's N.L. batting champion.

  • 1B Gil Hodges (hooper for St. Joseph's IN in 1943 and Oakland City IN in 1947 and 1948) supplied the first homer in New York Mets history (at St. Louis in 1962).

  • Atlanta Braves 2B Davey Johnson (averaged 1.7 ppg with Texas A&M in 1961-62) went 4-for-4 against the San Diego Padres in a 1973 game.

  • In his second MLB game, Boston Red Sox RF Joe Lahoud (New Haven CT hoops letterman in mid-1960s) socked a homer off the Detroit Tigers' Denny McLain in 1968.

  • Toronto Blue Jays DH Rick Leach (averaged 15.5 ppg for Michigan's JV squad in 1975-76) registered four hits against the New York Yankees in 1988.

  • Cleveland Indians CF Kenny Lofton (Arizona's leader in steals for 1988 Final Four team compiling 35-3 record) notched at least one double or triple in each of first six games of 1999 campaign while hitting .467.

  • Chicago Cubs CF Jerry Martin (1971 Southern Conference MVP after he was Furman's runner-up in scoring the previous season) whacked two homers against the New York Mets in a 1980 contest.

  • Chicago White Sox RF Lyle Mouton (starter in LSU's backcourt with All-American Chris Jackson for 1989 NCAA playoff team) launched a game-winning, three-run homer in the bottom of the 11th inning against the Texas Rangers in 1996.

  • New York Giants RF Red Murray (played hoops for Lock Haven PA in early 1900s) collected four hits and four RBI in 1912 season opener against the Brooklyn Dodgers.

  • In 1961, Hall of Fame RHP Robin Roberts (one of Michigan State's top three scorers each season from 1944-45 through 1946-47) tied Grover Cleveland Alexander's N.L. record with a 12th straight Opening Day start for the Philadelphia Phillies.

  • St. Louis Cardinals rookie LF Wally Roettger (Illinois hoops letterman in 1921-22 and 1922-23) registered five RBI against the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1928 season opener.

  • CF Bill Virdon (Drury MO hooper in 1949) traded by the New York Yankees to the St. Louis Cardinals in a deal involving OF Enos Slaughter in 1954. Seven years later, Virdon socked a two-out, three-run homer to give the Pittsburgh Pirates an 8-7 victory at San Francisco.

  • New York Yankees RF Dave Winfield (starting forward for Minnesota's first NCAA playoff team in 1972) went 4-for-4 against the Boston Red Sox in 1985.

  • 3B Eddie Yost (NYU freshman hooper in 1943-44 under coach Howard Cann) became the first-ever batter in Los Angeles Angels' history.

Lists Are Deceiving: Prep Player Rankings Little More Than Huge Con Jobs

The herd-mentality "experts" on lame-stream TV are routinely mistaken on coronavirus issues large and small - from effectiveness of donning masks, reusable bags, virus modeling and hydroxychloroquine treatments. Their frequent stunning litany of failure is reminiscent of ranking high school basketball recruits and their eventual impact. Vaping loyalists for big-name schools count on remaining or returning to elite status via recruiting services. Typically, the herd-mentality national media falls in lockstep predicting most of them will be back to at least near the top of the national polls. But welfare writers (accepting guesswork handouts from well-meaning but ineffectual middle men) better hope the recruiting gurus ranking high school hotshots emerge from a sorry slump. Textbook example last season was consensus national player of the year Obi Toppin (Dayton) didn't rank among the nation's Top 100 recruits coming out of high school. This year, unanimous national player of the year Luka Garza (Iowa) barely cracked the Top 100. Ditto Final Four Most Outstanding Player Jared Butler (Baylor).

Three years ago, Kansas guard Devonte' Graham was nowhere to be found among the nation's Top 100 high school recruits in 2014. Four years ago, national POY teammate Frank Mason wasn't among the consensus Top 75 coming out of high school in 2013. But at least Mason was somewhere between 75 and 100 similar to Michigan State's Denzel Valentine, who shared national POY awards four seasons ago with Oklahoma's Buddy Hield (outside Top 100 in 2012). Well, if roof-top dancing bartender AOC is correct about climate change and defending colleague's outrageous "some people did something," we only need to tolerate college hoopdom's crowning jewel for junk science about 10 more years.

What good are prep player rankings and ESPN's periodic commitment announcements if the brainiac analysts can't come close to pinpointing a prospect who will emerge among the elite collegiate players in a couple of years? Nine seasons ago provided ample evidence of rating ineptitude when four of the five NCAA unanimous All-American first-team selections, including national player of the year Trey Burke (Michigan), weren't ranked among the consensus Top 100 H.S. recruits assembled by RSCI the years they left high school. First-teamer Kelly Olynyk (Gonzaga) and Final Four MOP Luke Hancock (Louisville) weren't among the top 100 in 2009. First-teamers Doug McDermott (Creighton) and Victor Oladipo (Indiana) plus honorable mention All-American Russ Smith (leading scorer for NCAA champion Louisville) weren't among the top 100 in 2010.

The player pimps, "hustling" more than attorney Ben Crump to profit off multitude of miscreants, certainly lack credibility. Burke, McDermott, Frank Kaminsky (Wisconsin) and Hield pooled their previously overlooked assets to assemble a string of four straight national POY honorees. Burke wasn't included among the consensus top 100 in 2011 although every scout in this burgeoning charade saw him play on the same high school squad with eventual Ohio State All-American Jared Sullinger. Ditto McDermott with regal recruit Harrison Barnes (North Carolina).

Media hacks as confused as Bruce Jenner, inauguration boycotters, disgraced California Rep. Katie Hill, know-nothing leftist lunatics banning plastic straws and #MadMaxine expounding on college loans, apparently incapable of calculating the difference between AAU-pickup street ball and genuine team ball, should be deep-sixed when you compared Hield and Valentine against the following list of mediocre players ranked among the consensus Top 40 recruits in 2012: Chaquille Cleare (averaged 3.5 ppg for Maryland and Texas), DaJuan Coleman (4.8 ppg/Syracuse), Grant Jerrett (5.2 ppg/Arizona) and Omar Calhoun (6 ppg/Connecticut).

As a cautionary measure when considering prize prospects lists for the 2020-21 campaign, pore over this information again the next time some lazy broadcaster needing a drool bucket begins slobbering over a pimple-faced teenager without ever seeing him play firsthand and only using recruiting services as a resource. The dopey devotees intoxicated by recruiting services should simply be ignored for accepting as gospel player rankings dwelling on wingspans, weight reps, Soul Train dance moves and carnival-like dunk contests. How about focusing solely on whether they'll continue to improve against comparable athletes, boast the proper attitude to learn to fit in with teammates in a me-myself-and-I generation and make a major bottom-line impact on the game rather than strut-your-stuff swagger? When pass is considered a dirty four-letter word, the chronic over-hyping doesn't appear as if it will end anytime soon.

Two-time NBA Most Valuable Player and three-point shooting sensation Stephen Curry (Davidson) is perhaps the premier collegian thus far this century. If you've got a life, you don't have time to go over all of the no-names ranked better than Curry when he graduated from high school in 2006. You'd have an easier task competing in the national spelling bee, trying to size up all of the issues involving Tulsa coach Frank Haith's checking account when he was at Miami (Fla.), helping Bruce Pearl remember decor inside of his old TN residence, discerning how much Roy Williams "earned" in academic progress bonuses at North Carolina or believing Rick Pitino's Sgt. "I-Know-Nothing" Schultz routine at Louisville regarding recruiting regaling.

Rating recruits - the ultimate sports distortion foisted upon dupes - is akin to believing government grifters telling the gullible masses taxpayer-financed Muslim extremist terrorism is workplace violence or fueled by a largely-unseen movie (such as #ShrillaryRotten lying about video in front of caskets at Andrews AFB duplicating her honesty when describing dodging Bosnian bullets). Pilfering a propaganda-like phrase spun during the institutionalizing of political correctness to the detriment of the safety of the American people, the player ratings are authentic "man-made disasters." They need to make a dramatic turnaround comparable to the Obama White House's post-marathon bombing appeasing administration lauding Cambridge/Boston area police after previous exploitation portraying them as "acting stupidly" when it suited their agenda. Amid the insulting misinformation overload, it might be time to visit Rev. Wrong's church and see if he is recruiting susceptible supporters by telling his captive audience "America's Chechens have come home to roost." Truth-escape artists supporting chronic criminals rather than law enforcement and opponents of Tsarnaev receiving a death-penalty sentence can simply deny you ever heard or read such impudence.

The same play-dumb mindset comparable to the Benghazi stonewalling, VA executive comparing veteran care waits to long lines at Disney theme park, IRS conservative-group targeting and general incompetence, #ShrillaryRotten's State Department IT chief unable to provide his emails or being willing to talk to investigators plus fondness for determining transgender dumping grounds applies to entitlement-era "ridiculists" stemming from recruiting service player ratings. Resembling Jason Collins' long-time fiancée, you look like a full-fledged fool by putting a significant amount of stock in these breathless rush-to-judgment projections spawning a slew of blue-chippers turned prima donnas. But don't muzzle 'em with a jock jihad or sound as lucid as the buffoonish Bomb Mom. Just give the sane a barf bag when clueless adults hold their collective breath to see if coddled scholar dons their alma mater's cap on TV announcing a college choice. Why can't we simply wait until impressionable teenagers such as Dayton dynamo Toppin, Murray State marvel Ja Morant plus KU kinetic knockouts Mason and Graham compete in an actual game on both ends of a college court against comparable athletes before rendering assessments on their ability at the next level?

On This Date: Former College Hoopers Made News on April 10 MLB Contests

Extra! Extra! As a new season gains traction, you can read news all about memorable major league baseball achievements, moments and transactions involving former college basketball players. Numerous ex-college hoopers had front-row seats to many of the most notable games and dates in MLB history.

Baseball is portrayed as a thinking man's game but only 4% of active MLB players earned college diplomas. Jerry Adair (Oklahoma State) and Sonny Siebert (Missouri) - former Big Seven Conference opponents as top three scorers for their respective teams in 1956-57 - supplied significant MLB performances in season openers on this date. Ex-juco hoopers Bob Oliver (American River), Ken Retzer (Jefferson City MO), Jackie Robinson (Pasadena City CA) and Jim Thome (Illinois Central) also made MLB news on this date. Unless you habitually pore over the content at baseballlibrary.com, baseballreference.com and nationalpastime.com, following is an April 10 calendar focusing on such versatile MLB athletes:

APRIL 10

  • Baltimore Orioles 2B Jerry Adair (one of Oklahoma State's top three basketball scorers in 1956-57 and 1957-58) went 3-for-3 on Opening Day against the New York Yankees in 1962.

  • Cincinnati Reds LHP Amir Garrett (averaged 7.4 ppg and 4 rpg for St. John's under coach Steve Lavin in 2011-12 and 2012-13 before RS transfer year at Cal State Northridge) posted a victory against the Miami Marlins en route to holding opponents scoreless in his first seven relief appearances of the 2019 season while fanning 10 of 25 batters he faced over 6 2/3 innings.

  • Washington Senators 1B Frank Howard (two-time All-Big Ten Conference first-team selection in 1956-57 and 1957-58 when leading Ohio State in scoring and rebounding) hammered two homers against the New York Yankees in 1969.

  • Utilityman Bob Oliver (All-Valley Conference basketball choice for American River Community College CA in 1962) purchased from the Chicago White Sox by Philadelphia Phillies in 1976.

  • C Ken Retzer (fourth-leading juco scorer with 184 points for Jefferson City MO in 1953-54) traded by the Minnesota Twins to Houston Astros in 1966.

  • In 1947, 1B Jackie Robinson (highest scoring average in Pacific Coast Conference both of his seasons with UCLA in 1939-40 and 1940-41) became the first black player of the 20th Century to sign a MLB contract (with Brooklyn Dodgers).

  • OF Wally Roettger (Illinois hoops letterman in 1921-22 and 1922-23) traded by the St. Louis Cardinals to the New York Giants in 1930.

  • In 1968 season opener, Cleveland Indians RHP Sonny Siebert (team-high 16.7 ppg for Missouri in 1957-58 as All-Big Eight Conference second-team selection) tossed a two-hit shutout against the Chicago White Sox.

  • Atlanta Braves LHP George Stone (averaged 14.7 ppg and 6.5 rpg for Louisiana Tech in 1964-65 and 1965-66) tossed a six-hit shutout against the Houston Astros in his first start of the 1970 campaign.

  • A pinch-hit grand slam by OF-1B Champ Summers (led SIUE in scoring in 1969-70 after doing same with Nicholls State in 1964-65) propelled the San Diego Padres to a 7-3 win against the St. Louis Cardinals in 1984. It was Summers' final MLB homer.

  • Cleveland Indians 1B Jim Thome (played junior-college hoops for Illinois Central in 1988-89) hammered a grand slam in 2002 game against the Minnesota Twins. Circuit clout was the first of four consecutive contests where he hit a round-tripper.

  • RHP Billy Wynne (one of prime hoopers in mid-1960s for Pfeiffer NC) returned by the Cleveland Indians to the New York Mets in 1967 after he was selected during the winter in Rule 5 draft.

The Past Dunce: Basketball Baron MJ Like Markle as Pro Baseball Royalty

"The basket is in the same place all the time." - Long-time MLB player/manager/executive Joe Torre on why trying to hit a moving target in professional baseball would be more difficult for Michael Jordan than excelling at basketball

Today marks the anniversary of celebrated cager Michael Jordan unceremoniously commencing his Organized Baseball career becoming as much of a dud as Meghan Markle's foray into British royalty. As entertaining as ESPN's 10 episodes of "The Last Dance" were for five quarantined weeks a year ago, the documentary couldn't possibly be rated a "10" by majority of versatile athletes boasting experiential knowledge playing basketball and baseball at the collegiate or professional level. The disconcerting departure from Jordan's regal reality in hoopdom was an absurd implication he could have reached the majors in baseball. Please! What baseball skill set was he betting on? Between sniffing hair and incoherent policy messages to the nation on economic intercourse, Plagiarist Bi-dumb, while trying to scale Stair Farce One on "windy" day, might jive-talk say: "He ain't no Daddy Hack, man!"

Yes, an adventurous life includes risk. Just ask self-anointed Ambassador to North Korea Dennis Rodman. But what in the world was NBA GOAT thinking when personally knocking himself off hoops pedestal to become pedestrian baseball player? He was textbook example that even an authentic physical specimen doesn't always possess the aptitude to competently compete, let alone excel, in both basketball and baseball at the highest level. Of course, anyone with a pulse admires Michael's mystical work ethic. Some starry-eyed observers on injured list sans moral compass may even applaud Jordan's extracurricular-activity appetite for betting and bedding. But unless MJ won a wager with actor/director Robert "The Natural" Redford to obtain "Wonderboy" lightning bolt-treated bat, only a fictional-film fan "Airhead" believes "His Airness" was big-league bound as an outfielder.

Numbers don't lie. After his initial retirement, Jordan hit an anemic .202 and scarred his prestigious persona with 30% more strikeouts than base hits (114 to 88) for Double A Birmingham's 1994 Southern League West Division last-place team. He wasn't exactly the South's next Henry Aaron 20 years removed from "Hammerin' Hank" breaking Babe Ruth's MLB career home-run record. None of the Southern League's "44" players with at least 400 at-bats that year registered a lower batting average. In fact, Jordan posted the lowest average in entirety of AA Organized Ball among 180 players with at least 325 ABs (including Eastern League and Texas League). Embracing Jordan's crude Jerry Krause food-consumption lingo, his baseball menu featured more "crumbs" than fine dining. Nonetheless, media leftovers was what eventual MLB veterans Jason Giambi, Doug Glanville, Tony Graffanino, Jason Kendall, Damian Miller, Pokey Reese, Desi Relaford, Alex Rodriguez, Chris Stynes and Chris Widger received in Southern League that season compared to Jordan generating more publicity than all of these genuine baseball players combined.

Anyone with functioning brain realizes Jordan was the Chicago Bulls' centerpiece. But despite Krause assembling rosters including 66 different players for potent teams compiling 11 consecutive winning seasons from 1987-88 through "The Last Dance," Jordan disparaged architect by mooing like a cow when portly executive entered the Bulls' locker room or got on team bus. However, Jordan should currently have at least a little more respect for Krause after an abundance of NBA humble pie served to him in front office as the Charlotte Bobcats/Hornets notched winning campaigns only twice in last 10 years since he became majority owner.

Contrary to anything your father may have told you about athletic endeavors, the single most difficult thing to do in any team sport is soundly striking a quality baseball pitch. In parallel with Joe Torre's incisive quote above, there is a "Greatest Showman" carnival caveat regarding Jordan's celebrity cruise. If he grudgingly consented to become a 31-year-old replacement player during the MLB strike commencing in mid-August 1994 when Torre was managing the St. Louis Cardinals, perhaps an Eddie Gaedel-like "Field of Schemes" freak show in reverse might have unfolded to put a few more fannies in stadium seats.

Partially influenced by legend-building commercial spoon-fed culture, most "Be-Like-Mike" aficionados are unaware the documentary failed to touch all the bases by pointing out North Carolina's two-time consensus All-American wasn't best former college basketball standout performing as an outfielder on the Barons' baseball roster in 1994. The superior teammate on the diamond was Scott Tedder, a 6-4 lefthander who is Ohio Wesleyan's all-time leading scorer with 2,501 points. Tedder, playing about one-fourth of the '94 campaign with Cubs' affiliate Orlando (also in Southern League), hit .281 for the season. Tedder, a three-time All-NCAC first-team selection in basketball and Most Outstanding Player of NCAA Division III Final Four as senior in 1987-88, posted a .261 batting average over five years with the Barons. Another ex-college hooper on roster of White Sox' affiliate that season was Ken Coleman, a utilityman who hit .191. Coleman is New Haven's all-time leader in assists after pacing the Chargers in scoring feeds all four seasons from 1984-85 through 1987-88. Coleman, a two-time All-NECC hoop selection, played seven years in the minors, finishing with a .258 batting mark. If not a better batting average in order to emerge from basement by winning a few more road games, at least Jordan's teammates got a better traveling bus worth $350,000 financed by him out of the deal.

There are pros and cons about earn-your-spurs hazing of self-absorbed rookies. But former minor-league pitcher Scott Burrell, a Chicago Bulls teammate in MJ's final Bulls season (1997-98) and current hoops bench boss for Southern Connecticut State, was treated like a rented mule by five-time MVP in excessive competitive repartee heaped on a veteran. Odds are UConn product Burrell, the first athlete to become a first-round draft pick of two major sports organizations (MLB/Seattle Mariners in 1989 and NBA/Charlotte Hornets in 1993), missed out on a potential hefty bonus when failing to respond to Jordan by challenging him to a one-on-one baseball gamble. Insofar as Jordan appeared in 127 games with the Barons, how about a symbolic "I love to bet" home-run derby with him facing 127 strikes from Burrell in Comiskey Park or Las Vegas to see if MJ might swat more than the three round-trippers he did with the Barons? Trash-talking Jordan could have condescendingly distributed a diet pill for each Big Fly to competition director if event was "managed" by talent evaluator Krause, who worked as scout for four different MLB franchises (Indians/Athletics/Mariners/White Sox). Naturally, the hoops legend would also emerge as "the best (actor) there ever was" in baseball if resembling Roy Hobbs by knocking cover off Burrell delivery in front of his sons. Parked in first row of stadium, equally-versatile film director-producer-writer-actor Spike Lee/Mars Blackmon would proclaim: "It's gotta be the news (headline)!"

