Caulton Tudor was one of the lucky hundreds of media who covered NC State's 1983 NCAA championship in Albuquerque, New Mexico. No one knew more about that team and its quest for the title. |
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© Tim Peeler, 2017
I followed Caulton Tudor from the locker room of Brendan
Byrne Arena at the Meadowlands to a small training room in the bowels of the
famed coliseum. NC State basketball coach Jim Valvano was there leaning against a table, seething with his media peeps in this ersatz interview room. Tony Kornheiser
was there. Mike Lupica and Mike Fratello were too. John Feinstein, Bob Ryan and
Mitch Albom were too, if memory serves correctly.
Then there was Tudor, a big-time college basketball writer
with a small-town background, something I aspired to be. Toots was a guy who
could weave his way into any conversation, any circumstance, whether it was
college basketball, football or professional golf. I was a 24-year-old
recovering hayseed whose English degree from NC State was still in its
recently mailed envelope. Tudor let me tag along with him and his entourage whenever we were covering the same events,
even from my earliest days as a student reporter.
Caulton Tudor. |
Few people had a bigger impact on how I covered college
athletics than Tudor.
On this particular night at the end of a trying 1988-89
season was a great example. Tudor was still working for the Times and I was in my first fulltime job
with The Salisbury Post.
Valvano had just endured one of the worst moments of his
coaching career, a 69-61 loss to second-ranked Georgetown in the 1989 NCAA East
Region semifinals. It was one of those rare losses that actually could be
blamed on an official. Rick Hartzell, to be specific.
Late in the game, Chris Corchiani drove inside the paint for a short jumpshot over the outstretched arms of Alonzo Mourning, the All-America center
who had already collected four fouls in the game. NC State had trailed by as
many as 16 points in the second half, and Corchiani’s shot would have cut the
Hoyas’ lead to one point with less than three minutes to play.
Corchiani made the shot, Hartzell blew his whistle and the
world paused in great anticipation while waiting for the call, knowing that the
winner of the contest would face Duke for the right to go the Final Four.
Hartzell froze in the limelight of the tournament and under
the icy stare of Georgetown coach John Thompson. He couldn’t call Mourning for
his fifth foul in such a huge situation in front of a national television
audience of millions of people.
So he motioned a traveling violation on Corchiani—something CBS
analyst Billy Packer immediately called “the worst call in the history of the
NCAA tournament.”
The call changed the momentum of the game, the Hoyas escaped
elimination and the Wolfpack slinked into its locker room to recite their Valvano-directed
postgame comments.
“It was an unfortunate call,” the players said in near
unison.
Valvano echoed the same thing in the mass interview room,
where all the morning newspaper reporters got their quotes before rushing back
to their Radio Shack laptop computers to burb out a final-edition story, which
usually covered the bases but didn’t have as much depth. Tudor and I were both
working for afternoon newspapers, and we had the luxury of next-day deadlines.
Tudor taught me to take advantage of that extra time, to
wait until the morning guys had finished with the basics and to ask more
probing questions that would make for a better second-day story. We could stay
in the lockeroom long after the morning guys had toddled off to write their
hasty ledes.
We did the same thing with Valvano, in that small training room filled with big names. I carried with me a microcassette recorder in my hand and recorded a
postgame press conference unlike anything I’d ever heard before, even when I should've turned the tape recorder off. It was Valvano
with his favorite group of people in the world—the national press corps.
When asked about the traveling violation, Valvano continued
to repeat the company line until Lupica finally had his fill of boilerplate.
“Enough of this 'unfortunate call' bullsh*t,” Lupica said. “Tell
us what you really think.”
Valvano answered: “On the record, I think it was an
unfortunate call…on the record.”
After a brief pause, the coach got wound up for exactly the
kind of barstool analysis that the national columnists—none of whom were writing
for their next morning editions—were looking for.
“Off the record…off the record….that was the most
chickensh*t thing I’ve ever seen. Gutless. He comes running in from right in
front of the Georgetown bench, and he makes that call. We were right there, all
ready to play Duke. We can take Duke. Our kids know we can take Duke. It was
horseshit.
“It was all right there. I’ve felt it all week. We had a
perfect plan to beat Georgetown and my kids fought back and pulled it off. Then
this chickensh*t mother**ker makes that call. It was all in place. We could win
another one [national championship].
“And then this guy…Jesus Christ, he’s one of our own guys—an
ACC official. I’m going to have to call my Uncle Guido and have him take care
of him. Sonofab*tch. It was the most gutless, chickensh*t thing I’ve ever seen.”
At that point, unlike the previous five minutes, Valvano
became too profane for print, with more beeps than a retreating brigade of dump
trucks.
We stood there in awe and silence. Even the big-time guys
had no words after Valvano finished.
“On the record…on the record…,” the coach said. “It was an
unfortunate call.”
It was the perfect Valvano moment, filled with humor,
profanity and a serious point: he may have even known it was the last chance he
had to win another national championship.
Valvano had had a trying year. The News and Observer of Raleigh published excerpts of a book by Peter
Golenbock that made outlandish allegations about Valvano’s program. The
Wolfpack was inundated with questions all season long and multiple
investigations were launched by various organizations, including the NCAA. The
scandal ended with a whimper, but the school was put on two years of
probation and barred from the next season’s tournament. Both Valvano and school
chancellor Bruce Poulton eventually lost their jobs.
Tudor had to write about all of those things, and more, as
the Times staff was eventually
absorbed into the N&O. His
relationship with Valvano soured because of it, but he always had cherished memories
to share from the 1983 season, when Tudor, Frank Dascenzo of the Durham Morning
Herald, Don Shea of WTVD in Durham and a handful of other North Carolina
reporters covered the Wolfpack from Atlanta to Corvallis, Oregon, to Ogden,
Utah, to Albuquerque, New Mexico, on its way to NC State’s second national
championship. He was one of the few people who heard Valvano make his famous prediction that the Wolfpack would win the championship, if it could manage to find a way to beat Pepperdine in the opening round.
Tudor was full of stories from that transcontinental trip.
He even wrote the first book about that season, a collector’s item if you ever
see it for sale. He was kind enough to share some of his favorite anecdotes when
I began writing the story of the season in the book When March Went Mad.
Somehow, the stories Tudor told were always much better than
the ones he wrote, and he was a highly decorated writer.
Because Valvano was off the record when he spoke to us that night at the Meadowlands, Tudor never wrote that story. Yet we laughed about it many times through the years, and I included the anecdote in a chapter about the late Valvano.
I’ve missed being around him since he left the N&O and I stopped writing sports full time. I saw him infrequently when he
began writing for WRAL, though when I did he always greeted me the same way as
he and Bruce Phillips did when I first started working for the Times: “Hey,
babe…what’s happening?”
There was also a little more to our friendship. Our
wives are both in the meeting-planning profession and, when we most
needed it, his wife hired mine to work a couple of conventions in Orlando. That meant
as much to me as any thing I ever got out our personal friendship.
Still, I’m thankful for everything he taught me, especially that it
is better to be the last one out of the locker room than the first one out of
the press room.
GREAT article, Tim. It brought back so many memories to me as I, too, was fortunate to experience the agony of defeat at the Meadowlands and the thrill of victory in Albuquerque. I also experienced a few of Jim's tirades but not as explicit as you described. Caulton will be missed by many.
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