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Total chaos

Can't even imagine him on the floor with Calbert, Graham, Bailey, Henderson. That's one scary lineup.
It's the lineup that will always haunt Hoosier Nation as the banner that got away, thanks to Ted Valentine's overzealous whistle and his distain for anything Bob Knight on the day the music died in Minneapolis.
 
It's the lineup that will always haunt Hoosier Nation as the banner that got away, thanks to Ted Valentine's overzealous whistle and his distain for anything Bob Knight on the day the music died in Minneapolis.
IU dismantled UCLA in the regional final and was doing the same vs Duke. Hurley's 3 pt shooting prevented it from being a 15 pt halftime deficit ....then the whistles started blowing...and blowing...and blowing. Next thing you know, almost every IU player had fouled out. Really should be one more banner form the 89-93 period.
 
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IU dismantled UCLA in the regional final and was doing the same vs Duke. Hurley's 3 pt shooting prevented it from being a 15 pt halftime deficit ....then the whistles started blowing...and blowing...and blowing. Next thing you know, almost every IU player had fouled out. Really should be one more banner form the 89-93 period.
Annie Avatar, ROTFLMAO!!!
 
IU dismantled UCLA in the regional final and was doing the same vs Duke. Hurley's 3 pt shooting prevented it from being a 15 pt halftime deficit ....then the whistles started blowing...and blowing...and blowing. Next thing you know, almost every IU player had fouled out. Really should be one more banner form the 89-93 period.
If Laettner hadn't hit "The Miracle Shot" against Kentucky, Hurley's three point barrage wouldn't have happened. That Hurley kid was a sharp thorn stuck in our side, much like the thorn found while stuck in farmland more north.

"If butt and the nutz the candy of Christmas..." paraphrased from Memorable Quotes of Bob Knight, third edition with apologies finding Pat and Timmy.
 
Coach, the team was fine. You went total panic mode with 3 seconds left and started making mass substitutions instead of just rolling with what was working.
True...but those final 6 seconds, Mgbako/Goode..at least ONE of them, needed ro be on the floor. And it's like he didn't realize this until after he drew up final play.

Clown show
 
If Laettner hadn't hit "The Miracle Shot" against Kentucky, Hurley's three point barrage wouldn't have happened. That Hurley kid was a sharp thorn stuck in our side, much like the thorn found while stuck in farmland more north.

"If butt and the nutz the candy of Christmas..." paraphrased from Memorable Quotes of Bob Knight, third edition with apologies finding Pat and Timmy.
will take it one more step...I thought Laettner should have been tossed from the UK game when he chest stomped the player with his size 14. Then he wouldn't even have been on the court in the end to hit that shot.
The Valentine thing goes all the way back to the 3OT game in Madison back in 1987. Then the infamous motivational bull whip incident the week before the Duke game. Ted V had it in for RMK hard. No way he was letting IU win that game in 92.
 
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True...but those final 6 seconds, Mgbako/Goode..at least ONE of them, needed ro be on the floor. And it's like he didn't realize this until after he drew up final play.

Clown show
Spread the floor, bringing out all players and let Myles "Blow-bye, bye" " Rice run with it. It's what he does best, getting to the basket before defense has time to react. Instead, the circus came to town and it had a clown. Forgetting to shake hands was only part of his act. Like Emmett Kelly, this clown is a sad clown, one who smiles down with frown. "Good afternoon, Ladies and Gentlemen, I present to you, Clown Woodson!" barks the ringmaster, the honorable Scottie Dolson. (getting nervous again)
 
Spread the floor, bringing out all players and let Myles "Blow-bye, bye" " Rice run with it. It's what he does best, getting to the basket before defense has time to react. Instead, the circus came to town and it had a clown. Forgetting to shake hands was only part of his act. Like Emmett Kelly, this clown is a sad clown, one who smiles down with frown. "Good afternoon, Ladies and Gentlemen, I present to you, Clown Woodson!" barks the ringmaster, the honorable Scottie Dolson. (getting nervous again)
Should have never called a timeout to begin with.

But Woody likes to "play" coach sometimes
 
I like him a lot too. I hope if there's a coaching change, that he sticks around with whoever the new coach is. His abilities should translate to really any coach, and coaching style. And from everything I've read or heard about him, he's a great kid, works his ass off... We'll need people like him if we change coaches, and have to rebuild everything.