At any rate, never underestimate Jordan's penchant for rising to the occasion and three-time All-Big East Conference hoops selection Burrell failed to reach as high as Double A, compiling a 2-6 Class A pitching record in 14 starts in the Toronto Blue Jays' farm system in 1990 and 1991. In 1989, promising righthander Burrell was picked ahead of supplemental first-rounder Todd Jones plus the following eventual MLB hurlers: Jerry Dipoto (3rd round), Shane Reynolds (3rd), Denny Neagle (3rd), Scott Erickson (4th), Alan Embree (5th), Paul Quantrill (6th), Russ Springer (7th), Curt Leskanie (8th), Sterling Hitchcock (9th), Trevor Hoffman (11th), Mike Trombley (14th), Pat Rapp (15th) and Tim Worrell (20th). In 1990 as a fifth-round selection by Toronto, Burrell was chosen before eventual MLB pitchers Mike Hampton (6th round), Troy Percival (6th), Mike Williams (14th), Rick White (15th), Dave Mlicki (17th), Eddie Guardado (21st), Andy Pettitte (22nd) and Jason Bere (36th).

Baseball Hall of Fame hurlers Bob Gibson (Creighton), Ted Lyons (Baylor), Eppa Rixey Jr. (Virginia) and Robin Roberts (Michigan State) also were standout basketball players for major universities. But hoopers-turned-pitchers such as the HOFers plus Gene Conley (Washington State) and Steve Hamilton (Morehead State) should be exempt from any basketball-to-baseball comparison equation assessing an everyday performer such as Jordan. Conley is the only individual in history to win both MLB (Milwaukee Braves in 1957) and NBA titles (member of three consecutive Celtics championship teams from 1959 through 1961). Hamilton is only athlete to play in World Series (1963 and 1964 with New York Yankees) and NBA Finals (rookie in 1959 when Lakers were swept by Celtics) after participating in NCAA playoffs (averaged 18.5 points in four tourney games in 1956 and 1957).

A hoops-to-MLB transition has been achieved more often than the average fan knows. Jordan was incapable, but former NCAA Division I basketball standouts Tony Clark (San Diego State), Terrell Lowery (Loyola Marymount), Lyle Mouton (Louisiana State) and Desi Wilson (Fairleigh Dickinson) competed in Double A baseball in 1994 - collaborating for .288 batting average - en route to reaching the majors. No matter how much sweat equity is dispensed, you either have "it" (multiple-sport skills) or you don't. Truth be told in evaluating what could be depicted as Jordan's "The Past Dunce," we probably should defer to short-lived uniform #45 during brief career in Organized Ball. Fitting like a glove in baseball infinitely more than MJ's iconic NBA jersey #23, following is an alphabetical list of 45 major-college varsity basketball regulars who went on to enjoy non-pitcher MLB careers of at least six seasons (same number as Jordan's NBA titles) since the start of national postseason competition in late 1930s:

Two-Way Athlete Summary of Major-College Hoops Career Summary of Non-Pitcher's MLB Career
Jerry Adair Played two seasons of varsity basketball under legendary coach Hank Iba with Oklahoma State (third-leading scorer with 9.7 ppg in 1956-57 and second-leading scorer with 11.9 ppg in 1957-58). Adair ranked among the nation's top 12 free-throw shooters both seasons when one of his teammates was recently-deceased HOF coach Eddie Sutton. Hit .254 in 1,165 games in 13 seasons from 1958 through 1970 with the Orioles, White Sox, Red Sox and Athletics before playing one year in Japan. Adair set MLB records for highest fielding average (.994) and fewest errors (five) by 2B in single season in 1964 and for consecutive errorless games by 2B (89 in 1964 and 1965). He participated in 1967 World Series with the Red Sox after being traded by White Sox for reliever Don McMahon.
Joe Adcock Played three seasons from 1944-45 through 1946-47 for Louisiana State as 6-4, 190-pound center. Leading scorer with 18.6 ppg for 1945-46 Tigers team compiling an 18-3 record. All-league second-team selection set SEC Tournament record with 15 field goals in game against Tulane in 1946 (subsequently broken). 1B hit .277 with 336 homers and 1,122 RBI in 17 seasons from 1950 through 1966 with four different teams. He hit four homers and double for the Braves against Brooklyn Dodgers on 7-31-54, setting MLB record for most total bases in game (18) that stood until broken by Shawn Green in 2002. Adcock was the Braves' regular first baseman on 1957 and 1958 N.L. champions. Adcock, who blasted career-high 38 homers in 1956 between injury-plagued seasons, was an All-Star in 1960 and managed the Indians in 1967.
Frankie Baumholtz First player in Ohio University history to score 1,000 points in career led school to three-year record of 49-18. His high game was 29 points against Dayton. Capped college career by earning MVP honors in 1941 NIT when leading tourney in scoring with 53 points in three games for second-place Bobcats, including game-high 19 in final. OF hit .290 in 1,019 games in 10 N.L. seasons (1947 through 1949 and 1951 through 1957) with the Cubs, Reds and Phillies. Baumholtz, who finished fifth in inaugural Rookie of Year voting, hit under .283 in only two of his nine full seasons. He hit .325 in 1952, finishing second to Stan Musial in batting championship race. Lefthander led N.L. in pinch hits in 1955 and 1956.
Bruce Bochte Starting 6-3 forward for Santa Clara in 1969-70 when averaging 7.4 ppg and 4 rpg under coach Dick Garibaldi. Collected eight rebounds in loss against Utah State and 10 points in victory against Jerry Tarkanian-coached Long Beach State in 1970 NCAA playoffs. One of Bochte's teammates was All-American center Dennis Awtrey, who went on to play 12 NBA seasons with six different franchises. 1B-OF hit .282 with the Angels, Indians, Mariners and A's in 12 A.L. seasons from 1974 through 1986 (boycotted 1983 as a personal protest over rising player salaries). Lefthander was A.L. All-Star with Seattle in 1979 when finishing 10th in batting average (career-high .316) and eighth in doubles (career-high 38) along with career-high 100 RBI. Representing the Mariners the only time Seattle has hosted the Midsummer Classic, Bochte knocked in run with single off Gaylord Perry. Named team MVP the next year. In post-playing days, the avowed agnostic worked to "save the Mother Earth from humankind's destructive ways."
Leo Burke Averaged 9.2 ppg for Virginia Tech in 1952-53 and 1953-54. Utilityman hit .239 with the Orioles, Angels, Cardinals and Cubs in seven years from 1958 through 1965. Traded by St. Louis to the Cubs in mid-1963 for knuckleballer Barney Schultz, a key reliever for the Cards in their 1964 pennant-winning season.
Bob Cerv The 6-0, 200-pounder averaged 6.2 ppg for Nebraska from 1946-47 through 1949-50, ranking fourth on the school's career scoring list when finishing his eligibility. OF hit .276 in 12 seasons from 1951 through 1962 with the Yankees, Athletics, Angels and Colt .45s. Cerv played in 1955, 1956 and 1960 World Series with the Yankees. He slugged homer in 1955 WS against the Dodgers and hit .357 in 1960 WS against the Pirates. In 1958, he batted .305 (sixth in A.L.) with 38 homers (fourth) and 104 RBI (fourth) for Kansas City and was chosen over Ted Williams as All-Star LF in year of Boston legend's final batting title. Finished among A.L. top 10 in batting average and RBI in back-to-back years (1958 and 1959).
Tony Clark Played in only five games his freshman season for Arizona in 1990-91 under coach Lute Olson before transferring home to San Diego State. The swingman averaged 11.6 ppg and 4.6 rpg for the Aztecs as sophomore in 1991-92, leading them in scoring in WAC games. 1B averaged 31 homers per season in four-year span from 1996 through 1999 with the Tigers. Finished sixth in A.L. with 117 RBI in 1997. Tallest switch-hitter (6-7) in major-league history was second pick overall in 1990 amateur draft. Traded to Red Sox following All-Star campaign in 2001. Hit .262 with 251 homers and 824 RBI in 15 seasons from 1995 through 2009 with the Tigers, Red Sox, Mets, Yankees, Diamondbacks and Padres. In 2014, became first former player named executive director of MLB Players Association.
Billy Cowan The 6-0 guard was Utah letterman from 1957-58 through 1959-60 under coach Jack Gardner. Co-captain of Utes as senior when teammate of All-American Billy McGill scored 25 points in three NCAA playoff games. OF hit .236 with the Cubs, Mets, Braves, Phillies, Yankees and Angels in eight seasons (1963 through 1965, 1967 and 1969 through 1972). PCL MVP in 1963 with the Salt Lake City Bees. His only year as regular was 1964 when posting career highs of 16 doubles, 19 homers and 50 RBI as the Cubs CF ranked among N.L. top nine in stolen bases with 12. Traded by the Cubs to Mets for George Altman on 1-1-65.
Tim Cullen Starting guard for Santa Clara in 1962-63 when averaging 10 ppg and 3.4 rpg in Dick Garibaldi's first season as coach. Averaged 3.7 ppg and 2.4 rpg in nine games the previous year when one of his teammates was Bob Garibaldi, who pitched briefly for the Giants. Infielder, primarily a second baseman, hit .220 with the Senators, White Sox and A's in seven seasons from 1966 through 1972. Led A.L. second basemen in fielding percentage in 1970 one year after committing three errors in one inning on 8-30-69. Traded by the White Sox to Senators for Ron Hansen on 8-2-68. Played in ALCS in his final major-league campaign.
Alvin Dark Louisiana State letterman in 1942-43 before entering military service (Marine Corps V-12 program) during World War II. Three-time All-Star INF hit .289 in 14 years (1946 and 1948 through 1960) with the Braves, Giants, Cardinals, Cubs and Phillies. Hit career-high .322 with the Braves in 1948 when earning Rookie of Year award. Dark led N.L. in doubles with the Giants with 41 in 1951 and paced league's shortstops three times in putouts and double plays. Ranked among N.L. top 10 in hits seven times in 10-year stretch from 1948 through 1957. Hit .323 in three World Series ('48 with Braves; '51 and '54 with Giants). Dark compiled 994-954 record in 13 years (1961-64, 1966-71, 1974, 1975, 1977) as manager of the Giants, A's, Indians and Padres. Won 1962 N.L. pennant with San Francisco and 1974 WS with Oakland.
Walt Dropo The 6-5, 220-pounder averaged 21.7 ppg in 1942-43, 21 ppg in 1945-46 and 19.7 ppg in 1946-47 in Connecticut career interrupted by World War II. First player in UConn history to average 20 points for a season has second-highest scoring average in school annals (20.7). He didn't play pro basketball despite being the Providence Steamrollers' top draft choice in 1947. 1B hit .270 with 152 homers and 704 RBI in 13 seasons from 1949 through 1961 with the Red Sox, Tigers, White Sox, Reds and Orioles. Named A.L. Rookie of Year in 1950 when All-Star pick hit .322 (8th in league) with 34 homers (runner-up) and league-leading 144 RBI for Boston. Also ranked 6th in RBI in 1952 and 9th in 1953. Tied MLB record with 12 consecutive hits in 1952, including 7-for-7 effort in twinbill against the Senators.
Sammy Esposito Scored 81 points in Chicago high school game. He played one season (1951-52) of varsity basketball for Indiana before signing a pro baseball contract, averaging 7 ppg as starting guard under coach Branch McCracken. Assistant basketball coach at North Carolina State for 14 years, including 1974 NCAA champion. Utility INF hit .207 in 560 games during 10-year career (1952 and 1955 through 1963) with the White Sox and Athletics. Saw action in two World Series games in 1959 with White Sox. On 9-7-60, he started in place of 2B Nellie Fox, ending Fox's consecutive-game streak at 798. Esposito was baseball coach at North Carolina State from 1967 through 1987, leading Wolfpack to third-place finish in 1968 College World Series.
Hoot Evers The 6-2 Evers was starter for Illinois in 1939-40 under coach Doug Mills. Two-time All-Star OF hit .278 with the Tigers, Red Sox, Giants, Orioles and Indians in 12 seasons in 1941 and from 1946 through 1956. His best season was in 1950 when leading A.L. in triples (11) and ranked third in slugging percentage (.551), fourth in doubles (35), sixth in extra-base hits (67), seventh in batting average (.323), ninth in on-base percentage (.408), ninth in RBI (103) and ninth in total bases (290). Red Sox LF while Hall of Famer Ted Williams served in U.S. military hit for cycle on 9-7-50 with Tigers.
Dick Groat Named College Basketball Player of Year by Helms Foundation in 1950-51. Nation's fifth-leading scorer as junior (25.2 ppg) and runner-up as senior (26 ppg). Scored career-high 48 points for Duke against North Carolina on 2-29-52. Played 26 games in NBA, averaging 11.9 ppg for Fort Wayne Pistons in 1952-53. In 1951, Virginia coach Gus Tebell said Groat is "the finest player I've seen in the South in my 27 years of coaching." SS hit .286 in 1,929 games in 14 N.L. seasons (1952 and 1955 through 1967) with the Pirates, Cardinals, Phillies and Giants. Eight-time All-Star started on World Series championship teams with Pirates in 1960 and Cardinals in 1964. N.L. MVP in 1960 when pacing league in batting average (.325). Ranked among N.L. top four in hits in 1960, 1962 and 1963 (led league in doubles with 43).
Tony Gwynn Averaged 8.6 ppg, 2 rpg and 5.5 apg with San Diego State from 1977-78 through 1980-81. The 5-11, 170-pound guard was named second-team All-WAC as both junior and senior. Set school DI record with 18 assists vs. UNLV on 2-5-80. Led WAC in assists as sophomore and junior before finishing third as senior. Paced the Aztecs in steals each of his last three seasons. Padres OF hit .338 in 20 seasons (1982 through 2001), winning eight N.L. batting titles (1984-87-88-89-94-95-96-97). Played in 15th All-Star Game in 1999 before topping the 3,000-hit plateau later in the year. Holds N.L. record for most years leading league in singles (seven). Paced N.L. in runs in 1986 (107) and on-base percentage in 1994 (.454). Gold Glove winner five times (1986-87-89-90-91). He hit .368 in 1984 NLCS to help San Diego reach World Series against the Tigers. Also participated in 1998 WS against the Yankees.
Frank Howard Two-time All-Big Ten Conference first-team selection averaged 17.4 ppg and 13.9 rpg from 1955-56 through 1957-58, leading Ohio State in both scoring and rebounding as junior (20.1 ppg/15.3 rpg) and senior (16.9 ppg/13.6 rpg). The 6-5, 220-pounder grabbed still existing school-record 32 rebounds in game against BYU. It was one of 10 times he retrieved 20 or more missed shots. Howard, who was 54th in country in scoring as junior, finished his college career as Buckeyes' third-leading career scorer and leading rebounder. Howard was first-team All-American selection by USBWA/Look Magazine, Converse and NEA as junior when ranking 8th in nation in rebounding. He was third-round choice of Philadelphia Warriors in 1958 NBA draft. OF/1B for 16 seasons from 1958 through 1973 with the Dodgers, Senators/Rangers and Tigers. In 1,902 major league games, he hit .273 with 382 homers and 1,119 RBI. N.L. Rookie of Year in 1960. Capped off string of four straight years finishing among A.L. top five in RBI with a league-high 126 in 1970. Howard led A.L. in homers with 44 in both 1968 and 1970 and was runner-up in 1969 with 48. Eight of his round-trippers came in a five-game stretch in 1968 to set MLB record. Four-time All-Star homered in Game 4 of 1963 World Series to help Dodgers sweep the Yankees.
Ron Jackson Second-team All-Mid-American Conference choice from 1951-52 through 1953-54. The 6-7 center led Western Michigan in scoring and rebounding as junior (15.5 ppg/12.3 rpg) and senior (19.7 ppg/10.9 rpg). Bonus baby 1B hit .245 in seven seasons from 1954 through 1960 with the White Sox and Red Sox. Never lived up to promising rookie campaign when hitting .280 in 40 games.
Davey Johnson Averaged 1.7 ppg in only varsity season (1961-62) with Texas A&M before signing pro baseball contract. One of his fellow sophomore opponents that year was Rice center Kendall Rhine Sr., an All-SWC second-team selection who had 6-7 son with same name selected by Houston Astros in first round of 1992 MLB June amateur draft (37th pick overall). A.L. Manager of Year in 1997 with the Orioles directed the Mets to victory over Baltimore in 1986 World Series. His managerial record in 14 seasons with the Reds, Mets, Orioles and Dodgers was 1,148-888 (.564) before leaving the Nationals' front office in middle of 2011 campaign to become their manager. Johnson finished first or second 11 times in his first 15 seasons as big league skipper. Four-time All-Star hit .261 as INF in 13-year career (1965 through 1975, 1977 and 1978) with the Orioles, Braves, Phillies and Cubs. Earned three straight A.L. Gold Gloves as 2B with Orioles from 1969 through 1971. Slugged 43 (N.L. runner-up) of his 136 career homers for the Braves in 1973 after appearing in four World Series with Orioles (1966-69-70-71). Owns distinction of being only player to have hit behind both Hank Aaron and Japan's all-time home-run king (Sadaharu Oh).
Don Kessinger Selected to 10-man All-SEC team each season from 1961-62 through 1963-64 while finishing among nation's top 45 scorers. In scoring for all games, ranked third in league as sophomore (21.4 ppg), second as junior (21.8 ppg) and second as senior (23.5 ppg). Scored 49 points for Mississippi on 22-of-28 field-goal shooting against Tulane on 2-2-63, and exploded for 48 at Tennessee 10 nights later. SS hit .252 in 16 seasons from 1964 through 1979 with the Cubs, Cardinals and White Sox. Managed the White Sox in 1979 before becoming coach at his alma mater. Led N.L. shortstops in putouts three times, assists four times and double plays four times. The 6-1, 170-pound switch-hitter played in six All-Star Games in seven-year span from 1968 through 1974. His best season was 1969 when scoring 109 runs (fourth in N.L.), had 181 hits (seventh), stroked 38 doubles (runner-up) and earned one of his two Gold Gloves.
Jerry Kindall The 6-2 1/2, 175-pounder played two seasons for Minnesota under coach Ozzie Cowles, averaging 1.4 ppg as sophomore in 1954-55 and 6.9 ppg as junior in 1955-56. INF hit .213 in nine seasons (1956 through 1958 and 1960 through 1965) with the Cubs, Indians and Twins. Baseball coach at Arizona for more than 20 years, leading the Wildcats to three College World Series titles (1976-80-86). He was only player to hit for cycle in CWS at Omaha (against Ole Miss on 6-1-56). Kindall is only individual to play for and coach CWS champions.
Art Kusnyer The 6-2 Kusnyer led Kent State in field-goal percentage (44.5%) in 1965-66 when he was Golden Flashes' third-leading scorer and rebounder (10.5 ppg and 4 rpg). Backup C hit .176 with the White Sox, Angels, Brewers and Royals in six A.L. seasons (1970 through 1973, 1976 and 1978). Involved in nine-player deal between Angels and Brewers on 10-22-73.
Vance Law The 6-2, 185-pounder averaged 6.8 ppg for Brigham Young from 1974-75 through 1976-77. Played for BYU with his brother (Veryl). INF hit .256 with the Pirates, White Sox, Expos, Cubs and A's in 11 years from 1980 through 1991. He posted career-high .293 batting average (eighth in N.L.) with Cubs in 1988 when named an All-Star. Appeared in at least 130 games in six of seven seasons from 1983 through 1989, including 25-inning marathon on May 8-9, 1984, against the Brewers. Participated in league championship series with White Sox in 1983 and Cubs in 1989. Son of RHP Vern Law also pitched in seven big-league games.
Don Lock The 6-2 Lock was starting guard for Wichita as junior in 1956-57 (7 ppg) and senior in 1957-58 (10.1 ppg), leading the Shockers in FG% both seasons under coach Ralph Miller. OF hit .238 with 122 homers for the Senators, Phillies and Red Sox in eight seasons from 1962 through 1969. Ranked among A.L. top 10 in homers in 1963 (27) and 1964 (28). Homered in his debut but was plagued by strikeouts, averaging more than 105 whiffs annually in five-year span from 1963 through 1967. Traded by the Yankees to Senators for Dale Long on 7-11-62 and by Senators to Phillies for P Darold Knowles plus cash on 11-30-66.
Kenny Lofton Averaged 4.8 ppg and 2.6 apg for Arizona from 1985-86 through 1988-89 under coach Lute Olson. Set school records for steals in season (67 as senior) and career (200). Leader in steals for 1988 Final Four team compiling 35-3 record. Lefthander hit .299 and stole 622 bases in 17 seasons from 1991 through 2007 with the Astros, Indians, Braves, White Sox, Giants, Pirates, Cubs, Yankees, Phillies, Dodgers and Rangers. Four-time Gold Glove CF led Indians with .325 batting mark (fourth in A.L.) and paced majors with 70 stolen bases in 1993. After traded to Cleveland, he hit .285 for the Indians in 1992 and led A.L. in SBs with 66, a record for A.L. rookie. Six-time All-Star led A.L. in SBs five consecutive years from 1992 through 1996, hitting career-high .349 in 1994. Paced A.L. with 13 triples in 1995 before stealing six bases in World Series against the Braves. Returned to WS in 2002 with the Giants. Tied major-league record by scoring at least one run in 18 consecutive contests.
Don Lund Starting guard as junior for Michigan and starting center as senior. Averaged 4.4 ppg in 46 outings. In his history of UM basketball, Jeff Mortimer wrote of school's World War II squads: "Lund, rejected for military service because of a trick knee, was the mainstay of these teams." Following his playing career, he served as baseball coach for his alma mater (won 1962 College World Series), farm system director for the Tigers and associate athletic director at his alma mater. OF hit .240 in seven-year career (1945, 1947 through 1949 and 1952 through 1954) with the Dodgers, Browns and Tigers. His only season as regular was 1953 when serving as Tigers' RF. Coached baseball at his alma mater, winning the national championship in 1962, before running the Tigers' farm system until 1970. First-round selection as a fullback/linebacker by the Chicago Bears in 1945 NFL draft.
Tony Lupien The 5-10, 185-pound guard was captain of 1938-39 Harvard squad. The previous season, he was school's second-leading scorer in conference competition with 5.4 ppg. Lefthanded 1B hit .268 in six seasons (1940, 1942 through 1945 and 1948) with the Red Sox, Phillies and White Sox. Ranked sixth in triples with nine in A.L. and N.L. in back-to-back seasons (1943 and 1944). Former baseball coach at Dartmouth (313-305-3 record in 21 years from 1957 through 1977) was co-author of book "The Imperfect Diamond: The Story of Baseball's Reserve Clause and the Men Who Fought to Change It."
Jim Lyttle Point guard led Florida State in free-throw shooting in 1965-66 (75.9%) when averaging 12.4 ppg. Backup OF, a first-round pick in 1966 amateur draft, hit .248 with the Yankees, White Sox, Expos and Dodgers in eight years from 1969 through 1976. The lefthanded swinger's best season was 1970 when hitting .310 with the Yanks.
Jerry Martin Juco transfer was Furman's second-leading scorer as junior in 1969-70 (16 ppg) under coach Frank Selvy and third-leading scorer as senior in 1970-71 (12.7 ppg) under coach Joe Williams. The 6-1, 195-pound guard was named MVP in 1971 Southern Conference Tournament after leading Paladins to title with 22-, 36- and 19-point performances to pace tourney in scoring. He collected five points and two rebounds as starter for them in their inaugural NCAA Tournament game, a 105-74 defeat against Digger Phelps-coached Fordham in 1971 East Regional. OF hit .251 in 11 years from 1974 through 1984 with the Phillies, Cubs, Giants, Royals and Mets. Valuable backup hit three pinch homers for Phillies in 1978 in his last year with three consecutive divisional champions. The next two seasons as regular with Cubs, Martin collected 42 homers and 146 RBI. His 34 doubles in 1979 ranked ninth in N.L. His father, Barney Martin, pitched in one game for the Reds in 1953. The free-swinger, suspended in 1984 for involvement with drugs, served three-month sentence in Fort Worth Correctional Institute with Royals teammate Willie Wilson.
Len Matuszek Two-year letterman was starter for Toledo's 1975-76 squad compiling 18-7 record. The 6-2, 190-pounder averaged 5.4 ppg in three-year career under coach Bob Nichols. Lefthanded swinger hit .234 in seven seasons from 1981 through 1987 with the Phillies, Blue Jays and Dodgers. Appeared in 1985 NLCS with the Dodgers. Backup OF assumed first-base duties from Pete Rose in 1984 after all-time hits leader left Phillies.
Sam Mele Guard played two seasons with NYU before entering U.S. military. Named to first five on All-Metropolitan New York team as sophomore in 1942-43 when he was the Violets' leading scorer in NCAA Tournament (losses against Georgetown and Dartmouth). OF for 10 years from 1947 through 1956 and manager of the Twins for seven years from 1961 through 1967. Hit .267 in 1,046 games with the Red Sox, Senators, White Sox, Orioles, Reds and Indians. Played for two different teams in single season four times in seven-year span from 1949 through 1955. Led A.L. with 36 doubles for the Senators in 1951 and drove in six runs in one inning in 1952 game for the White Sox. Compiled 524-436 managerial record from 1961 through 1967 with the Twins, winning 1965 A.L. title with 102-60 mark.
Gene Michael The 6-2, 180-pounder led Kent State in scoring with 14 ppg in 1957-58. He also chipped in with 4.9 rpg. Former Yankees general manager was switch-hitting SS who hit .229 in 10 seasons from 1966 through 1975 with the Pirates, Dodgers, Yanks and Tigers. Nicknamed "Stick," he was master of hidden-ball trick, pulling it off five times in MLB career. Michael compiled 206-200 record in four-year managerial career with the Yankees (1981 and 1982) and Cubs (1986 and 1987).
Wally Moon The 5-11 Moon averaged 4.3 ppg with Texas A&M in 1948-49 and 1949-50. Two-time All-Star OF-1B hit .289 with the Cardinals and Dodgers in 12 N.L. seasons from 1954 through 1965. Lefthanded swinger homered in first at-bat en route to earning N.L. Rookie of Year acclaim over Hank Aaron in 1954 when Moon led league in plate appearances (716) and ranked among top six in hits (193), triples (9), runs (106) and stolen bases (18). Paced N.L. in triples in 1959 with 11. Gold Glove LF in 1960 between appearing in two World Series with Dodgers (1959 and 1965). Finished fourth in 1959 MVP voting ahead of Willie Mays (6th), Frank Robinson (9th) and Ken Boyer (10th).
Lyle Mouton The 6-3 Mouton averaged 8.2 ppg and 3.2 rpg as sophomore in 1988-89 before dropping off LSU coach Dale Brown's team to concentrate on baseball. Started in the Tigers' backcourt with All-American Chris Jackson when they lost to Texas-El Paso in West Regional of NCAA playoffs. OF hit .280 for the White Sox, Orioles, Brewers and Marlins in seven seasons from 1995 through 2001. Also played in Japan. Named to 1990 College World Series All-Tournament Team.
Johnny O'Brien The 5-9, 160-pound guard scored 2,733 points for Seattle from 1950-51 through 1952-53, averaging 20.7 ppg as sophomore, 28.4 as junior and 28.6 as senior (third among major-college players). Scored 51 points against Gonzaga on 2-15-53. NCAA consensus All-American second-team choice as junior and consensus first-team selection as senior. Averaged 32 ppg in three NCAA playoff contests in 1953. Became first college player to crack 1,000-point plateau in single season when scoring 1,051 in 37 games in 1951-52. Bonus baby INF/P played six seasons (1953 and 1955 through 1959) with the Pirates, Cardinals and Braves. Hit .250 and compiled 1-3 pitching record in 339 games. As 2B for the Pirates on 4-3-56, he became last N.L. position player to earn victory on the mound until catcher Brent Mayne achieved the feat for the Rockies against Atlanta in August 2000. Traded by the Pirates with Gene Freese to Cardinals for Dick Schofield and cash. Twin brother of former major leaguer Eddie O'Brien, a teammate with Seattle.
Paul Popovich Averaged 3.3 ppg in reserve role in one season of varsity basketball with West Virginia (1959-60) before signing pro baseball contract. Led freshman team in scoring with 18.8 ppg. Teammate of All-American Jerry West on squad compiling 26-5 record and playing in NCAA Tournament under coach Fred Schaus. Popovich sank 5-of-6 field-goal attempts in second-round 82-81 loss against NYU. INF hit .233 in 11 N.L. seasons (1964 and 1966 through 1975) with the Cubs, Dodgers and Pirates. Traded by the Dodgers with Ron Fairly to the Expos for Maury Wills and Manny Mota on 6-11-69, before immediately being traded to the Cubs. Switch-hitter went 3-for-3 in pinch-hitting appearances for the Pirates in 1974 NLCS.
Curtis Pride Averaged 5.6 ppg and 3.1 apg with William & Mary from [1986-87](seasons/1986-870 through 1989-90. The 6-0, 185-pound guard led Tribe in season steals three times and assists twice. Dished out 10 assists vs. ECU on 2-24-88. Named to Colonial Athletic Association All-Rookie team as freshman and to league All-Defensive team as sophomore and junior. Born with 95% hearing disability, he was one of few deaf athletes to ever play in MLB. OF made debut with Expos in 1993 and hit .444 in 10 games. His best season was in 1996 when collecting 17 doubles and 10 homers while hitting .300 for the Tigers. Lefthanded swinger hit .250 in 11 seasons to 2006 with six franchises (Expos, Tigers, Red Sox, Braves, Yankees and Angels). Appeared in 2004 A.L. Divisional Series with Angels.
Dave Ricketts The 6-2, 190-pound guard was three-year starter who led Duquesne in scoring with 17.9 ppg as senior in 1956-57, finishing fourth in nation in free-throw percentage (86.2%). Sophomore member of team compiling 22-4 record and finishing sixth in final AP poll after winning NIT. He converted school-record 42 consecutive free-throw attempts. C hit .249 in six seasons (1962, 1965 and 1967 through 1970) with the Cardinals and Pirates. Switch-hitter played with the Cardinals in 1967 and 1968 World Series. Long-time coach, instructor and minor league manager in the Cards' organization.
Mel Roach The 6-1, 190-pounder earned basketball letter by averaging 9.3 ppg in 1952-53 in Virginia's final season prior to joining the ACC before receiving substantial MLB bonus from Milwaukee Braves. Bonus baby utilityman hit .238 in eight years (1953, 1954 and 1957 through 1962) with the Braves, Cubs and Phillies. The longtime backup to Red Schoendienst hit .309 in 44 games in 1958 and .300 in 48 games in 1960 for the Braves, who traded him to Cubs for Frank Thomas on 5-9-61.
Jackie Robinson Football, basketball and track standout at Pasadena City College in 1937-38 and 1938-39. Named to All-Southern California Junior College Conference Western Division all-star basketball team both years, a span during which UCLA was winless in league competition. First athlete in Bruins history to letter in football, basketball, baseball and track. The 5-11 forward compiled highest scoring average in Pacific Coast Conference both of his seasons with UCLA (12.3 ppg in league play in 1939-40 as all-league second-team selection and 11.1 in 1940-41). In his final athletic outing for Bruins, he accounted for more than half of their output with 20 points in 52-37 loss to USC. Hall of Fame INF hit .311 with 137 homers as regular on six N.L. pennant winners with the Dodgers in 10 seasons from 1947 through 1956. After becoming Rookie of Year in 1947, Robinson was named MVP in 1949 when leading N.L. with .342 batting average and 37 stolen bases. Also finished runner-up in batting average in 1950, third in 1951 and fourth in 1952. Ranked among N.L. top nine in runs scored seven times and top seven in SBs on nine occasions. The six-time All-Star homered in 1952 All-Star Game. He had two homers and seven doubles in World Series competition.
Gary Sutherland The 6-0, 175-pound guard was USC's fifth-leading scorer in 1963-64 when averaging 7.4 ppg as shortest man on coach Forrest Twogood's roster. Utilityman hit .243 in 13 seasons from 1966 through 1978 with seven teams (Phillies, Expos, Astros, Tigers, Brewers, Padres and Cardinals). Selected by Montreal in expansion draft, brother of four-year MLB pitcher Darrell Sutherland, a Stanford hooper, had more than 500 at-bats in one season with the Expos (1969) and two with the Tigers (1974 and 1975). Ranked fourth in A.L. in singles in 1974 with 131.
Wayne Terwilliger The 5-11, 165-pounder was two-year letterman for Western Michigan's team, averaging 5.6 ppg in his final season in 1947-48. 2B hit .240 in nine seasons (1949 through 1951, 1953 through 1956, 1959 and 1960) with the Cubs, Dodgers, Senators, Giants and Athletics. He collected eight consecutive hits for the Cubs as rookie. Minor league manager for 15 seasons in farm systems of the Yankees, Senators and Rangers (1961-68, 1973 and 1975-80). Served as major league coach with the Senators, Rangers and Twins (1969-71, 1972 and 1981-94).
Will Venable All-Ivy League first-team selection as junior and second-team choice as senior averaged 9.3 ppg under Princeton coach John Thompson III from 2001-02 through 2004-05. Scored team-high 16 points and contributed game highs of 8 rebounds and 3 steals in 2004 NCAA tourney setback against Texas. Lefthanded OF hit .249 with the Padres, Rangers and Dodgers in nine seasons from 2008 through 2016. Venable, who didn't play baseball his freshman year in college, finished among N.L. top 10 in triples (8th with 7) and stolen bases (9th with 29) in 2010. He had career-high 22 homers in 2013. Son of 12-year MLB OF Max Venable was the Padres' seventh-round choice in 2005 amateur draft.
Sammy White Averaged 10.1 ppg as 6-3, 195-pound forward with Washington from 1946-47 through 1948-49. Named to first five on All-Pacific Coast Conference Northern Division team as junior and senior. C hit .262 in 11 seasons with the Red Sox (1951 through 1959), Braves (1961) and Phillies (1962). All-Star in 1953 hit over .280 three times with Boston. Ranked among A.L. top 10 in doubles three straight years (1953 through 1955). Scored three runs in one inning (7th) on 6-18-53 when Red Sox tallied 17 against the Tigers.
Dave Winfield Played two seasons as 6-6, 220-pound forward with Minnesota, averaging 6.9 ppg and 5.4 rpg as junior in 1971-72 and 10.5 ppg and 6.1 rpg as senior in 1972-73. He played entire game, collecting 8 points and 8 rebounds against eventual Final Four participant Florida State, in Gophers' initial NCAA Tournament appearance in 1972 under coach Bill Musselman. Selected by Atlanta Hawks in fifth round of 1973 NBA draft and Utah Stars in sixth round of 1973 ABA draft. Didn't play college football, but was chosen in 17th round of 1973 NFL draft by Minnesota Vikings. Hall of Fame OF, a first-round pick in 1973 amateur draft (fourth choice overall), hit .283 with 465 homers, 1,833 RBI and 3,110 hits in 22 seasons (1973 through 1988 and 1990 through 1995) with the Padres, Yankees, Angels, Blue Jays, Twins and Indians. Led N.L. in total bases in 1979 with 333 before ranking among A.L. top four in batting average in 1984 (.340) and 1988 (.322). Seven-time Gold Glover appeared in 12 All-Star Games after never playing in minors. Participated in World Series with the Yankees (1981) and Blue Jays (1992).
Randy Winn The 6-2 backcourtmate of eventual two-time NBA Most Valuable Player Steve Nash averaged 1.4 ppg in 17 games for Santa Clara in 1993-94. A.L. All-Star OF in 2002 was one of most consistent switch-hitters in MLB, hitting .284 and stealing 215 bases in 13 seasons from 1998 through 2010. When retiring, Winn was active player with most games (1,717) without appearing in postseason after playing for the Yankees and Cardinals in 2010. Ranked among A.L. top three in triples in 1998 and 2002 and top eight in stolen bases three straight years from 2002 through 2004. In 2005 with the Mariners and Giants, he fell one SB shy of becoming first switch-hitter ever with at least 45 doubles, 20 homers and 20 steals in single season. His 51-hit effort in September 2005 marked most safeties by Giants player in any single month in 30 years. Selected by Tampa Bay in 3rd round of expansion draft before making his big league debut.

On This Date: Former College Hoopers Made News on April 9 MLB Contests

Extra! Extra! As a new season gains steam, you have time to read news all about memorable major league baseball achievements, moments and transactions involving former college basketball players. Numerous ex-college hoopers had front-row seats to many of the most notable games and dates in MLB history.

Did you know that outfielder "Sweet" Lou Johnson, an ex-Kentucky State hooper, was traded three times the first nine days in April in deals involving Los Angeles-based teams? In the minors, all-time basketball great Michael Jordan made his Organized Baseball debut on April 9, 1994, when the Chicago White Sox farmhand went hitless as right fielder for the Birmingham Barons (Southern League). What in the world was the then 31-year-old Jordan thinking en route to a .202 batting average and 114 strikeouts in 127 games? Unless Jordan won a bet with Robert "The Natural" Redford to acquire "Wonderboy" bat, the only way MJ could have reached the majors was via an Eddie Gaedel-like stunt.

Baseball is portrayed as a thinking man's game but only 4% of active MLB players earned college diplomas. George Altman (Tennessee State) joined Sweet Lou as another former HBCU hooper making MLB news on this date. Former juco hoopers Darrell Evans (Pasadena City CA) and Jim Thome (Illinois Central) each hit two homers in MLB games on this date. Unless you habitually pore over the content at baseballlibrary.com, baseballreference.com and nationalpastime.com, following is an April 9 calendar focusing on such versatile MLB athletes:

APRIL 9

  • RF George Altman (appeared in 1953 and 1954 NAIA Tournament with Tennessee State's basketball squad) stroked four hits against the New York Mets on Opening Day 1963 in his debut with the St. Louis Cardinals.

  • 1B George Crowe (four-year letterman from 1939-40 through 1942-43 for Indiana Central after becoming first high school player named state's "Mr. Basketball") traded by the Milwaukee Braves to the Cincinnati Reds in 1956.

  • Detroit Tigers DH Darrell Evans (member of Jerry Tarkanian-coached Pasadena City CA club winning 1967 state community college crown) homered twice in a 1986 game against the Boston Red Sox.

  • LF "Sweet" Lou Johnson (Kentucky State hoops teammate of legendary HBCU coach Davey Whitney averaged 5.7 ppg and 2 rpg in 1951-52) traded by the Detroit Tigers with $10,000 to the Los Angeles Dodgers for P Larry Sherry in 1964.

  • In his first start of the 1992 campaign, Baltimore Orioles RHP Ben McDonald (started six times as freshman forward for LSU in 1986-87 under coach Dale Brown) tossed a two-hit shutout against the Cleveland Indians.

  • Seattle Mariners RF Leon Roberts (grabbed one rebound in four basketball games for Michigan in 1970-71 under coach Johnny Orr) ripped a grand slam in 8-6 setback against the Minnesota Twins in 1978 season opener.

  • RHP Mike Smithson (teammate of Tennessee All-American Ernie Grunfeld averaged 1.9 ppg and 1.6 rpg under coach Ray Mears in 1974-75 and 1975-76) traded by the Boston Red Sox to the Texas Rangers in 1982.

  • Detroit Tigers 2B Gary Sutherland (averaged 7.4 ppg with USC in 1963-64) went 4-for-4 against the New York Yankees in 1974.

  • Philadelphia Phillies 1B Jim Thome (played junior-college hoops for Illinois Central in 1988-89) collected two homers and five RBI in a 2003 game against the Atlanta Braves.

  • Minnesota Twins DH Dave Winfield (starting forward for Minnesota's first NCAA playoff team in 1972) stroked three extra-base hits against the Kansas City Royals in 1993.

Color Coded: Ridder Becomes 10th Coach Going From HBCU to White School

Ryan Ridder, who is white, switched from Bethune-Cookman to Tennessee-Martin) to became the 10th coach in NCAA Division I history hired directly from a historically black college or university by a predominantly white school at the major-college level. For those woke wizards counting color of noses, there were only two such mentors in the 20th Century. The SWAC and MEAC moved up to the major-college level in 1979-80 and 1980-81, respectively.