IF there is a coaching change??!!
There better be.
Damn, man, don't jinx it!
 
will take it one more step...I thought Laettner should have been tossed from the UK game when he chest stomped the player with his size 14. Then he wouldn't even have been on the court in the end to hit that shot.
The Valentine thing goes all the way back to the 3OT game in Madison back in 1987. Then the infamous motivational bull whip incident the week before the Duke game. Ted V had it in for RMK hard. No way he was letting IU win that game in 92.
That 3 OT game you speak of, the one won? It seems like 5 OT as years grow. If this is truly the one, Wisconsin players were later each given commemorative plaques for their all-out ballsy effort to win that night. For Badger fans, it was one of those dreaded "barnburning gut-wrenchers" one never forgets. I watched it on TV. It started late and ended later. I was fortunate to not have to work the next day. I think it was Tuesday night which would make more sense. Losing a game like that, like they did and we did yesterday, it can't be healthy. No plaques of commendation this time of chaos.

I also fuzzily remember a famous game in AH with Wisconsin. They beat us at home, ending their string of futility against us at something like 34 games. IU's Frank Wilson failed to get the ball inbounds underneath our own basket, leading immediately to the Badger victory. Frank caught a lot of fan frustration for that act he committed, or lack thereof, acting like I should have, failing miserably. He's since been forgiven and has gone on to lead a productive life of benefit to society, as I imagine one day we will, too, in forgiveness give to Galloway, doing so that he may do, too, that one day, forth giving.
 
I almost posted looked like a “Chinese fire drill” but didn’t want to be accused of being a racist.

Since that has nothing to do about the belief of the superiority or inferiority of a race, I think you'd have been safe - not that more than 10% of people actually know the definition of racism, but whatever.

The word you and that 90% are looking for is "stereotype".
 
That 3 OT game you speak of, the one won? It seems like 5 OT as years grow. If this is truly the one, Wisconsin players were later each given commemorative plaques for their all-out ballsy effort to win that night. For Badger fans, it was one of those dreaded "barnburning gut-wrenchers" one never forgets. I watched it on TV. It started late and ended later. I was fortunate to not have to work the next day. I think it was Tuesday night which would make more sense. Losing a game like that, like they did and we did yesterday, it can't be healthy. No plaques of commendation this time of chaos.

I also fuzzily remember a famous game in AH with Wisconsin. They beat us at home, ending their string of futility against us at something like 34 games. IU's Frank Wilson failed to get the ball inbounds underneath our own basket, leading immediately to the Badger victory. Frank caught a lot of fan frustration for that act he committed, or lack thereof, acting like I should have, failing miserably. He's since been forgiven and has gone on to lead a productive life of benefit to society, as I imagine one day we will, too, in forgiveness give to Galloway, doing so that he may do, too, that one day, forth giving.
yep 3OT in Madison, winter of 87. Game ended after midnight. Game felt like was 5 hours long...was exhausting to watch.
To make long story short, a rookie ref named Ted Valentine made a critical call late in the game that favored IU. Later review shows he probably got it wrong. Valentine felt he gave the game to IU as a result. He sent an apology letter to coach Steve Yoder a few days later. That win eventually helped IU win the B1G and secure the 1 seed in Midwest...first two rounds in Indy, then Cincy, allowing IU to advance to Final 4 playing close to home, in front of mostly IU fans. My belief is that Valentine felt that his call helped RMK win that 3rd championship that year and he seemed to have it in for RMK and IU afterwards. The rest is history.
 
TV Teddy was a scumbag that shoulda been fired as soon as he first stepped on a court! Lost many games for IU! I think he was in on all the Tim Donahee betting nonsense too!
 
yep 3OT in Madison, winter of 87. Game ended after midnight. Game felt like was 5 hours long...was exhausting to watch.
To make long story short, a rookie ref named Ted Valentine made a critical call late in the game that favored IU. Later review shows he probably got it wrong. Valentine felt he gave the game to IU as a result. He sent an apology letter to coach Steve Yoder a few days later. That win eventually helped IU win the B1G and secure the 1 seed in Midwest...first two rounds in Indy, then Cincy, allowing IU to advance to Final 4 playing close to home, in front of mostly IU fans. My belief is that Valentine felt that his call helped RMK win that 3rd championship that year and he seemed to have it in for RMK and IU afterwards. The rest is history.
I faintly remember this. Was it a clutch Alford 3 where replay showed he had his foot on the arc, or am I combining memories?
 