Ford and Davis joined Jeff Capel Jr. (North Carolina A&T to Old Dominion after 1993-94 campaign), Rob Chavez (Maryland-Eastern Shore to Portland after 1993-94), Steve Merfeld (Hampton to Evansville after 2001-02), James Green (Mississippi Valley State to Jacksonville State after 2007-08), John Cooper (Tennessee State to Miami of Ohio after 2011-12), Sean Woods (Mississippi Valley State to Morehead State after 2011-12), Anthony Evans (Norfolk State to Florida International after 2012-13), Dana Ford (Tennessee State to Missouri State after 2017-18) and Mike Davis (Texas Southern to Detroit after 2017-18). The first seven bench bosses in this category each served at least five seasons in their new digs but combined for a paltry .441 winning percentage.

No power-conference member ever has gone to a HBCU to hire its head basketball coach. None of the limited progress in this category would have occurred if not for pioneer John McLendon, who was the first African-American mentor hired by a predominantly white university when he coached Cleveland State for three seasons in the late 1960s just prior to the institution moving up to DI. After winning three consecutive NAIA titles with Tennessee State in the late 1950s, McLendon had been the first African-American head coach in professional sports when he was hired in the early 1960s by the George Steinbrenner-owned Cleveland Pipers of the short-lived American Basketball League.

Hammerin' Home College Basketball's Impact on Hank Aaron's MLB Career

On historic day commemorating sports icon Hank Aaron, it should be pointed out he was surrounded by hoopers his entire 23-year MLB career. The majority of Milwaukee Braves' starting infield was comprised of former college basketball players on April 23, 1954, when Aaron contributed his first big-league RBI and homer (against St. Louis Cardinals). Aaron was outhomered in his rookie campaign by 1B teammate Joe Adcock, 23-13, eight years after Adcock set SEC Tournament record with 15 field goals for Louisiana State's basketball squad in 1946. Did you also know that ex-Texas A&M hooper Wally Moon (averaged 4.3 ppg in 1948-49 and 1949-50) earned National League Rookie of the Year acclaim over Aaron when the Cards CF led league in plate appearances (716) and ranked among top six in hits (193), triples (9), runs (106) and stolen bases (18)? Twenty years later in Atlanta, Aaron's 715th round-tripper surpassing Babe Ruth on April 8, 1974, was hit off Los Angeles Dodgers lefthander Al Downing, who attended Muhlenberg (Pa.) on a basketball scholarship but left school before ever playing to turn to Organized Ball and his ultimate date with sports history while also donning uniform #44.

Opposing catcher adjacent to Aaron for historic homer was Downing's batterymate Joe Ferguson, who played for Pacific against eventual NCAA basketball champion UCLA in 1967 West Regional final. LA's manager was Walter Alston, a basketball letterman with Miami of Ohio from 1932-33 through 1934-35. The winning hurler in historic baseball game was Atlanta's Ron Reed, who led Notre Dame in rebounding as a junior (17.7 rpg in 1963-64) and scoring as a senior (21 ppg in 1964-65). Reed played more seasons (nine) with Aaron than any ex-college cager. Former hoopers Darrell Evans (Pasadena City College under coach Jerry Tarkanian) and Davey Johnson (Texas A&M) combined for 40 homers with the Braves in Aaron's final campaign with them in 1974. Johnson, who tied Hall of Famer Rogers Hornsby's record for most single-season round-trippers by a second baseman the previous year, became a regular with the Baltimore Orioles in 1966 by succeeding slick-fielding Jerry Adair, a top three scorer for Oklahoma State in 1956-57 and 1957-58 under legendary coach Hank Iba.

Aaron led the entire majors in homers in a single season only once (44 in 1957) before pacing N.L. three more times (1963, 1966 and 1967). Former college hooper contemporaries swatting more circuit clouts than Aaron in a season when he registered at least 20 round-trippers included Adcock (38 in 1956 and 35 in 1961), Bob Cerv (attended Nebraska/38 in 1958 with Kansas City Athletics), Evans (41 in 1973 and 25 in 1974), Gil Hodges (St. Joseph's IN & Oakland City IN/32 in 1956 with Brooklyn Dodgers), Frank Howard (Ohio State/44 in 1968, 48 in 1969 and 44 in 1970 with Washington Senators), Johnson (43 in 1973), Don Lock (Wichita/28 in 1964 with Senators), Graig Nettles (San Diego State/22 in 1974 with New York Yankees) and Leon "Daddy Wags" Wagner (Tuskegee AL/31 in 1964 with Cleveland Indians). Johnson, Evans and Aaron comprised the first trio of teammates to each hammer at least 40 homers in a single season.

Aaron's 755th and final homer came against the California Angels on 7/20/76 (hit none in his final 23 games covering 2 1/2 months). In Aaron's next-to-last MLB game, his final extra-base hit was a sixth-inning double vs. Baltimore Orioles on 9/29/76 before scoring eventual winning run on a single by Eastern League MVP/Triple Crown winner/September call-up Dan Thomas in the Milwaukee Brewers' 6-3 victory. The tally was Aaron's final of 2,174 runs scored. His successor as the Brewers' principal DH early in 1977 was Thomas before career for "The Sundown Kid" unraveled under Bud Selig's stewardship prior to becoming MLB commissioner. Believe it or not, Thomas died in Aaron's hometown of Mobile, Ala., under distressing circumstances. If you need to win a sports trivia bar bet, please be aware that Thomas' high-school basketball coach at Dupo, Ill., in the St. Louis Metro East area was Cal Neeman Sr. (catcher with Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia Phillies, Pittsburgh Pirates, Cleveland Indians and Washington Senators for seven years from 1957 through 1963 after leading Illinois Wesleyan hoops in scoring in 1947-48 and 1948-49).

Adding to hoop connection, the college baseball coach for Thomas, 6th pick overall in 1972 MLB June amateur draft following Southern Illinois' runner-up finish in 1971 College World Series, was Richard "Itchy" Jones, an ex-Salukis hooper averaging 8.9 ppg in 1956-57. Moreover, Thomas was runner-up to Sixto Lezcano in batting average in 1973 with the Shreveport Captains' AA Texas League club managed by Gene Freese, the captain of West Liberty State WV hoop squad participating in 1952 NAIA Tournament. On 5-1-75, Lezcano scored record-setting run on Aaron's third-inning single when Aaron passed Ruth in career RBI (2,210).

It's a small sports world, after all. In 1950, Neeman was a minor-league teammate of New York Yankees farmhand Mickey Mantle for Joplin (Class C Western Association). Mantle earned his second of three A.L. MVP awards in 1957. In Neeman's MLB debut with the Cubs on opening day 1957 against the Braves, he got his first big-league safety off Cy Young Award winner Warren Spahn (single to right-center; Aaron was RF). One week later on 4/23/57, Aaron was a firsthand witness early in his lone MVP campaign to Neeman's first MLB homer (decisive 10th-inning blast off World Series MVP Lew Burdette of the Braves). Coincidentally, Aaron (fractured left ankle sliding into third base) and Neeman (fractured little finger of right hand) both had their regal rookie seasons stall the first week in September because of injuries. For the record, Thomas' first big-league homer came at Yankee Stadium off Catfish Hunter. Eventual Hall of Fame shortstop Robin Yount went 2-for-18 with Milwaukee in the four games Thomas hit a round-tripper in September of 1976. Yount, the Brewers' top June amateur draft pick (3rd overall) the year after Thomas, wound up with 3,140 other safeties. Thomas' third HR came off Yankees lefthander Ken Holtzman. Unbelievably, Thomas' high school baseball coach was Bill Schlueter, Holtzman's batterymate while attending Illinois and son of MLB catcher Norm Schlueter, who played in A.L. same decade (1930s) as none other than Yankees legend Babe Ruth.

Aaron went deep against Downing (three times), Holtzman (four) and 308 other hurlers over the course of his celebrated career. Victims of Aaron's blasts included All-Americans Joe Gibbon, Johnny O'Brien and Dick Ricketts among the following alphabetical list of former college hoopers: Steve Arlin (Ohio State/yielded two HRs), Curt Barclay (Oregon/one), Joe Black (Morgan State/one), Ray Burris (Southwestern Oklahoma State/one), Danny Coombs (Seton Hall/one), Roger Craig (North Carolina State freshman team/10), Gibbon (Mississippi/two), Bob Gibson (Creighton/eight), Dave Giusti (Syracuse/two), Dallas Green (Delaware/one), Don Gross (Michigan State freshman/two), Paul Hartzell (Lehigh/one), Jim Hearn (Georgia Tech/one), Bill Henry (Houston/two), Jay Hook (Northwestern/eight), Ken Hunt (Brigham Young/one), Don Kaiser (East Central OK/one), Cal Koonce (Campbell/two), Sandy Koufax (Cincinnati freshman/seven), Lindy McDaniel (Oklahoma freshman/four), Joe Niekro (West Liberty State WV/two), O'Brien (Seattle/one), Steve Renko (Kansas/two), Ricketts (Duquesne/one), Robin Roberts (Michigan State/nine), George Stone (Louisiana Tech/two), Jim Todd (Parsons IA & Millersville PA/one), Bob Veale (Benedictine KS/three) and Ray Washburn (Whitworth WA/six).

Getting back to Neeman, he coached Thomas in Southern Illinois high school hoops in 1968-69 against Gary Simpson (Pistol Pete's backcourt successor with Louisiana State in 1970-71), Rick Suttle (Kansas' 1974 Final Four team) and Dave Taynor (Kansas captain). Eerily, Thomas and Simpson both passed away in 1980 at the age of 29. Thirteen winters apart, Neeman and Thomas played baseball in Venezuela within a year of each of them concluding their MLB careers. Curiously, the aforementioned Johnson was Thomas' first-year skipper in 1979 with the Miami Amigos franchise in short-lived AAA Inter-American League. Earlier that decade, Johnson gained distinction as the only player to hit behind both Aaron and Japan's all-time home-run king (Sadaharu Oh). Adcock, Evans, Johnson and Reed are among the following list of Aaron's baseball teammates with the Braves and Brewers who previously played college basketball (14 from current power-conference members):

Aaron's Ex-Hooper Teammates Pos. MLB Team College Hoops School
Joe Adcock 1B Braves 54-58 Louisiana State
Rick Austin LHP Brewers 75-76 Washington State
Frank Bolling 2B Braves 61-65 Spring Hill AL
Jim Colborn RHP Brewers 75-76 Edinburgh (Scotland)
Gene Conley RHP Braves 54-58 Washington State
Billy Cowan OF Braves 65 Utah
George Crowe 1B Braves 55 Indiana Central
Al Dark UT Braves 60 Louisiana State/USL
John DeMerit OF Braves 57-61 Wisconsin
Jack Dittmer 2B Braves 54-56 Iowa
Darrell Evans 3B Braves 69-74 Pasadena City College CA
Davey Johnson 1B Braves 73-74 Texas A&M
Art Kusnyer C Brewers 76 Kent State
Johnny Logan SS Braves 54-61 Binghamton
Gary Neibauer RHP Braves 69-73 Nebraska
Joe Niekro RHP Braves 73-74 West Liberty State WV
Johnny O'Brien 2B Braves 59 Seattle
Ron Reed RHP Braves 66-74 Notre Dame
Mel Roach UT Braves 54 & 57-61 Virginia
Don Schwall RHP Braves 66-67 Oklahoma
Roy Smalley Jr. INF Braves 54 Drury MO
George Stone LHP Braves 67-72 Louisiana Tech
Gary Sutherland INF Brewers 76 Southern California
Cecil Upshaw RHP Braves 66-73 Centenary
Sammy White C Braves 61 Washington
Jim Wilson RHP Braves 54 San Diego State

NOTE: A couple of Aaron's MLB managers - Birdie Tebbetts (1961 and 1962/Providence) and Harvey Kuenn (1975/Wisconsin) - also were former college hoopers. Tebbetts, while skipper of the Cincinnati Reds, gushed about the lanky Neeman's power: "That big catcher can hit a ball a mile (but 725 fewer than Aaron)." Neeman's baseball impact continues as a grandson, Kevin Graham, belted a three-run homer in his first start with Ole Miss and was named Freshman All-American by Collegiate Baseball in 2019. Graham, an INF/OF, led the NCAA Regional host Rebels in homers during 2021 regular season and finished campaign with NCAA-high 60 consecutive contests reaching base.

On This Date: Former College Hoopers Made News on April 8 MLB Contests

Extra! Extra! As a new season gains steam, you have time to read news all about memorable major league baseball achievements, moments and transactions involving former college basketball players! Numerous ex-college hoopers had front-row seats to many of the most notable games and dates in MLB history.

Baseball is portrayed as a thinking man's game but only 4% of active MLB players earned college diplomas. Two former small-college hoopers from Pennsylvania - Al Downing (Muhlenberg) and Pete Sivess (Dickinson) - made MLB news on this date. Downing allowed one of the most historic home runs in history. Unless you habitually pore over the content at baseballlibrary.com, baseballreference.com and nationalpastime.com, following is an April 8 calendar focusing on such versatile MLB athletes:

APRIL 8

  • OF Babe Barna (two-year West Virginia basketball letterman in mid-1930s) purchased from the Philadelphia Athletics by the Washington Senators in 1939.

  • In 1974, Los Angeles Dodgers LHP Al Downing (attended Muhlenberg PA on hoop scholarship but left school before playing) yielded Hank Aaron's 715th homer bypassing Babe Ruth as MLB all-time leader (subsequently broken by Barry Bonds).

  • RHP Mark Freeman (averaged 3.6 ppg for Louisiana State as senior in 1950-51) traded by the New York Yankees to the Kansas City Athletics in 1959. Returned to Yankees a month later.

  • CF Lou Piniella (averaged 2.5 ppg and 1.4 rpg for Tampa as freshman in 1961-62) provided four hits as leadoff batter for the expansion Kansas City Royals in their inaugural game in 1969.

  • Cincinnati Reds rookie LF Gary Redus (J.C. hooper for Athens AL and father of Centenary/South Alabama guard) went 4-for-4 and chipped in with five RBI against the Chicago Cubs in 1983.

  • RHP Pete Sivess (Dickinson PA hooper in 1935-36) traded by the Philadelphia Phillies with cash to the New York Yankees in 1939.

  • New York Yankees RF Dave Winfield (starting forward for Minnesota's first NCAA playoff team in 1972) whacked two homers against the Milwaukee Brewers, igniting his streak of seven consecutive multiple-hit contests in 1988.

Boys Gone Wild: Russell and Sherman Had Highest-Scoring Output vs. Baylor

Four years ago, Kentucky freshman guard Malik Monk may have manufactured the highest single-game scoring output in history against an NCAA champion-to-be when he erupted for 47 points against North Carolina in a non-conference contest at Las Vegas. In 2019, Purdue's Carsen Edwards poured in 42 points against kingpin-to-be Virginia in the South Regional final, matching Bo Kimble's output for Loyola Marymount vs. UNLV in 1990 NCAA playoffs. Notre Dame senior guard Austin Carr poured in 46 against UCLA in 1970-71. Statistical research is sketchy in the 1940s and 1950s in trying to discern if anyone contributed a higher total than Monk or Carr.

This season, senior guards Cedric Russell (Louisiana-Lafayette) and Taz Sherman (West Virginia) each tallied 26 points against champion-to-be Baylor. Since UCLA's first NCAA championship in 1964, Louisville guard Russ Smith has the lowest scoring average (11.5 ppg in 2011-12) for any player who posted the single-game high against an NCAA titlist. Some of the names probably will be surprising insofar as none of them became an NBA All-Star since Ray Allen (Connecticut), but following is a look in reverse order at the individuals notching the season-high scoring total against the past 57 eventual NCAA kingpins:

Year Opposing High Scorer vs. NCAA Titlist Avg. Single-Game High
2021 Cedric Russell, G, Sr., Louisiana-Lafayette 17.2 26 points vs. Baylor at Las Vegas
2021 Taz Sherman, G, Sr., West Virginia 13.4 26 vs. Baylor
2019 Carsen Edwards, G, Jr., Purdue 24.3 42 vs. Virginia in South Regional final
2018 Shamorie Ponds, G, Soph., St. John's 21.6 37 vs. Villanova
2017 Malik Monk, G, Fr., Kentucky 19.8 47 vs. North Carolina at Las Vegas
2016 Ben Bentil, F, Soph., Providence 21.1 31 vs. Villanova
2016 L.J. Peak, G, Soph., Georgetown 12.3 31 vs. Villanova
2015 Michael Gbinije, F, Jr., Syracuse 12.7 27 vs. Duke
2014 Dustin Hogue, F, Jr., Iowa State 11.6 34 vs. Connecticut in NCAA playoffs
2013 Tyler Brown, G, Sr., Illinois State 18.1 25 at Louisville
2012 Russ Smith, G, Soph., Louisville 11.5 30 at Kentucky
2011 Dwight Hardy, G, Sr., St. John's 18.3 33 vs. Connecticut
2010 Trevon Hughes, G, Sr., Wisconsin 15.3 26 vs. Duke
2009 Kyle McAlarney, G, Sr., Notre Dame 15.0 39 vs. North Carolina at Maui
2008 Michael Beasley, F-C, Fr., Kansas State 26.2 39 at Kansas
2007 Al Thornton, F, Sr., Florida State 19.7 28 vs. Florida
2006 Chris Lofton, G, Soph., Tennessee 17.2 29 vs. Florida
2005 Will Bynum, G, Sr., Georgia Tech 12.5 35 vs. North Carolina in ACC Tournament
2004 Chris Thomas, G, Jr., Notre Dame 19.7 31 vs. Connecticut
2003 Chris Hill, G, Soph., Michigan State 13.7 34 vs. Syracuse
2002 Jason "Jay" Williams, G, Jr., Duke 21.3 34 vs. Maryland
2001 James "J.J." Miller, G, Sr., North Carolina A&T 16.0 34 at Duke
2000 A.J. Guyton, G, Sr., Indiana 19.7 34 vs. Michigan State
1999 Trajan Langdon, G, Sr., Duke 17.3 25 vs. Connecticut
1998 Brian Williams, G, Jr., Alabama 16.1 28 vs. Kentucky in SEC Tournament
1997 Isaac Fontaine, G, Sr., Washington State 21.9 32 vs. Arizona
1996 Marcus Camby, C, Jr., Massachusetts 20.5 32 vs. Kentucky at Great Eight
1995 Ray Allen, G, Soph., Connecticut 21.1 36 vs. UCLA in NCAA playoffs
1994 Gary Collier, F, Sr., Tulsa 22.9 35 vs. Arkansas in NCAA playoffs
1993 Chris Webber, F, Soph., Michigan 19.2 27 vs. North Carolina at Honolulu
1993 Randolph Childress, G, Soph., Wake Forest 19.7 27 vs. North Carolina
1993 James Forrest, F, Soph., Georgia Tech 19.5 27 vs. North Carolina in ACC Tournament
1993 Lester Lyons, G, Jr., East Carolina 15.4 27 vs. North Carolina in NCAA playoffs
1992 Malik Sealy, F, Sr., St. John's 22.6 37 vs. Duke at Greensboro
1991 Jeff Webster, F, Fr., Oklahoma 18.3 32 vs. Duke
1990 Greg "Bo" Kimble, F-G, Sr., Loyola Marymount 35.3 42 vs. UNLV in NCAA playoffs
1989 Roy Marble, F, Sr., Iowa 20.5 32 vs. Michigan
1988 Mitch Richmond, G-F, Sr., Kansas State 22.6 35 vs. Kansas
1987 Freddie Banks, G, Sr., UNLV 19.5 38 vs. Indiana in NCAA playoffs
1986 Ron Harper, F, Sr., Miami (oh) 24.4 36 vs. Louisville in Big Apple NIT at Cincinnati
1985 Len Bias, F, Jr., Maryland 18.9 30 vs. Villanova
1984 Chris Mullin, G-F, Jr., St. John's 22.9 29 vs. Georgetown in Big East Tournament
1983 Ralph Sampson, C, Sr., Virginia 19.1 33 vs. North Carolina State
1982 Ralph Sampson, C, Jr., Virginia 15.8 30 at North Carolina
1981 Mike McGee, F, Sr., Michigan 24.4 29 vs. Indiana
1980 Jeff Ruland, C, Jr., Iona 20.1 30 vs. Louisville
1979 Joe Barry Carroll, C, Jr., Purdue 22.8 27 vs. Michigan State
1979 Calvin Roberts, F-C, Jr., Cal State Fullerton 15.3 27 vs. Michigan State
1978 Freeman Williams, G, Sr., Portland State 35.9 39 at Kentucky
1977 Dave Corzine, C, Jr., DePaul 19.0 26 vs. Marquette
1976 Terry Furlow, F, Sr., Michigan State 29.4 40 vs. Indiana
1975 Kevin Grevey, F, Sr., Kentucky 23.5 34 vs. UCLA in NCAA final
1974 Billy Cook, G, Soph., Memphis State 16.2 33 vs. North Carolina State
1973 Billy Knight, F, Jr., Pittsburgh 23.7 37 vs. UCLA
1972 Fred Boyd, G, Sr., Oregon State 19.8 37 vs. UCLA
1971 Austin Carr, G, Sr., Notre Dame 38.0 46 vs. UCLA
1970 Pete Maravich, G, Sr., Louisiana State 44.5 38 vs. UCLA
1970 Rich Yunkus, C, Jr., Georgia Tech 30.1 38 vs. UCLA
1969 Vic Collucci, G, Soph., Providence 15.4 36 vs. UCLA
1968 Elvin Hayes, F-C, Sr., Houston 36.8 39 vs. UCLA
1967 Bill Hewitt, F, Jr., Southern California 19.5 39 vs. UCLA
1966 Jerry Chambers, F-C, Sr., Utah 28.8 38 vs. Texas Western in NCAA playoffs
1965 Ollie Johnson, C, Sr., San Francisco 21.6 37 vs. UCLA
1964 Tom Dose, C, Sr., Stanford 20.0 38 vs. UCLA

Lost That Finger Feeling: Clark Missed Out on Earning Championship Ring

Tristan Clark was on top of the world when leading Baylor in scoring and the nation in field-goal percentage midway through his sophomore season in 2018-19. But an injury to his left knee curtailed a once-promising career and cost him a chance to earn some championship bling. Numerous other players have also been denied because they transferred before NCAA playoff title run. A striking number of original Duke recruits are on the following alphabetical list of transfer players denied receiving an NCAA championship ring because they left a school subsequently capturing a national crown:

Transfer Player Alma Mater Original College (Title Year)
Mohamed Abukar San Diego State '07 Florida (2006)
Ryan Appleby Washington '08 Florida (2006 and 2007)
Craig Bardo The Citadel '87 Indiana (1987)
Larry Bird Indiana State '79 Indiana (1976)
Mario Boggan Oklahoma State '07 Florida (2006)
Adam Boone Minnesota '06 North Carolina (2005)
Bob Brannum Michigan State '48 Kentucky (1947)
Delray Brooks Providence '88 Indiana (1987)
Rakeem Buckles Florida International '14 Louisville (2013)
Chris Burgess Utah '02 Duke (2001)
Deward Compton Louisville '48 Kentucky (1947 and 1948)
Olek Czyz Nevada '12 Duke (2010)
Doug Davis Miami (Ohio) '02 Michigan State (2000)
Darnell Dodson Southern Mississippi '13 Kentucky (2012)
Micah Downs Gonzaga '09 Kansas (2008)
Dylan Ennis Oregon '17 Villanova (2016)
Bob Fowler Iowa State '80 Kentucky (1978)
Alex Galindo Florida International '09 Kansas (2008)
Michael Gbinije Syracuse '16 Duke (2015)
C.J. Giles Oregon State '08 Kansas (2008)
Mike Giomi North Carolina State '87 Indiana (1987)
Danny Hall Marshall '78 Kentucky (1978)
Kenny Harris Virginia Commonwealth '94 North Carolina (1993)
Scott Hazelton Rhode Island '05 Connecticut (2004)
Derek Holcomb Illinois '81 Indiana (1981)
David Huertas Mississippi '10 Florida (2007)
*Karl James South Alabama '91 UNLV (1990)
Taylor King Villanova '12 Duke (2010)
Jack Kramer UAB '91 Michigan (1989)
Darrell Lorrance Missouri '47 Kentucky (1947)
Billy McCaffrey Vanderbilt '94 Duke (1992)
Malcolm McMullen Xavier '50 Kentucky (1948)
Mike Miday Bowling Green State '81 Indiana (1981)
Danny Miller Notre Dame '03 Maryland (2002)
Alex Murphy Florida '16 Duke (2015)
Semi Ojeleye Southern Methodist '18 Duke (2015)
Crawford Palmer Dartmouth '93 Duke (1992)
Stacey Poole Georgia Tech '14 Kentucky (2012)
Jarred Reuter George Mason '19 Virginia (2019)
Rodrick Rhodes Southern California '97 Kentucky (1996)
Clifford Rozier Louisville '95 North Carolina (1993)
Marty Simmons Evansville '88 Indiana (1987)
Oliver Simmons Florida State '00 Kentucky (1998)
Will Smethers Bowling Green State '51 Kentucky (1949)
Roscoe Smith UNLV '15 Connecticut (2014)
Alex Stephenson Southern California '11 North Carolina (2009)
Rasheed Sulaimon Maryland '16 Duke (2015)
Barry Sumpter Austin Peay State '87 Louisville (1986)
Andre Sweet Seton Hall '05 Duke (2001)
Jared Swopshire Northwestern '13 Louisville (2013)
James Thues Detroit '05 Syracuse (2003)
Jeff Tropf Central Michigan '79 Michigan State (1979)
Jason Webber Central Michigan '00 Michigan State (2000)
DeShaun Williams Iona '04 Syracuse (2003)
Elliot Williams Memphis '12 Duke (2010)

*Played for a junior college between four-year schools

NOTES: McCaffrey and Palmer played for an NCAA champion with Duke in 1991 and Huertas did with Florida in 2006. . . . King played only one season for Villanova in 2009-10. . . . E. Williams left Memphis after 2009-10 campaign when he declared early for the NBA draft. Likewise for Smith at UNLV following 2013-14 season.

Last Man Standing: Will MOP Jared Butler Make Significant Impact on NBA?

"I'm gonna make it to heaven, light up the sky like a flame. I'm gonna live forever. Baby, remember my name." - Theme from 1980s film and TV series Fame

Baylor's two-time All-American Jared Butler MOP(ped) the Indianapolis floor this season. Three years ago, Villanova sixth man Donte DiVincenzo became the fourth in a row and 11th Most Outstanding Player overall in NCAA Tournament history who wasn't an All-American, joining Kansas' B.H. Born (1953), Villanova's Ed Pinckney (1985), Indiana's Keith Smart (1987), UNLV's Anderson Hunt (1990), North Carolina's Donald Williams (1993), Kentucky's Jeff Sheppard (1998), Louisville's Luke Hancock (2013), Duke's Tyus Jones (2015), Villanova's Ryan Arcidiacono (2016) and North Carolina's Joel Berry II (2017).

Questions linger as to whether Butler will have any impact in the NBA. Perhaps that is why he should think about what happens when the ball stops bouncing. What did the brightest Final Four stars do in the real world after Father Time took its toll on their playing ability? The following individuals weren't always defined solely as basketball standouts after earning acclaim as the Final Four MOP:

Year(s) - NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player, Position, Class, School

1939 - Jimmy Hull, F, Sr., Ohio State
Employed as a dentist.

1940 - Marv Huffman, G, Sr., Indiana
Played one season with Goodyear in the National Industrial League in 1940-41 (5.1 ppg) and four with the Akron Collegians. After he stopped playing basketball, he was a special assistant to the president of Goodyear. He died in 1984 of multiple sclerosis.

1941 - John Kotz, F, Soph., Wisconsin
Retired in 1980 after working his way up from shipping clerk to president and majority stockholder of Badger Sporting Goods Company.

1942 - Howie Dallmar, G, Soph., Stanford
Averaged 9.6 ppg with the Philadelphia Warriors in three NBA seasons from 1946-47 through 1948-49. Compiled a 105-51 record (.673) for Penn in six seasons from 1948-49 through 1953-54 before posting a 264-264 record (.500) for Stanford in 21 seasons from 1954-55 through 1974-75. His best season was a 22-5 mark in 1952-53.

1943 - Kenny Sailors, G, Jr., Wyoming
Averaged 12.6 ppg and 2.8 apg with seven different NBA teams in five seasons from 1946-47 through 1950-51. Lived in Gakona, Alaska, where he owned a guided big-game hunting business with his son. Had a winter home in Arizona.

1944 - Arnie Ferrin, F, Fr., Utah
Averaged 5.8 ppg with the Minneapolis Lakers in three NBA seasons from 1948-49 through 1950-51. General Manager of the ABA's Utah Stars, athletic director for his alma mater and chairman of the NCAA Tournament selection committee in 1988.

1945 and 1946 - Bob Kurland, C, Jr./Sr., Oklahoma A&M
Retired Phillips Petroleum executive had a retirement home in Florida.

1947 - George Kaftan, F-C, Soph., Holy Cross
Averaged 7.5 ppg with the Boston Celtics, New York Knicks and Baltimore Bullets in five NBA seasons from 1948-49 through 1952-53. Graduated from Georgetown Dental School, coached C.W. Post for 17 seasons and maintained a dental practice.

1948 and 1949 - Alex Groza, C, Jr./Sr., Kentucky
Averaged 22.5 ppg with the Indianapolis Olympians in two NBA seasons in 1949-50 and 1950-51 before his pro career ended because of a college point-shaving scandal. Got a job at General Electric in Louisville before returning to his hometown (Martin's Ferry, Ohio) and running his mother's tavern. Compiled a 91-77 record (.542) as coach for Bellarmine College in seven seasons from 1959-60 through 1965-66. Executive with two ABA franchises (Kentucky Colonels and San Diego Conquistadors) before getting involved with professional volleyball. Joined Reynolds Metals in 1977 and traveled around the country as Pacific Coast manager of its chemical division.

1950 - Irwin Dambrot, F, Sr., CCNY
Became a dentist.

1951 - Bill Spivey, C, Sr., Kentucky
After 16 years in the bush leagues with assorted nondescript teams, he extended his nomadic existence with a series of jobs - salesman, insurance agent, real estate developer, government official (Kentucky's deputy insurance commissioner) and restaurant and bar owner - before relocating to Costa Rica.

1952 - Clyde Lovellette, C, Sr., Kansas
Averaged 17 ppg and 9.5 rpg with the Minneapolis Lakers, Cincinnati Royals, St. Louis Hawks and Boston Celtics in 11 NBA seasons from 1953-54 through 1963-64. Assistant coach for the Indiana Pacers in 1967 when they started their ABA franchise. Served as a sheriff in his native Indiana and taught and coached at White's Institute, a school for troubled youngsters in Wabash, before moving to Munising, Mich.

1953 - B.H. Born, C, Jr., Kansas
Played AAU basketball until the late 1950s with the Peoria (Ill.) Caterpillars before going to work in the personnel office for Caterpillar Bulldozers. He spent his entire career working for Caterpillar until his retirement.

1954 - Tom Gola, C-F, Jr., La Salle
Averaged 11.3 ppg and 8 rpg with the Philadelphia/San Francisco Warriors and New York Knicks in 11 NBA seasons from 1955-56 through 1965-66. He invested in driving ranges, apartment complexes, recycling companies and residential sites. Gola owned his own insurance company and a skating rink. He was a spokesman for Texaco, Vitalis and the Army Reserve. In 1966, Gola began a two-term career as a state legislator while coaching his alma mater before becoming Philadelphia's city controller. He later became a vice president of the Valley Forge Investment Corporation and served on the board of the Philadelphia Convention Center.

1955 - Bill Russell, C, Jr., San Francisco
Twelve-time All-Star averaged 15.1 ppg, 22.5 rpg and 4.3 apg with the Boston Celtics in 13 NBA seasons from 1956-57 through 1968-69. Five-time MVP was named one of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History (1996). Compiled a 341-290 record (.540) with the Celtics (1966-67 through 1968-69), Seattle SuperSonics (1973-74 through 1976-77) and Sacramento Kings (1987-88) in eight seasons. Network analyst dabbled with acting but retreated to the quiet life on Mercer Island in Washington, and has a clothing line company called Center Court.

1956 - Hal Lear, G, Sr., Temple
Played in three games for the NBA's Philadelphia Warriors in 1956-57 before playing 10 seasons in the Eastern Basketball League, becoming MVP in 1956-57 and averaging 39.7 ppg for Easton in 1960-61. Also averaged 13.1 ppg for Los Angeles and Cleveland in the ABL in 1961-62.

1957 - Wilt Chamberlain, C, Soph., Kansas
Averaged 30.1 ppg, 22.9 rpg and 4.4 apg with the Philadelphia/San Francisco Warriors, Philadelphia 76ers and Los Angeles Lakers in 14 NBA seasons from 1959-60 through 1972-73. Made a fortune in the restaurant business, designed homes, owned racehorses and played professional volleyball. Also wrote four books: Wilt; A View From Above; Chamberlain House: The Possible Dream, and Who's Running the Asylum: The Insane World of Sports Today.

1958 - Elgin Baylor, C, Jr., Seattle
Averaged 27.4 ppg, 13.5 rpg and 4.3 apg with the Minneapolis/Los Angeles Lakers in 14 seasons from 1958-59 through 1971-72. Coached the New Orleans Jazz for four seasons in the late 1970s (86-135 record). Executive with the Los Angeles Clippers.

1959 - Jerry West, F-G, Jr., West Virginia
Averaged 27 ppg, 5.8 rpg and 6.7 apg with the Los Angeles Lakers in 14 NBA seasons from 1960-61 through 1973-74. Long-time executive with the Lakers before accepting a similar position with the Memphis Grizzlies.

1960 and 1961 - Jerry Lucas, C, Soph./Jr., Ohio State
Seven-time All-Star averaged 17 ppg and 15.6 rpg with the Cincinnati Royals, San Francisco Warriors and New York Knicks in 11 NBA seasons from 1963-64 through 1973-74. One of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History (1996). Memory expert and motivational speaker lived in Templeton, Calif., while working on revolutionary educational programs. Taught his memory and learning technique to many Fortune 500 companies and countless churches. He authored more than 60 books on learning, including The Memory Book, which was on the New York Times' best-seller list for 50 weeks and reached the No. 2 position behind All the President's Men, the investigative story that uncovered the Watergate scandal.

1962 - Paul Hogue, C, Sr., Cincinnati
Averaged 6.3 ppg and 7.1 rpg with the New York Knicks and Baltimore Bullets in two NBA seasons in 1962-63 and 1963-64. Worked with the Tennessee juvenile program before moving back to Cincinnati to work at a milling machine firm. He served as a physical therapist at a state mental hospital, a counselor at a neighborhood youth center and as a counselor in a local school system before becoming the division supervisor for the Postal Services' Employee Assistance Program.

1963 - Art Heyman, F, Sr., Duke
Averaged 10.3 ppg and 2.8 rpg with the New York Knicks, Cincinnati Royals and Philadelphia 76ers in three NBA seasons from 1963-64 through 1965-66 before averaging 15.4 ppg and 6.4 rpg with the New Jersey Americans, Pittsburgh/Minnesota Pipers and Miami Floridians in three ABA seasons from 1967-68 through 1969-70. Owned and operated several restaurants.

1964 - Walt Hazzard, G, Sr., UCLA
Averaged 12.6 ppg, 3 rpg and 4.9 apg with five different NBA teams in 10 seasons from 1964-65 through 1973-74. Later named Mahdi Abdul-Rahmad, he worked in the Los Angeles Lakers' front office and coached his alma mater and Chapman College before suffering a stroke and undergoing open-heart surgery in 1996.

1965 - Bill Bradley, F, Sr., Princeton
Rhodes Scholar averaged 12.4 ppg, 3.2 rpg and 3.4 apg with the New York Knicks in 10 NBA seasons from 1967-68 through 1976-77. Three-term U.S. Senator (Democrat-N.J.) until 1995 was a tax and trade expert with a strong voice on race issues and campaign finance reform. The presidential candidate against Al Gore in 2000 authored two basketball books (Life on the Run in 1976 and Values of the Game in 1998).

1966 - Jerry Chambers, F, Sr., Utah
Averaged 8.3 ppg and 3.2 rpg with the Los Angeles Lakers, Phoenix Suns, Atlanta Hawks, Buffalo Braves, San Diego Conquistadors and San Antonio Spurs in six NBA/ABA seasons from 1966-67 to 1973-74. Worked for the L.A. city parks and recreation department for many years.

1967, 1968 and 1969 - Lew Alcindor, C, Soph./Jr./Sr., UCLA
Six-time league MVP averaged 24.6 ppg and 11.2 rpg in 20 NBA seasons with the Milwaukee Bucks and Los Angeles Lakers from 1969-70 through 1988-89. Nineteen-time All-Star later named Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is one of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History (1996). In 1999, he worked with a high school team at White Mountain Apache Reservation in Whiteriver, Ariz. He was an assistant coach for the Los Angeles Clippers in 2000 and then worked in training camp with the Indiana Pacers before becoming head coach of the USBL's Oklahoma Storm for one season. Hired by the New York Knicks as a scout in March, 2004 before serving as a Lakers aide helping develop center Andrew Bynum. In January 2012, he was appointed a Cultural Ambassador for the U.S. Department of State before becoming a TIME columnist.

1970 - Sidney Wicks, F, Jr., UCLA
Averaged 16.8 ppg and 8.7 rpg with the Portland Trail Blazers, Boston Celtics and San Diego Clippers in 10 NBA seasons from 1971-72 through 1980-81. Worked in property management. Served as an assistant coach at his alma mater under Walt Hazzard for four seasons in the mid-1980s. At the completion of his coaching stint with the Bruins, Wicks has been in private business.

1971 - Howard Porter, F, Sr., Villanova
Averaged 9.2 ppg and 4.1 rpg with the Chicago Bulls, New York Knicks, Detroit Pistons and New Jersey Nets in seven NBA seasons from 1971-72 through 1977-78. Senior probation officer for Ramsey County (Minn.) after getting clean from drugs with the help of a colleague working with him loading furniture for a construction firm in Orlando. Earlier, Porter failed at running a club in Florida and a convenience store. He was trying to trade money and crack cocaine for sex with a prostitute in St. Paul in May, 2007, when the probation officer was beaten to death, according to murder charges filed several months later.

1972 and 1973 - Bill Walton, C, Soph./Jr., UCLA
Averaged 13.3 ppg, 10.5 rpg and 3.4 apg with the Portland Trail Blazers, San Diego/Los Angeles Clippers and Boston Celtics in 10 NBA seasons from 1974-75 to 1986-87. Network commentator for both the NBA and NCAA after and while working in a similar capacity for the Clippers.

1974 - David Thompson, F, Jr., North Carolina State
Averaged 22.7 ppg and 4.1 rpg with the Denver Nuggets and Seattle SuperSonics in nine ABA/NBA seasons from 1975-76 through 1983-84. Motivational speaker with Unlimited Sports Management was also community relations director for the Charlotte Hornets.

1975 - Richard Washington, C-F, Soph., UCLA
Averaged 9.8 ppg and 6.3 rpg with the Kansas City Kings, Milwaukee Bucks, Dallas Mavericks and Cleveland Cavaliers in six NBA seasons from 1976-77 through 1981-82. Contractor in Portland.

1976 - Kent Benson, C, Jr., Indiana
Averaged 9.1 ppg and 5.7 rpg with four different NBA teams in 11 seasons from 1977-78 through 1987-88. Resided in Bloomington, where he worked with Diversified Benefit Services.

1977 - Butch Lee, G, Jr., Marquette
Averaged 8.1 ppg and 3.2 apg with the Atlanta Hawks, Cleveland Cavaliers and Los Angeles Lakers in two NBA seasons in 1978-79 and 1979-80. Owned two restaurants, coached pro ball in Puerto Rico and had a sign business in San Juan.