yep 3OT in Madison, winter of 87. Game ended after midnight. Game felt like was 5 hours long...was exhausting to watch.
To make long story short, a rookie ref named Ted Valentine made a critical call late in the game that favored IU. Later review shows he probably got it wrong. Valentine felt he gave the game to IU as a result. He sent an apology letter to coach Steve Yoder a few days later. That win eventually helped IU win the B1G and secure the 1 seed in Midwest...first two rounds in Indy, then Cincy, allowing IU to advance to Final 4 playing close to home, in front of mostly IU fans. My belief is that Valentine felt that his call helped RMK win that 3rd championship that year and he seemed to have it in for RMK and IU afterwards. The rest is history.
Thank you for the history lesson. I learned something in that call for IU gone right, having been previously unknown. Ted Valentine got the last laugh and probably still has a lingering grin with a wryness of smile. That particular loss, in my mind having witnessed, ranks as #2 in all-time barn burning gut-wrenching games having lost (as gut-wrenchers always do). The first one (# 1) was while seated in Dayton's arena, watching IU vs Kentucky for the right to go to the Final Four in '75. Should have kept May on the bench with his cast and let Abernathy run with it. I believe a banner was lost with that lack of hindsight decision, a decision Bob later admitted to regret.
 
I faintly remember this. Was it a clutch Alford 3 where replay showed he had his foot on the arc, or am I combining memories?
can't remember the details of the call. But how many refs send apology letters to coaches? Shows you how much it weighed on him...and how he could possibly be motivated to cleanse his conscience down the road. Kinda bizarre.
 
That's what Notre Dame thought about Gerry Faust after his success for Cincy's Archbishop Moeller HS...fun times in South Bend on Saturday afternoons. At least he was a rosary bead-carrying Catholic.
Did Faust jump from HS directly to college? No clue on all that history.

If so, it isn't a very good comp to the jump McCollum would be making to IU. Or any current college coach to IU, for that matter.
 
Did Faust jump from HS directly to college? No clue on all that history.
Yes, and Notre Dame officials were soon fraught with the sinking, "what-were-we-thinking' feeling. It remains a head-scratcher to this day and is often presented by example in Business Management Training Guides, typically in a chapter called, The Peter Principle of Vocational Ladder Climbing.
 
Did Faust jump from HS directly to college? No clue on all that history.

If so, it isn't a very good comp to the jump McCollum would be making to IU. Or any current college coach to IU, for that matter.
yep that's correct. I attended ND football camp the summer of 85 and Faust spoke to the entire camp. Was talking a big talk, they were gonna conquer the world the upcoming season. Little did he know... he and staff were all dead men walking.
 
I spent about 30 min watching both IU-Mich games from 1993. So intense, so much talent on the court- for both teams. Crowds were rabid. Both games won by IU, by 1 point, against the Fab/Fraud 5. IU scored 75-90 points/game running the motion offense with 45 second shot clock and much more selective with 3 point shooting. The changes made to the college game really haven't led to increased scoring. If anything they just made taking crappy shots more acceptable. If younger fans really want to understand how far our program has slid, go watch these games, or maybe the IU @ OSU overtime game in '92 (painful OT loss but still a monster of a game to view).
I was at a lot of the games back then, watched every one of them as a rabid fan. One thing I notice when I watch those games now is when a mistake was made by IU it was such a huge deal. Every play mattered. Things have dropped off massively since then. Watch a Knight team back then and compare it to a Woody team now - TOTAL EMBARRASSMENT.
 
Yes, and Notre Dame officials were soon fraught with the sinking, "what-were-we-thinking' feeling. It remains a head-scratcher to this day and is often presented by example in Business Management Training Guides, typically in a chapter called, The Peter Principle of Vocational Ladder Climbing.
Well that's a pretty glaring example of the Peter Principle...but I would think not a great one to study. As that jump, the job itself, what it takes to be successful...despite the sport being the same, are soooo far a part from each other.

Some guys can do it...Bucky McMillan jumped straight from high school to college coaching. But jumping from high school, all the way to arguably the top coaching position in all of college sports...that's a bit much.

I think successfully leading a college program, at any level, mostly translates up to IU's level. Obviously there are different variables and dynamics that would be untested...but you're dealing with similar aged kids, you're recruiting, you're playing similar length schedules... Can you navigate boosters? Does your program relate to more elite level players? Those are probably the main differences.
 
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Well that's a pretty glaring example of the Peter Principle...but I would think not a great one to study. As that jump, the job itself, what it takes to be successful...despite the sport being the same, are soooo far a part from each other.

Some guys can do it...Bucky McMillan jumped straight from high school to college coaching. But jumping from high school, all the way to arguably the top coaching position in all of college sports...that's a bit much.

I think successfully leading a college program, at any level, mostly translates up to IU's level. Obviously there are different variables and dynamics that would be untested...but you're dealing with similar aged kids, you're recruiting, you're playing similar length schedules... Can you navigate boosters? Does your program relate to more elite level players? Those are probably the main differences.
Then we have rare college basketball head coaches having never played the game at that level. Tom Crean comes to mind, as does Gene Keady (Kansas football).
 
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