1978 - Jack Givens, F, Sr., Kentucky
Averaged 6.7 ppg and 2.9 rpg with the Atlanta Hawks in two NBA seasons in 1978-79 and 1979-80. Announcer for the Orlando Magic did not have his contract renewed after he was found not guilty following an arrest during summer of 2004 on charges of sexual battery and lewd molestation of a 14-year-old girl.

1979 - Earvin "Magic" Johnson, G, Soph., Michigan State
Averaged 19.5 ppg, 7.2 rpg and 11.2 apg with the Los Angeles Lakers in 13 NBA seasons from 1979-80 through 1990-91 and 1995-96. Business entrepreneur emphasized attempting to revitalize a number of minority neighborhoods. He owned the Magic Theatres, an L.A. restaurant chain (Fatburgers), a TGI Friday's and some Starbucks coffee shops. Johnson was a principal in a local black-owned bank and delved into the entertainment business as a concert promoter and owner of the Magic Johnson Record label. Part of ownership group that purchased the Los Angeles Dodgers in the spring of 2012.

1980 - Darrell Griffith, G, Sr., Louisville
Averaged 16.2 ppg and 3.3 rpg with the Utah Jazz in 11 NBA seasons from 1980-81 through 1990-91. Resides in Louisville where he has several real estate investments and business interests. Father-in-law of former NBA standout Derek Anderson established a foundation in his hometown.

1981 - Isiah Thomas, G, Soph., Indiana
Twelve-time All-Star averaged 19.2 ppg, 3.6 rpg and 9.3 apg with the Detroit Pistons in 13 NBA seasons from 1981-82 through 1993-94. One of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History (1996) served as president of the New York Knicks from 2003-04 through 2007-08. Executive and part owner of the Toronto Raptors, owner of the CBA and coach of the Indiana Pacers (131-115 record in three seasons from 2000-01 through 2002-03). Served as coach for Florida International three seasons. Named president and part-owner of the Knicks' WNBA sister team, the New York Liberty, subsequent to the re-hiring of Thomas' former Pistons teammate, Bill Laimbeer, as the team's coach.

1982 - James Worthy, F, Jr., North Carolina
Averaged 17.6 ppg, 5.1 rpg and 3 apg with the Los Angeles Lakers in 12 NBA seasons from 1982-83 through 1993-94. Served as network TV analyst.

1983 - Hakeem Olajuwon, C, Soph., Houston
Twelve-time All-Star averaged 21.8 ppg, 11.1 rpg and 3.1 bpg with the Houston Rockets and Toronto Raptors in 18 seasons from 1984-85 through 2001-02. Six-time All-NBA first-team selection was named as one of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History (1996). NBA Most Valuable Player in 1993-94 was one of only eight players in league history to amass more than 20,000 points and 12,000 rebounds. Split time between his ranch near Houston (buying real estate in cash-only purchases) and Jordan, where he pursued Islamic studies.

1984 - Patrick Ewing, C, Jr., Georgetown
Eleven-time All-Star averaged 21 ppg, 9.8 rpg and 2.4 bpg with the New York Knicks, Seattle SuperSonics and Orlando Magic in 17 seasons from 1985-86 through 2001-02. One of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History (1996) became an assistant coach with the Washington Wizards, Houston Rockets, Orlando Magic and Charlotte Bobcats before becoming head coach of his alma mater in 2017-18.

1985 - Ed Pinckney, F, Sr., Villanova
Averaged 6.8 ppg and 5 rpg with seven different NBA teams in 12 seasons from 1985-86 through 1996-97. Miami Heat TV analyst while trying to cope with an overactive thyroid.

1986 - Pervis Ellison, C, Fr., Louisville
Averaged 9.7 ppg and 6.8 rpg with the Sacramento Kings, Washington Bullets and Boston Celtics in 10 NBA seasons from 1989-90 through 1997-98 and 1999-00. Lived in Atlanta. Coached basketball for various teams throughout Southern New Jersey, including his son, Malik, at Life Center Academy.

1987 - Keith Smart, G, Jr., Indiana
Played in two games with the San Antonio Spurs in 1988-89 before basketball took him to the Philippines, Venezuela and France. After playing and coaching in the CBA with the Fort Wayne (Ind.) Fury, he joined the Cleveland Cavaliers as director of player development and assistant coach. Smart was named interim head coach of the Cavs midway through the 2002-03 campaign, replacing John Lucas. Also promoted from assistant to head coach with the Golden State Warriors and Sacramento Kings before becoming an aide for the Miami Heat.

1988 - Danny Manning, F, Sr., Kansas
Two-time All-Star averaged 14 ppg and 5.2 rpg with seven different franchises in 15 NBA seasons from 1988-89 through 2002-03. Assistant coach at his alma mater for nine seasons before accepting head coaching position with Tulsa and subsequently accepting a similar position at Wake Forest.

1989 - Glen Rice, F, Sr., Michigan
Averaged 18.3 ppg and 4.4 rpg with six different NBA franchises in 15 seasons from 1989-90 through 2003-04. Three-time All-Star was the Heat's all-time leading scorer.

1990 - Anderson Hunt, G, Soph., UNLV
Photograph was published of him with a couple of teammates in a hot tub with known sports fixer Richard Perry before pleading guilty to misdemeanor charges in connection with marijuana found in his possession during a traffic stop in October 1993. Played overseas in France, Poland, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Venezuela. Worked in real estate market in Detroit following employment at Burger Palace inside the Imperial Palace Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.

1991 - Christian Laettner, C-F, Jr., Duke
All-Star in 1996-97 averaged 12.8 ppg, 6.7 rpg and 2.6 apg with six different NBA franchises in 13 seasons from 1992-93 through 2004-05. He and Duke teammate Brian Davis faced huge financial and legal hurdles stemming from a loan their real estate company failed to repay nearly $700,000 to former Duke captain and current Stanford coach Johnny Dawkins. Court documents obtained by the Wall Street Journal indicated that Laettner and Davis were defendants in several civil lawsuits seeking repayment of about $30 million.

1992 - Bobby Hurley, G, Jr., Duke
Averaged 3.8 ppg and 3.3 apg with the Sacramento Kings and Vancouver Grizzlies in five NBA seasons from 1993-94 through 1997-98. Owned race horses and did TV commentary on the ACC for Fox Sports. Assistant coach under his brother, Danny, with Wagner and Rhode Island prior to becoming head coach with Buffalo and Arizona State.

1993 - Donald Williams, G, Soph., North Carolina
Played professional basketball overseas in Germany and Greece and with the Harlem Globetrotters.

1994 - Corliss Williamson, F, Soph., Arkansas
Averaged 11.1 ppg and 3.9 rpg with the Sacramento Kings, Toronto Raptors, Detroit Pistons and Philadelphia 76ers in 12 NBA seasons from 1995-96 through 2006-07. Scored a career-high 40 points against the Pistons on 3-4-98. Coached for Arkansas Baptist College and Central Arkansas before returning to the NBA as an assistant coach with the Kings.

1995 - Ed O'Bannon, F, Sr., UCLA
Averaged 5 ppg and 2.5 rpg with the New Jersey Nets and Dallas Mavericks in two NBA seasons in 1995-96 and 1996-97. After his brief NBA career, he played professionally in Europe (Italy, Spain, Greece and Poland) before becoming a Toyota salesman/marketing director in the Las Vegas area. Lead plaintiff in highly-publicized lawsuit against the NCAA, disputing the organization's use of the images of its former student-athletes for commercial purposes.

1996 - Tony Delk, G, Sr., Kentucky
Averaged 9.1 ppg, 2.5 rpg and 1.9 apg with eight different franchises in 10 NBA seasons from 1996-97 through 2005-06. Scored a career-high 53 points against the Kings on 1-2-01. Played overseas in Greece and Puerto Rico before serving as an assistant coach at his alma mater and New Mexico State.

1997 - Miles Simon, G, Jr., Arizona
Appeared in five games with the NBA's Orlando Magic in 1998-99. Played professionally in Israel in 2000 and Italy in 2001 before joining the Dakota Wizards of the CBA where he earned 2002 Newcomer of the Year and MVP honors. Also played in Venezuela and Turkey before joining his alma mater's staff as an assistant under Lute Olson in 2005. Served as a commentator for ESPN.

1998 - Jeff Sheppard, G, Sr., Kentucky
After playing the 1998-99 season with the Atlanta Hawks, he played professionally in Italy. Married former UK women's player Stacey Reed. They own an apparel company.

1999 - Richard Hamilton, F-G, Jr., Connecticut
Averaged 17.3 ppg, 3.1 rpg and 3.4 apg with the Washington Wizards, Detroit Pistons and Chicago Bulls in 14 seasons from 1999-00 to 2012-13.

2000 - Mateen Cleaves, G, Sr., Michigan State
Averaged 3.6 ppg and 1.9 apg with four different NBA franchises in six seasons from 2000-01 through 2005-06 before becoming a color commentator for Fox Sports Detroit and the CBS Sports Network prior to being investigated for a sexual assault charge.

2001 - Shane Battier, F, Sr., Duke
Averaged 8.6 ppg and 4.2 rpg with four different NBA franchises in 13 seasons from 2001-02 through 2013-14 before becoming an ESPN color commentator.

2002 - Juan Dixon, G, Sr., Maryland
Averaged 8.4 ppg with five different NBA franchises in seven seasons from 2002-03 through 2008-09 before playing overseas in Greece, Spain and Turkey and subsequently becoming an assistant coach for his alma mater and head coach of Coppin State.

2003 - Carmelo Anthony, F, Fr., Syracuse
Averaged 23.6 ppg, 6.5 rpg and 2.9 apg with the Denver Nuggets, New York Knicks, Oklahoma City Thunder, Houston Rockets and Portland Trail Blazers in 17 seasons from 2003-04 through 2019-20.

2004 - Emeka Okafor, C, Jr., Connecticut
Averaged 12 ppg, 9.7 rpg and 1.6 bpg with the Charlotte/New Orleans Hornets, Washington Wizards and New Orleans Pelicans in 10 seasons from 2004-05 to 2012-13 and 2017-18.

2005 - Sean May, C-F, Jr., North Carolina
Averaged 6.9 ppg and 4 rpg with the Charlotte Hornets and Sacramento Kings in four injury-plagued seasons from 2005-06 through 2009-10 before playing overseas. Joined his alma mater's staff under Roy Williams as assistant to the director of player development.

2006 - Joakim Noah, C, Soph., Florida
Averaged 8.9 ppg, 9.3 rpg, 2.9 apg and 1.3 bpg with the Chicago Bulls and New York Knicks in 11 seasons from 2007-08 to 2017-18.

2007 - Corey Brewer, F, Jr., Florida
Averaged 8.9 ppg and 2.8 rpg with the Minnesota Timberwolves, Dallas Mavericks, Denver Nuggets, Houston Rockets, Los Angeles Lakers and Oklahoma City Thunder in 11 seasons from 2007-08 to 2017-18. He scored 51 points in a single game against the Houston Rockets.

2008 - Mario Chalmers, G, Jr., Kansas
Averaged 8.9 ppg, 2.5 rpg, 3.7 apg and 1.5 spg with the Miami Heat and Memphis Grizzlies in nine seasons from 2008-09 through 2015-16 and 2017-18.

2009 - Wayne Ellington, G, Jr., North Carolina
Averaged 8 ppg and 2.2 rpg with the Minnesota Timberwolves, Memphis Grizzlies, Cleveland Cavaliers, Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, Brooklyn Nets, Miami Heat, Detroit Pistons and New York Knicks in 11 seasons from 2009-10 through 2019-20.

2010 - Kyle Singler, F, Jr., Duke
Second-round draft choice by the NBA's Detroit Pistons played overseas two seasons in Spain before averaging 6.5 ppg and 2.9 rpg in six seasons from 2012-13 to 2017-18 with the Pistons and Oklahoma Thunder.

2011 - Kemba Walker, G, Jr., Connecticut
Averaged 19.8 ppg, 3.8 rpg and 5.5 apg with the Charlotte Bobcats/Hornets in eight seasons from 2011-12 through 2018-19. After signing as a free agent with the Boston Celtics, he averaged 21.2 ppg, 4.1 rpg and 4.9 apg in 2019-20.

2012 - Anthony Davis, C, Fr., Kentucky
Averaged 23.7 ppg, 10.5 rpg and 2.4 bpg with the New Orleans Hornets/Pelicans in seven seasons from 2012-13 through 2018-19, becoming an NBA All-Star in his second season and sparking the Pelicans to the playoffs in 2015. Following a trade, he averaged 26.7 ppg, 9.4 rpg and 2.4 bpg with the Los Angeles Lakers in 2019-20.

2013 - Luke Hancock, G, Jr., Louisville
Averaged 12.3 ppg, 2.6 rpg and 2.2 apg for the Cardinals as a senior, helping defeat 2014 NCAA champion-to-be Connecticut a total of three times. Briefly played professionally in Greece before tearing a muscle in his calf and becoming financial adviser in Louisville.

2014 - Shabazz Napier, G, Sr., Connecticut
Averaged 7.1 ppg and 2.5 apg with six NBA franchises (Miami Heat, Orlando Magic, Portland Trail Blazers, Brooklyn Nets, Minnesota Timberwolves and Washington Wizards) in six seasons from 2014-15 through 2019-20.

2015 - Tyus Jones, G, Fr., Duke
Averaged 5.8 ppg and 3.6 apg with the Minnesota Timberwolves and Memphis Grizzlies in six seasons from 2015-16 to 2020-21.

2016 - Ryan Arcidiacono, G, Sr., Villanova
Played for the San Antonio Spurs' Development League team in Austin in 2016-17 before signing a similar developmental deal with the Chicago Bulls. Averaged 4.9 ppg, 2.1 rpg and 2.3 apg for the Bulls from 2017-18 to 2020-21.

2017 - Joel Berry II, G, Jr., North Carolina
Earned All-American status with the Tar Heels in 2017-18 before elimination in second round of NCAA playoffs by 21 points against Texas A&M. Undrafted by the NBA, he played in the G League for a couple different franchises before aligning with BSL (Basketball Super League).

2018 - Donte DiVincenzo, G, Jr., Villanova
Missing most of season because of a foot injury, he averaged 4.9 ppg as NBA rookie with the Milwaukee Bucks. He doubled his rookie scoring average the past two years.

2019 - Kyle Guy, G, Jr., Virginia
Appeared in only two NBA games in 2019-20 with the Sacramento Kings prior to season being postponed. Averaging 3 ppg this campaign.

2021 - Jared Butler, G, Jr., Baylor
Post-college career to be determined.

On This Date: Former College Hoopers Made Mark on April 7 MLB Contests

Extra! Extra! As a new season commences full-steam ahead, you have time to read news all about memorable major league baseball achievements, moments and transactions involving former college basketball players. Numerous ex-college hoopers had front-row seats to many of the most notable games and dates in MLB history.

Former Hofstra top scorer and rebounder Brant Alyea set a MLB Opening Day RBI record on this date. Ex-juco hoopers Bobby Munoz (Polk FL), Tony Phillips (New Mexico Military) and Jim Thome (Illinois Central) also made MLB news on this date. Baseball is portrayed as a thinking man's game but only 4% of active MLB players earned college diplomas. Unless you habitually pore over the content at baseballlibrary.com, baseballreference.com and nationalpastime.com, following is an April 7 calendar focusing on such versatile MLB athletes:

APRIL 7

  • Minnesota Twins LF Brant Alyea (Hofstra's leading scorer and rebounder in 1960-61 after finishing runner-up in both categories previous basketball season) amassed seven RBI, a major league record for opening day, against the Chicago White Sox in 1970. Alyea drove in 19 runs in P Jim Perry's first four starts that year.

  • In his MLB debut in 1970, Philadelphia Phillies 2B Denny Doyle (averaged 2.7 ppg for Morehead State in 1962-63) delivered three hits, including a RBI triple in the third inning for the game's first run, in a 2-0 win against the Chicago Cubs.

  • In his MLB debut in 2017, Cincinnati Reds LHP Amir Garrett (averaged 7.4 ppg and 4 rpg for St. John's in 2011-12 and 2012-13 before RS transfer year at Cal State Northridge) hurled six shutout innings to defeat the St. Louis Cardinals.

  • RHP Bobby Humphreys (four-year hoops letterman for Hampden-Sydney VA in mid-1950s) traded by the St. Louis Cardinals to the Chicago Cubs in 1965.

  • INF Ralph LaPointe (Vermont hoops letterman during WWII) traded by the Philadelphia Phillies with $30,000 to St. Louis Cardinals for 1B Dick Sisler in 1948.

  • RHP Dave Madison (hoops letterman for Louisiana State from 1939-40 through 1942-43) purchased from the New York Yankees by the St. Louis Browns in 1952.

  • Philadelphia Phillies RHP Bobby Munoz (scored 35 points for Polk Community College FL in game against Palm Beach in mid-November 1986) hurled three innings of scoreless relief against the Colorado Rockies in 1994 appearance for his lone MLB save.

  • Boston Red Sox LHP Gary Peters (Grove City PA hooper in mid-1950s), after allowing no earned runs in 32 spring training innings, secured a 4-3 season-opening win at New York in 1970.

  • Detroit Tigers 3B Tony Phillips (New Mexico Military juco hooper in 1977-78 as teammate of eventual Drake All-American Lewis Lloyd) contributed four hits in a 1993 game against the Oakland Athletics.

  • Chicago White Sox DH Jim Thome (played junior-college hoops for Illinois Central in 1988-89) smacked decisive three-run homer in bottom of the eighth inning of 4-2 win in 2009 season opener.

  • New York Yankees LF Dave Winfield (starting forward for Minnesota's first NCAA playoff team in 1972) homered in each of his first three games in 1983.

Land of Plenty: 5 of Last 6 Champions Boast At Least 4 Different Top Scorers

Spreading the wealth has become a trait of recent NCAA kingpins. Kentucky's well-balanced attack, featuring six players averaging from 9.9 to 14.2 points per game in 2011-12, enabled the Wildcats to become the first NCAA Tournament champion to have five different players lead the team in scoring during the playoffs en route to capturing the crown. A quintessential quintet also emerged for titlists Duke (2015) and Villanova (2016).

Although All-American Davion Mitchell wasn't one of them, the following chronological list includes Baylor among five of last six NCAA Tournament champions featuring at least four different players leading the team in scoring during the playoffs en route to earning title:

Titlist With > 3 Team-High Scorers 4 or 5 Different Players Leading Club in Scoring During NCAA Playoffs
UCLA '70 Henry Bibby, Curtis Rowe, John Vallely, Sidney Wicks
UCLA '75 Dave Meyers, Marques Johnson, Pete Trgovich, Richard Washington
Kentucky '78 Truman Claytor, Jack Givens, Kyle Macy, Mike Phillips
North Carolina '82 Matt Doherty, Michael Jordan, Sam Perkins, James Worthy
Louisville '86 Herbert Crook, Pervis Ellison, Billy Thompson, Milt Wagner
Indiana '87 Steve Alford, Ricky Calloway, Dean Garrett, Keith Smart
UCLA '95 Toby Bailey, Tyus Edney, J.R. Henderson, Ed O'Bannon
Florida '07 Corey Brewer, Taurean Green, Al Horford, Lee Humphrey
Kansas '08 Darrell Arthur, Mario Chalmers, Sasha Kaun, Brandon Rush
Kentucky '12 Anthony Davis, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, Terrence Jones, Doron Lamb, Marquis Teague
Duke '15 Quinn Cook, Matt Jones, Tyus Jones, Jahlil Okafor, Justise Winslow
Villanova '16 Ryan Arcidiacono, Phil Booth Jr., Josh Hart, Kris Jenkins, Daniel Ochefu
Villanova '18 Mikal Bridges, Jalen Brunson, Donte DiVincenzo, Eric Paschall
Virginia '19 Mamadi Diakite, Kyle Guy, De'Andre Hunter, Ty Jerome
Baylor '21 Jared Butler, Adam Flagler, Matthew Mayer, MaCio Teague

National Review: State-By-State Winners and Sinners in NCAA DI Tourney

No state has won as much as 64% of its NCAA Tournament games and none has as many as five different schools with winning playoff records. The Michigan Wolverines reaching the 2018 NCAA final instead of the Kansas Jayhawks enabled Michigan (.6284) to nudge ahead of Kansas (.6279) as the state with highest all-time winning percentage before the Michigan State Spartans padded the state's advantage with a 2019 Final Four appearance. Kansas, one of 20 states represented by four or fewer members in the U.S. House of Representatives, is represented much more in the NCAA playoffs by ranking seventh with 164 victories from only three universities. With Kentucky and Louisville on the sideline, California passed the Commonwealth in total NCAA playoff triumphs. Additional stately views of national winners and sinners you might want to review include:

  • Despite going winless in 2021, schools from the state of North Carolina have collected more NCAA Tournament triumphs (324) than a total of 22 states including those with power-conference members such as Georgia, Missouri, New Jersey and West Virginia.
  • All four ACC members in Carolina have more than 25 playoff triumphs. Each of them (Duke, North Carolina, North Carolina State and Wake Forest) has more all-time wins than entire states such as Colorado, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Mexico, Rhode Island and South Carolina.
  • California is the only state with as many as 18 schools winning at least one NCAA Tournament game. Alas, less than 1/4 of them (four) have winning marks.
  • Other than Syracuse, Canisius is the only current New York Division I school to compile a winning NCAA playoff record (6-4). CCNY, the NCAA's DI champion in 1950, assembled a 4-2 mark ledger before de-emphasizing its program.
  • Despite Villanova's two NCAA titles in the last five tourneys, Pennsylvania is the only state with at least 140 tourney victories to compile an overall losing mark.
  • Syracuse (plus 29 in NY; 70-41) and Villanova (plus 29 in PA; 67-38) are the most games above .500 in states with overall losing playoff marks. On the flip side, Miami OH (minus 13; 6-19) and Murray State KY (minus 13; 4-17) are tied for most games below .500 in states with overall winning worksheets.
  • Abilene Christian enabled Texas to nudge ahead of California for most different schools participating in the tourney with 24 although 2021 Final Four participants Baylor and Houston are the only institutions from the Lone Star State posting a winning record. Texas has a total of 15 Final Four teams but is more games under .500 than any state (minus 38 including 10 different universities never winning a playoff contest).
  • LSU is the only one of Louisiana's 12 schools appearing in the playoffs notching a winning record. South Carolina has the most universities participate in the tourney (nine) without any of them posting a break-even or winning playoff record. Kansas has only three different colleges appear in the NCAA Tournament but boasts seven times as many victories as South Carolina and four times as many triumphs as Louisiana.
  • All six Mid-American Conference members from Ohio have losing records, combining for a 19-52 mark (.268).
  • Tennessee, the winningest state in NCAA playoff history despite never having a national champion, is the only state with as many as six schools at least five games below .500 in NCAA tourney competition.
  • Virginia is the only one of 12 different schools from its state and Memphis is only one of 11 different Tennessee schools appearing in the tourney to post a winning record.
  • Memphis (34-26) is joined by Spokane, Wash.-based Gonzaga (39-23) as the only mid-major schools leading a state with more than 60 playoff wins.
  • The only states with fewer than 45 tourney triumphs to assemble overall winning records are Nevada (39-28 by 6-9 Nevada and 33-19 UNLV) plus New Hampshire (10-7 by Dartmouth).
  • Utah is the only state saddled with as many as three schools posting tourney marks more than 10 games below .500 - Brigham Young (15-33), Utah State (6-24) and Weber State (6-17).

Plagiarist Joe Biden, despite big tech aspiring to hide details about his soap-opera family, hopes his prospects of success telling truth about attending HBCU Delaware State are a mite higher than the NCAA Tournament win total of the state he served as Senator because Delaware is 0-6. Abilene Christian and North Texas posted their initial NCAA tourney triumph this year. Following are NCAA Division I playoff cumulative records listed by most state victories through 2021:

STATE (# of Tourney Schools) Overall Record Pct. School-By-School NCAA Playoff Marks
NORTH CAROLINA (16) 324-198 .621 Appalachian State (0-3), Campbell (0-1), Charlotte (7-12), Davidson (8-15), Duke (114-38), East Carolina (0-2), Gardner-Webb (0-1), North Carolina (126-48), North Carolina A&T (1-10), North Carolina Central (0-4), North Carolina State (37-26), UNC Asheville (2-4), UNC Greensboro (0-4), UNC Wilmington (1-6), Wake Forest (28-23) and Western Carolina (0-1)
CALIFORNIA (23) 243-218 .527 California (20-19), UC Davis (0-1), UC Irvine (1-2), Cal Poly (1-1), UC Santa Barbara (1-6), Cal State Bakersfield (0-1), Cal State Fullerton (2-3), Cal State Los Angeles (0-1), Cal State Northridge (0-2), Fresno State (2-6), Long Beach State (7-10), Loyola Marymount (5-5), Pacific (4-10), Pepperdine (5-14), Saint Mary's (5-10), San Diego (1-4), San Diego State (6-13), San Francisco (21-14), San Jose State (0-3), Santa Clara (11-13), Southern California (17-21), Stanford (23-16) and UCLA (111-43)
KENTUCKY (seven) 236-157 .601 Eastern Kentucky (0-8), Kentucky (131-53), Louisville (76-44), Morehead State (6-9), Murray State (4-17), Northern Kentucky (0-2) and Western Kentucky (19-24)
PENNSYLVANIA (15) 190-210 .475 Bucknell (2-8), Drexel (1-5), Duquesne (4-5), Lafayette (0-5), La Salle (14-11), Lebanon Valley (1-2), Lehigh (1-5), Penn (13-26), Penn State (9-11), Pittsburgh (24-27), Robert Morris (2-8), Saint Francis (0-1), Saint Joseph's (19-25), Temple (33-33) and Villanova (67-38)
INDIANA (nine) 181-148 .550 Ball State (3-7), Butler (24-16), Evansville (1-5), Indiana (66-34), IUPUI (0-1), Indiana State (5-4), Notre Dame (38-40), Purdue (42-32) and Valparaiso (2-9)
OHIO (12) 173-172 .501 Akron (0-4), Bowling Green (1-5), Cincinnati (46-32), Cleveland State (3-3), Dayton (19-20), Kent State (4-6), Miami (6-19), Ohio University (8-15), Ohio State (57-33), Toledo (1-4), Wright State (0-3) and Xavier (28-28)
KANSAS (three) 164-100 .621 Kansas (109-48), Kansas State (37-35) and Wichita State (18-17)
TEXAS (24) 162-200 .448 Abilene Christian (1-2), Baylor (20-14), Hardin-Simmons (0-2), Houston (33-27), Houston Baptist (0-1), Lamar (5-6), North Texas (1-4), Prairie View A&M (0-2), Rice (2-5), Sam Houston State (0-2), Southern Methodist (10-14), Stephen F. Austin (2-5), Texas (35-38), Texas A&M (13-15), Texas A&M-Corpus Christi (0-1), Texas-Arlington (0-1), Texas Christian (5-8), Texas-El Paso (14-16), Texas-San Antonio (1-4), Texas Southern (2-9), Texas State (0-2), Texas Tech (17-19), Trinity (0-1) and West Texas A&M (0-1)
MICHIGAN (eight) 146-85 .632 Central Michigan (3-4), Detroit (3-6), Eastern Michigan (3-4), Michigan (64-29), Michigan State (69-33), Oakland (1-3), Wayne State (1-2) and Western Michigan (2-4)
NEW YORK (22) 142-175 .448 Albany (1-5), Binghamton (0-1), Buffalo (2-4), Canisius (6-4), CCNY (4-2), Colgate (0-4), Columbia (2-4), Cornell (2-6), Fordham (2-4), Hofstra (0-4), Iona (1-15), Long Island (0-7), Manhattan (3-9), Marist (0-2), NYU (9-9), Niagara (2-4), St. Bonaventure (7-10), St. John's (27-32), Siena (4-6), Stony Brook (0-1), Syracuse (70-41) and Wagner (0-1)
OKLAHOMA (five) 106-96 .525 Oklahoma (43-33), Oklahoma City (8-13), Oklahoma State (39-28), Oral Roberts (4-6) and Tulsa (12-16)
ILLINOIS (10) 98-97 .503 Bradley (11-9), DePaul (21-25), Eastern Illinois (0-2), Illinois (41-32), Illinois-Chicago (0-3), Illinois State (3-6), Loyola of Chicago (15-6), Northern Illinois (0-3), Northwestern (1-1) and Southern Illinois (6-10)
FLORIDA (11) 90-71 .559 Florida (48-21), Florida A&M (1-3), Florida Atlantic (0-1), Florida Gulf Coast (3-3), Florida International (0-1), Florida State (23-18), Jacksonville (4-5), Miami (8-10), North Florida (0-1), South Florida (2-3) and UCF (1-5)
VIRGINIA (12) 86-104 .453 George Mason (5-6), Hampton (2-6), James Madison (4-5), Liberty (1-5), Norfolk State (2-2), Old Dominion (3-12), Radford (1-3), Richmond (8-9), Virginia (35-23), Virginia Commonwealth (13-17), Virginia Military (3-3) and Virginia Tech (8-12)
WISCONSIN (four) 84-67 .556 Green Bay (1-5), Marquette (41-34), Milwaukee (3-4) and Wisconsin (39-24)
TENNESSEE (11) 78-118 .398 Austin Peay (2-8), Belmont (1-8), Chattanooga (3-11), East Tennessee State (2-11), Lipscomb (0-1), Memphis (34-26), Middle Tennessee State (4-9), Tennessee (22-24), Tennessee State (0-2), Tennessee Tech (0-2) and Vanderbilt (10-16)
WASHINGTON (five) 74-63 .540 Eastern Washington (0-3), Gonzaga (39-23), Seattle (10-13), Washington (19-18) and Washington State (6-6)
ARIZONA (three) 70-53 .569 Arizona (56-34), Arizona State (14-17) and Northern Arizona (0-2)
UTAH (five) 65-107 .378 Brigham Young (15-32), Southern Utah (0-1), Utah (38-33), Utah State (6-24) and Weber State (6-17)
IOWA (four) 61-62 .496 Drake (6-5), Iowa (31-29), Iowa State (19-20) and Northern Iowa (5-8)
CONNECTICUT (five) 60-44 .577 Central Connecticut State (0-3), Connecticut (59-31), Fairfield (0-3), Hartford (0-1) and Yale (1-6)
MARYLAND (eight) 55-58 .487 Coppin State (1-4), Loyola (0-2), Maryland (43-28), Maryland-Baltimore County (1-2), Morgan State (0-2), Mount St. Mary's (2-6), Navy (8-12) and Towson (0-2)
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (five) 51-48 .515 American University (0-3), Catholic (0-2), George Washington (4-11), Georgetown (47-30) and Howard University (0-2)
ALABAMA (nine) 51-65 .440 Alabama (23-22), Alabama A&M (0-1), Alabama State (0-4), Auburn (17-10), Jacksonville State (0-1), Samford (0-2), South Alabama (1-8), Troy (0-2) and UAB (10-15)
MASSACHUSETTS (nine) 48-67 .417 Boston College (22-19), Boston University (2-7), Harvard (2-6), Holy Cross (8-13), Massachusetts (11-9), Northeastern (3-9), Springfield (0-1), Tufts (0-2) and Williams (0-1)
ARKANSAS (four) 48-40 .545 Arkansas (45-33), Arkansas-Pine Bluff (1-1), Arkansas State (0-1) and UALR (2-5)
LOUISIANA (12) 42-77 .353 Louisiana-Lafayette (4-11), Louisiana-Monroe (0-7), Louisiana State (27-26), Louisiana Tech (4-5), Loyola of New Orleans (0-3), McNeese State (0-2), New Orleans (1-5), Nicholls State (0-2), Northwestern State (2-3), Southeastern Louisiana (0-1), Southern (1-9) and Tulane (3-3)
OREGON (four) 41-41 .500 Oregon (26-16), Oregon State (15-21), Portland (0-2) and Portland State (0-2)
NEVADA (two) 39-28 .582 Nevada (6-9) and UNLV (33-19)
NEW JERSEY (seven) 37-66 .359 Fairleigh Dickinson (1-6), Monmouth (1-4), Princeton (13-29), Rider (0-3), Rutgers (6-8), Saint Peter's (0-3) and Seton Hall (16-13)
GEORGIA (five) 33-40 .452 Georgia (7-12), Georgia Southern (0-3), Georgia State (2-5), Georgia Tech (23-17) and Mercer (1-3)
WEST VIRGINIA (two) 33-36 .478 Marshall (1-6) and West Virginia (32-30)
MISSOURI (four) 31-46 .403 Missouri (22-28), Missouri State (3-6), Saint Louis (6-11) and Southeast Missouri State (0-1)
RHODE ISLAND (three) 23-33 .411 Brown (0-2), Providence (15-21) and Rhode Island (8-10)
SOUTH CAROLINA (nine) 23-61 .274 Charleston Southern (0-1), Clemson (11-13), Coastal Carolina (0-4), College of Charleston (1-5), Furman (1-7), South Carolina (8-10), South Carolina State (0-5), Winthrop (1-11) and Wofford (1-5)
MISSISSIPPI (six) 19-37 .339 Alcorn State (3-6), Jackson State (0-3), Mississippi (5-9), Mississippi State (11-11), Mississippi Valley State (0-5) and Southern Mississippi (0-3)
NEW MEXICO (two) 18-43 .295 New Mexico (8-16) and New Mexico State (10-27)
COLORADO (four) 15-33 .313 Air Force (0-4), Colorado (11-17), Colorado State (4-11) and Northern Colorado (0-1)
MINNESOTA (one) 14-14 .500 Minnesota (14-14)
NEBRASKA (two) 14-30 .293 Creighton (14-23) and Nebraska (0-7)
NEW HAMPSHIRE (one) 10-7 .588 Dartmouth (10-7)
WYOMING (one) 9-20 .310 Wyoming (9-20)
IDAHO (three) 9-24 .273 Boise State (0-7), Idaho (1-4) and Idaho State (8-13)
NORTH DAKOTA (two) 2-5 .286 North Dakota (0-1) and North Dakota State (2-4)
VERMONT (one) 2-7 .222 Vermont (2-7)
MONTANA (two) 2-16 .111 Montana (2-13) and Montana State (0-3)
HAWAII (one) 1-5 .167 Hawaii (1-5)
SOUTH DAKOTA (one) 0-5 .000 South Dakota State (0-5)
DELAWARE (two) 0-6 .000 Delaware (0-5) and Delaware State (0-1)

NOTE: Two states - Alaska and Maine - never had a school participate in the NCAA Division I Tournament.

States of Success: California and Kentucky Tied for Most Men's Cage Crowns

Kentucky (32), buttressed by Georgetown College's two NAIA championships in the previous eight years, is tied with California as the state with the most national titles from each level of four-year college men's basketball - NCAA Division I, NIT, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III and NAIA. Ohio has moved into third place ahead of North Carolina.

Illinois and Ohio are the only states to boast at least one champion from all five levels. Among the 14 states amassing a total of more than 10 national crowns, Missouri is the only one in that group without a Division I championship after Virginia's success in 2019. Drury (Mo.), Central Missouri and Northwest Missouri State won DII titles in the last decade but the state's two headline schools - Mizzou and Saint Louis - never have reached the NCAA DI Final Four.

The biggest surprise among states fond of hoops but never capturing a four-year school national title was Iowa until Graceland won NAIA crown three years ago. Following is how states stack up by national four-year school titles including the NIT and various levels of small-college basketball:

State DI NIT DII DIII NAIA Total
California 15 8 5 0 4 32
Kentucky 11 3 10 0 8 32
Ohio 3 6 3 5 3 20
North Carolina 13 2 3 0 1 19
Missouri 0 1 6 2 8 17
Oklahoma 2 2 1 0 11 16
Pennsylvania 4 7 2 3 0 16
Wisconsin 2 1 0 13 0 16
Illinois 1 6 1 6 1 15
New York 2 10 0 3 0 15
Indiana 5 2 6 0 1 14
Texas 2 4 0 0 8 14
Kansas 3 1 1 0 6 11
Virginia 1 4 5 1 0 11
Minnesota 0 3 2 2 3 10
Michigan 3 3 1 2 0 9
Tennessee 0 3 1 1 4 9
Georgia 0 0 1 0 6 7
Massachusetts 1 1 1 4 0 7
Alabama 0 0 3 0 3 6
Connecticut 4 1 1 0 0 6
Maryland 1 1 2 0 1 5
Arizona 1 0 0 0 3 4
District of Columbia 1 1 1 1 0 4
Florida 2 0 2 0 0 4
South Carolina 0 2 0 0 2 4
Utah 1 3 0 0 0 4
West Virginia 0 2 0 0 2 4
Colorado 0 1 2 0 0 3
Louisiana 0 0 0 0 3 3
New Jersey 0 2 0 1 0 3
South Dakota 0 0 3 0 0 3
Arkansas 1 0 0 0 1 2
Nebraska 0 1 0 1 0 2
Rhode Island 0 2 0 0 0 2
Washington 0 0 2 0 0 2
Hawaii 0 0 0 0 1 1
Iowa 0 0 0 0 1 1
Mississippi 0 1 0 0 0 1
Montana 0 0 0 0 1 1
Nevada 1 0 0 0 0 1
New Mexico 0 0 0 0 1 1
Oregon 1 0 0 0 0 1
Wyoming 1 0 0 0 0 1

NOTE: Seven states - Alaska, Delaware, Idaho, Maine, New Hampshire, North Dakota and Vermont - never have had a four-year school win a men's national championship.

Dribble Handoff: Power-League Members Keeping Coaching Chain In-House

In a typical season, about 1/5 of the NCAA DI head coaches are "next man up" in-house promotions. New principal pilots Mark Adams and Hubert Davis are among the following eight active mentors serving as bench boss for a power-conference member:

Head Coach (Years as Aide) Power-League School Stint as Assistant at Same University Under Predecessor
Mike Boynton Jr. (1) Oklahoma State 2016-17 under Brad Underwood
Matt Painter (1) Purdue 2004-05 under Gene Keady
Mark Adams (5) Texas Tech 2016-17 through 2020-21 under Chris Beard
Jim Boeheim (7) Syracuse 1969-70 through 1975-76 under Roy Danforth
Hubert Davis (9) North Carolina 2012-13 through 2020-21 under Roy Williams
Travis Steele (9) Xavier 2009-10 through 2017-18 under Chris Mack
Tom Izzo (12) Michigan State 1983-84 through 1994-95 under Jud Heathcote
Greg Gard (15) Wisconsin 2001-02 to 2015-16 under Bo Ryan

On This Date: Former College Hoopers Made News on April 6 MLB Contests

Extra! Extra! While a new season unfolds, you can read news all about memorable major league baseball achievements, moments and transactions involving former college basketball players. Numerous ex-college hoopers had front-row seats to many of the most notable games and dates in MLB history.

Baseball is portrayed as a thinking man's game but only 4% of active MLB players earned college diplomas. Two former small-college hoopers from Iowa - Davey Lopes (Iowa Wesleyan) and Jim Todd (Parsons) before transferring to schools in other states - made MLB news on this date. Ditto ex-hoopers Mark Acre (New Mexico State), Tony Clark (San Diego State), Mark Hendrickson (Washington State) and Darrell Sutherland (Stanford) from Far West universities. Unless you habitually pore over the content at baseballlibrary.com, baseballreference.com and nationalpastime.com, following is an April 6 calendar focusing on such versatile MLB athletes:

APRIL 6

  • Oakland A's RHP Mark Acre (played in 1990 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament with New Mexico State) earned his second relief victory in three days against the New York Yankees in 1997.

  • Baltimore Orioles CF Al Bumbry (Virginia State's runner-up in scoring with 16.7 ppg as freshman in 1964-65) scored four runs against the Kansas City Royals in 1983.

  • Detroit Tigers 1B Tony Clark (San Diego State's leading scorer in WAC games in 1991-92) contributed two sixth-inning hits, including a grand slam, in a 10-inning, 10-9 win over the Chicago White Sox in 2001. Eight years later, Clark clobbered back-to-back homers for the Arizona Diamondbacks in a season-opening, 9-8 win against the Colorado Rockies in 2009.

  • In 2006, LHP Mark Hendrickson (two-time All-Pacific-10 Conference selection paced Washington State four straight seasons in rebounding 1992-93 through 1995-96) hurled first complete-game shutout for the Tampa Devil Rays in a span of 349 contests (three-hit, 2-0 whitewash against Baltimore Orioles).

  • Los Angeles Dodgers 2B Davey Lopes (NAIA All-District 15 selection for Iowa Wesleyan averaged 16.9 ppg as freshman in 1964-65 and 12.1 ppg as sophomore in 1965-66 before transferring to Washburn KS with his coach and becoming All-CIC choice with 1968 NAIA Tournament team) scored three runs and stole three bases against the San Diego Padres in a 1974 game.

  • RHP Joe Niekro (averaged 8.9 ppg and 3.8 rpg for West Liberty WV from 1963-64 through 1965-66) purchased from the Atlanta Braves by the Houston Astros for $35,000 in 1975.

  • In his first start with the St. Louis Cardinals, RHP Sonny Siebert (team-high 16.7 ppg for Missouri in 1957-58 as All-Big Eight Conference second-team selection) tossed a four-hit shutout against the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1974.

  • RHP Darrell Sutherland (averaged 8.1 ppg and 2.2 rpg for Stanford from 1960-61 through 1962-63) awarded on waivers from the Philadelphia Phillies to the New York Mets as a first-year waiver selection in 1964.

  • RHP Ralph Terry (juco hooper averaged 22 ppg for Northeastern Oklahoma A&M in mid-1950s) traded by the Cleveland Indians to Kansas City Athletics in 1966.

  • RHP Jim Todd (Parsons IA hooper before averaging 16 ppg with Millersville PA in 1968-69) traded by the Chicago Cubs to the Oakland Athletics for a player to be designated and cash in 1975.

  • After 159 MLB starts, RHP Chris Young (All-Ivy League first-team selection as Princeton's leading scorer and rebounder in 1999-00) made his debut with the Seattle Mariners as a reliever (two hitless innings against Oakland Athletics in 2014).

Hot or Not? Six of Past Seven NCAA Titlists Entered Tourney Coming Off Loss

Which cliche is most accurate? If a team is on a winning streak entering the NCAA Tournament, it has momentum on its side and is peaking at the right time. On the other hand, some observers contend a loss before the start of the playoffs is deemed a wake-up call. Baylor became the sixth champion in last seven tourneys to enter playoffs on a losing note. All five of Duke's champions under coach Mike Krzyzewski entered the NCAA tourney with fewer than eight straight triumphs.

Since the last undefeated team in Division I (Indiana was 32-0 in 1975-76), there have been 44 national champions. Twenty-three of those squads entered the tourney with a victory and 21 entered with a defeat. The longest winning streak of a champion-to-be in that span was by UCLA, which won 13 in a row in 1995 before posting six more triumphs in the playoffs. Louisville accounted for two of the other double-digit victory streaks for champions-to-be entering the playoffs.

Of the 23 aforementioned squads entering on a winning note, the average winning streak was six in a row. Following in reverse order is how those 44 post-unbeaten IU titlists entered the NCAA playoffs (including conference tournaments):

Year NCAA Champion Coach Pre-NCAA Playoff Finish
2021 Baylor Scott Drew Lost one (Oklahoma State)
2019 Virginia Tony Bennett Lost one (Florida State)
2018 Villanova Jay Wright Won five
2017 North Carolina Roy Williams Lost one (Duke)
2016 Villanova Jay Wright Lost one (Seton Hall)
2015 Duke Mike Krzyzewski Lost one (Notre Dame)
2014 Connecticut Kevin Ollie Lost one (Louisville)
2013 Louisville Rick Pitino Won 10
2012 Kentucky John Calipari Lost one (Vanderbilt)
2011 Connecticut Jim Calhoun Won five
2010 Duke Mike Krzyzewski Won four
2009 North Carolina Roy Williams Lost one (Florida State)
2008 Kansas Bill Self Won seven
2007 Florida Billy Donovan Won four
2006 Florida Billy Donovan Won five
2005 North Carolina Roy Williams Lost one (Georgia Tech)
2004 Connecticut Jim Calhoun Won three
2003 Syracuse Jim Boeheim Lost one (Connecticut)
2002 Maryland Gary Williams Lost one (North Carolina State)
2001 Duke Mike Krzyzewski Won four
2000 Michigan State Tom Izzo Won five
1999 Connecticut Jim Calhoun Won five
1998 Kentucky Tubby Smith Won seven
1997 Arizona Lute Olson Lost two (Stanford and California)
1996 Kentucky Rick Pitino Lost one (Mississippi State)
1995 UCLA Jim Harrick Won 13
1994 Arkansas Nolan Richardson Lost one (Kentucky)
1993 North Carolina Dean Smith Lost one (Georgia Tech)
1992 Duke Mike Krzyzewski Won seven
1991 Duke Mike Krzyzewski Lost one (North Carolina)
1990 UNLV Jerry Tarkanian Won five
1989 Michigan Bill Frieder/Steve Fisher Lost one (Illinois)
1988 Kansas Larry Brown Lost one (Kansas State)
1987 Indiana Bob Knight Won one
1986 Louisville Denny Crum Won 11
1985 Villanova Rollie Massimino Lost one (St. John's)
1984 Georgetown John Thompson Jr. Won six
1983 North Carolina State Jim Valvano Won four
1982 North Carolina Dean Smith Won 11
1981 Indiana Bob Knight Won five
1980 Louisville Denny Crum Won three
1979 Michigan State Jud Heathcote Lost one (Wisconsin)
1978 Kentucky Joe B. Hall Won eight
1977 Marquette Al McGuire Lost one (Michigan)

Victory Map: Baylor 15th NCAA Titlist to Win All Playoff Games By > 8 Points

Baylor became the 15th NCAA Tournament champion to win all of its playoff games by at least nine points. There has been some smooth sailing, but it usually is a rugged road en route to becoming NCAA champion such as Virginia in 2019 when the Cavaliers won their last four playoff games by an average of 4.5 points. Most titlists have near-death experiences and are severely tested at least once on the serpentine tourney trail. In 1997, Arizona won each of its playoff contests by a single-digit margin.

A total of 51 champions won a minimum of one playoff game by fewer than five, including 24 titlists to win at least one contest by just one point. Wyoming '43 would have become the only champion to trail at halftime in every tournament game if the Cowboys didn't score the last three baskets of the first half in the national final to lead Georgetown at intermission (18-16). Four titlists trailed at intermission in both of their Final Four games - Kentucky '51, Louisville '86, Duke '92 and Kentucky '98.

UCLA '67, the first varsity season for Lew Alcindor (became Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), set the record for largest average margin of victory for a champion when the Bruins started a dazzling streak of 10 consecutive Final Four appearances. They won their 12 NCAA playoff games with Alcindor manning the middle by an amazing average margin of 21.5 points.

Which of John Wooden's 10 national champion UCLA teams did the Wizard of Westwood perceive as his best?

"I've never come out and said it," Wooden said before passing away two years ago, "but it would be hard to pick a team over the 1968 team. I will say it would be the most difficult team to prepare for and play against offensively and defensively. It created so many problems. It had such great balance. We had the big center (Alcindor) who is the most valuable player of all time. Mike Warren was a three-year starter who may have been the most intelligent floor leader ever, going eight complete games once without a turnover. Lucius Allen was a very physical, talented individual who was extremely quick. Lynn Shackleford was a great shooter out of the corner who didn't allow defenses to sag on Jabbar. Mike Lynn didn't have power, but he had as fine a pair of hands around the boards as I have ever seen."

The roster for UCLA's 1968 national champion included six players with double-digit season scoring averages, but senior forward Edgar Lacey dropped off the team with an 11.9-point average following a dispute with Wooden after a ballyhooed mid-season defeat against Houston before 52,693 fans at the Astrodome. Lacey, assigned to defend Cougars star Elvin Hayes early in the game, was annoyed with Wooden for singling him out following Hayes' 29-point first-half outburst. Lacey, the leading rebounder for the Bruins' 1965 NCAA titlist when he was an All-Tournament team selection, missed the 1966-67 campaign because of a fractured left kneecap.

The three Lew-CLA teams rank among the seven NCAA champions with average margins of victory in a tournament of more than 19 points per game. It's no wonder a perceptive scribe wrote the acronym NCAA took on a new meaning during the plunderous Alcindor Era - "No Chance Against Alcindor."

"Bill Walton might have been a better all-around player (than Alcindor)," Wooden said. "If you were grading a player for every fundamental skill, Walton would rank the highest of any center who ever played. But Alcindor is the most valuable, owing to the pressure he put on the other team at both ends of the court."

UNC won all six of its playoff contests by double digits in 2009 but the only titlist to win all of its tournament games by more than 15 points was Ohio State '60. Center Jerry Lucas, a first-team All-American as a sophomore, averaged 24 points and 16 rebounds in four playoff contests for the Buckeyes. He collected 36 points and 25 rebounds to help them erase a six-point halftime deficit in their Mideast Regional opener against Western Kentucky.

Duke's five kingpins under Mike Krzyzewski have all come with average winning margin of at least 12.5 points per playoff game. Following is the breakdown of point differential and average margin of victory in NCAA playoffs for first 82 national champions:

Championship Team Coach G. Largest Smallest Average
UCLA '67 John Wooden 4 49 15 23.75
Loyola of Chicago '63 George Ireland 5 *69 2 23.0
Indiana '81 Bob Knight 5 35 13 22.6
Kentucky '96 Rick Pitino 6 38 7 21.5
UCLA '68 John Wooden 4 32 9 21.25
Michigan State '79 Jud Heathcote 5 34 11 20.8
Villanova '16 Jay Wright 6 44 3 20.67
North Carolina '09 Roy Williams 6 43 12 20.17
Ohio State '60 Fred Taylor 4 22 17 19.5
UCLA '69 John Wooden 4 38 3 19.5
UNLV '90 Jerry Tarkanian 6 30 2 18.67
Oklahoma State '45 Hank Iba 3 27 4 18.67
UCLA '70 John Wooden 4 23 11 18.0
UCLA '72 John Wooden 4 32 5 18.0
Villanova '18 Jay Wright 6 26 12 17.67
Kentucky '58 Adolph Rupp 4 33 1 17.5
Kentucky '49 Adolph Rupp 3 29 10 17.33
Indiana '40 Branch McCracken 3 24 9 17.0
Duke '01 Mike Krzyzewski 6 43 10 16.67
Louisville '13 Rick Pitino 6 31 4 16.17
Florida '06 Billy Donovan 6 26 4 16.0
UCLA '73 John Wooden 4 21 11 16.0
Kentucky '48 Adolph Rupp 3 23 8 15.67
North Carolina '93 Dean Smith 6 45 6 15.67
UCLA '65 John Wooden 4 24 8 15.5
Baylor '21 Scott Drew 6 24 9 15.33
Michigan State '00 Tom Izzo 6 27 11 15.33
Oregon '39 Howard Hobson 3 18 13 15.33
Kansas '52 Phog Allen 4 19 4 14.75
Duke '15 Mike Krzyzewski 6 29 5 14.67
Duke '10 Mike Krzyzewski 6 29 2 14.5
UCLA '95 Jim Harrick 6 36 1 14.33
North Carolina State '74 Norman Sloan 4 28 3 14.25
Florida '07 Billy Donovan 6 43 7 14.17
Kansas '08 Bill Self 6 24 2 14.17
Duke '91 Mike Krzyzewski 6 29 2 14.0
Maryland '02 Gary Williams 6 30 8 14.0
San Francisco '56 Phil Woolpert 4 18 11 14.0
North Carolina '05 Roy Williams 6 28 1 13.83
San Francisco '55 Phil Woolpert 5 23 1 13.8
Connecticut '04 Jim Calhoun 6 20 1 13.33
Kentucky '98 Tubby Smith 6 27 1 13.3
Indiana '76 Bob Knight 5 20 5 13.2
Cincinnati '62 Ed Jucker 4 20 2 12.75
Duke '92 Mike Krzyzewski 6 26 1 12.5
Cincinnati '61 Ed Jucker 4 23 5 12.0
Connecticut '99 Jim Calhoun 6 25 3 11.83
Kentucky '12 John Calipari 6 16 8 11.83
Louisville '86 Denny Crum 6 20 3 11.83
Oklahoma A&M '46 Hank Iba 3 17 3 11.67
Holy Cross '47 Doggie Julian 3 15 8 11.33
California '59 Pete Newell 4 20 1 11.25
La Salle '54 Ken Loeffler 5 16 2 11.2
Arkansas '94 Nolan Richardson 6 19 4 11.17
North Carolina '17 Roy Williams 6 39 1 11.17
Stanford '42 Everett Dean 3 15 6 10.67
Indiana '87 Bob Knight 6 34 1 10.5
Connecticut '11 Jim Calhoun 6 29 1 10.33
Michigan '89 Steve Fisher 6 37 1 9.83
Georgetown '84 John Thompson Jr. 5 14 1 9.8
Kentucky '51 Adolph Rupp 4 16 2 9.75
Louisville '80 Denny Crum 5 20 2 9.2
Kentucky '78 Joe B. Hall 5 22 3 9.0
Syracuse '03 Jim Boeheim 6 16 1 9.0
Kansas '88 Larry Brown 6 13 3 8.83
UCLA '71 John Wooden 4 18 2 8.5
North Carolina '57 Frank McGuire 5 16 1 8.4
Marquette '77 Al McGuire 5 15 1 8.0
Connecticut '14 Kevin Ollie 6 12 5 7.83
UCLA '64 John Wooden 4 15 4 7.5
Virginia '19 Tony Bennett 6 15 1 7.5
UCLA '75 John Wooden 5 14 1 7.4
Indiana '53 Branch McCracken 4 13 1 7.25
Utah '44 Vadal Peterson 3 10 2 7.0
Texas Western '66 Don Haskins 5 15 1 6.4
Wyoming '43 Everett Shelton 3 12 3 6.33
Arizona '97 Lute Olson 6 8 3 5.33
North Carolina State '83 Jim Valvano 6 19 1 5.33
Villanova '85 Rollie Massimino 6 12 2 5.0
North Carolina '82 Dean Smith 5 10 1 4.6
Wisconsin '41 Bud Foster 3 6 1 4.0
CCNY '50 Nat Holman 3 5 1 3.0

*All-time tournament record (111-42 first-round victory over Tennessee Tech).
NOTE: Sixteen teams participated in a total of 23 overtime games en route to national titles - Utah (1944), North Carolina (two triple-overtime Final Four games in 1957), Cincinnati (1961), Loyola of Chicago (1963), Texas Western (two in 1966, including a double overtime), North Carolina State (double overtime in 1974), UCLA (two in 1975), Louisville (two in 1980), North Carolina State (double overtime in 1983), Michigan (1989), Duke (1992), North Carolina (1993), Arizona (two in 1997), Kentucky (1998), Kansas (2008), Connecticut (2014) and Virginia (two in 2019).

Senior Moments: How Much Experience Does NCAA Kingpin Really Require?

Only two seniors were among Baylor's top nine scorers, exhibiting again why a senior-laden lineup is not a prerequisite for capturing a national championship. An average of only two seniors were among the top seven scorers for NCAA Tournament titlists since Villanova captured the NCAA crown in 1985 when the playoff field expanded to at least 64 teams. National titlists UConn '11, Florida '06 and Arizona '97 also didn't have a senior among their top six scorers.

Eight of the 16 NCAA champions from 1991 through 2006 boasted no more than one senior among its top seven scorers, which is what ACC rival Duke had four years ago. Only three NCAA champions since Indiana '87 - UCLA (1995), Michigan (2000) and Maryland (2002) - featured seniors as their top two scorers. Following is a look at the vital seniors for the previous 36 basically youthful championship teams (in reverse order):

2021 - Baylor (two of top nine scorers were seniors/MaCio Teague was second-leading scorer and Mark Vital was seventh)
2019 - Virginia (none of top seven scorers was a senior)
2018 - Villanova (no one among eight-man rotation was a senior)
2017 - North Carolina (three of 10-man rotation were seniors/Kennedy Meeks was third-leading scorer, Isaiah Hicks was fourth and Nate Britt was eighth).
2016 - Villanova (two of eight-man rotation were seniors/Ryan Arcidiacono was third-leading scorer and Daniel Ochefu was fourth).
2015 - Duke (one of eight-man rotation was a senior/Quinn Cook was second-leading scorer).
2014 - Connecticut (four of top 10 scorers were seniors/Shabazz Napier was leading scorer, Niels Giffey was fourth, Lasan Kromah was fifth and Tyler Olander was 10th).
2013 - Louisville (one of top eight scorers was a senior/Peyton Siva was second-leading scorer).
2012 - Kentucky (one of top seven scorers was a senior/Darius Miller was fifth-leading scorer).
2011 - Connecticut (none of top six scorers was a senior).
2010 - Duke (three of nine-man rotation were seniors/Jon Scheyer was leading scorer, Brian Zoubek was fourth and Lance Thomas was sixth).
2009 - North Carolina (two of top eight in scoring average were seniors/Tyler Hansbrough was leading scorer and Danny Green was fourth).
2008 - Kansas (one of top six scorers was a senior/Darnell Jackson was fourth-leading scorer).
2007 - Florida (two of nine-man rotation were seniors/Lee Humphrey was fifth and Chris Richard was sixth).
2006 - Florida (none of top seven scorers was a senior).
2005 - North Carolina (one of top five scorers was a senior/Jawad Williams was third).
2004 - Connecticut (one of top eight scorers was a senior/Taliek Brown was sixth).
2003 - Syracuse (one of top eight scorers was a senior/Keith Duany was fourth).
2002 - Maryland (three of top eight regulars were seniors/Juan Dixon was top scorer, Lonny Baxter was second and Byron Mouton was fourth).
2001 - Duke (two of top nine scorers were seniors/Shane Battier was second and Nate James was fifth).
2000 - Michigan State (three of top 11 scorers were seniors/Morris Peterson was first, Mateen Cleaves was second and A.J. Granger was fifth).
1999 - Connecticut (one of top seven scorers was a senior/Ricky Moore was fifth).
1998 - Kentucky (two of top seven scorers were seniors/Jeff Sheppard was first and Allen Edwards was fifth).
1997 - Arizona (none of top seven scorers was a senior).
1996 - Kentucky (three of top 10 scorers were seniors/Tony Delk was first, Walter McCarty was third and Mark Pope was sixth).
1995 - UCLA (three of top seven scorers were seniors/Ed O'Bannon was first, Tyus Edney was second and George Zidek was fourth).
1994 - Arkansas (one of top 10 scorers was a senior/Roger Crawford was eighth).
1993 - North Carolina (one of top seven scorers was a senior/George Lynch was second).
1992 - Duke (two of top 10 scorers were seniors/Christian Laettner was first and Brian Davis was fifth).
1991 - Duke (one of top 10 scorers was a senior/Greg Koubek was seventh).
1990 - UNLV (two of top eight scorers were seniors/David Butler was third and Moses Scurry was sixth).
1989 - Michigan (two of top 11 scorers were seniors/Glen Rice was first and Mark Hughes was sixth).
1988 - Kansas (two of top 11 scorers were seniors/Danny Manning was first and Chris Piper was fourth).
1987 - Indiana (two of top eight scorers were seniors/Steve Alford was first and Daryl Thomas was second).
1986 - Louisville (three of top nine scorers were seniors/Billy Thompson was first, Milt Wagner was second and Jeff Hall was fifth).
1985 - Villanova (three of top eight scorers were seniors/Ed Pinckney was first, Dwayne McClain was second and Gary McLain was fourth).

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