Jim Valvano: The Entertainer. |
© Tim Peeler, 2018
Of course Jim Valvano stole the spotlight.
Here we were in Kansas City for the 50th anniversary
of the NCAA Championship, the tournament the NC State coach and his Wolfpack
won five years earlier in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
ACC- and East region-champion Duke was there, with junior
Danny Ferry and a team that could win the national title it missed two years
earlier. Pac-10- and West region-champion Arizona was there for the first of
the program’s four Final Four and Lute Olsen was certain his team had a chance.
Big Eight runner-up Kansas was there, with senior Danny Manny having just
beaten cross-state rival Kansas State to qualify for its eighth trip to the
national semifinals since 1957. And overwhelming favorite Oklahoma was there,
with a high-scoring offense that averaged 96.8 points per game. (How good was Oklahoma? It allowed 99 points in a game that season--and won by 52.)
Valvano showed up without his team, which finished second in
the ACC that season and lost to Duke in one of the few good games at that year’s
ACC tournament in Greensboro. The third-seeded Wolfpack had lost in a huge upset to 14th-seeded
Murray State in the first round of the NCAA’s Midwest region in Lincoln, Nebraska.
That was fortuitous for me, barely three months after
graduating from NC State with a degree in English and just two-and-a-half
months into my first professional newspaper gig with The Salisbury Post. I switched over to cover Duke at the East
Regional in the Meadowlands, where they barely survived against 11th-seeded
Rhode Island, 73-72, then blasted top-seeded Temple, 63-53.
But this was a place where I really didn’t belong. I was too
green, too immature, too unprepared. I was dabbling in extended metaphor game
stories.
Still, I took my place that Thursday afternoon in the media
scrum in the lobby of the Hyatt Regency Hotel—the famous one where the walkway
collapsed in 1981, killing 114 people and injuring 216 more—waiting for a coach/athletics
director in a tailored suit to show up and talk to us.
Valvano, it seemed, was a candidate for the UCLA job, one of
his many dalliances with other teams through the years. This one, though, was
serious. The Bruins, according to several media reports and the words uttered
right out of Dick Vitale’s mouth, were offering a five-year contract for $2.5
million guaranteed, remarkable money for a coach at the time.
Valvano, with a New York heritage and a Hollywood
personality, seemed perfect for the job. After all, he had been connected with
John Wooden since his time as a player at Rutgers, and the Wizard of Westwood
had sent Valvano a hand-written following the ’83 championship. Los Angeles
might have been the only place in the world with enough cameras and microphones
for Valvano’s taste.
That afternoon, he was playing this dalliance for all he was
worth.
Which, apparently, was a lot.
Valvano walked in with Georgia Tech coach Bobby Cremins on
their way into the “Golden Salute to the Final Four” gala—surely, Valvano
thought the red carpet was just for him—with all the other Division I head and
assistant coaches and a slew of folks who paid big money to attend. Cremins giggled
out the media’s view as Valvano gave a prerecorded dodge that he perfected
years before.
“In a situation like this, it is always the best policy to
make comments at the appropriate time,” Valvano told us. “This is not the
appropriate time. When that occasion does come up, you know I’m going to have
something to say.”
When pressed, Valvano went to one of his standards.
“I have this string in my back and you can pull it again if
you want the same answer,” he said.
Valvano went to the gala, hitched a ride to California and
met with UCLA officials. Some say he accepted the job. Then he called home to talk
to his wife Pam and three daughters. They said he could take the job if he
wanted but they were staying put at their home in Cary. They had found a
permanent home and didn’t want to leave.
UCLA saved faced by saying it wasn’t willing to pay Valvano’s
$500,000 buy-out at NC State, one of those things that can be easily
negotiated. The school wanted him badly. Vitale told me years later that the Bruin
administration had pulled the necessary strings to secure a sitcom for the
coach. (If you’ve ever seen Valvano and Vitale’s appearance on the old Cosby show, you’ll understand why it’s a
good thing this never happened.)
By Saturday afternoon, Valvano had put out a statement
saying he had withdrawn his name for consideration. UCLA went trolling for both
Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski and Kansas’ Larry Brown, who had already coached the
Bruins once, when the Final Four was over. It ended up hiring Pepperdine’s Jim
Harrick three weeks later.
With that bit of local news out of the way, I was able to actually
cover the events I was there to write about.
Duke played Kansas in the first semifinal, a Danny-vs.-Danny
rematch of a game played earlier in the year. The Blue Devils came out nervous,
missed their first eight shots and never overcame the 14-0 lead Kansas opened
with.. In the nightcap, Oklahoma overwhelmed Arizona to set up only the third
championship game ever between two teams from the same conference.
Like this year, the Final Four was played on Easter weekend,
so I spent the day at the interminable press conferences. It was a lousy way to celebrate a holiday.
The next day, though, the NCAA gave us tickets to see the
Kansas City Royals season-opener against the Toronto Blue Jays, with surly
superstar Jorge Bell. He spent all of spring training complaining about being
switched from leftfield to designated hitter and made it a national news story.
We did not have good seats at Kauffman Stadium—Heaven was
three rows behind us—but we got to see major league history that day as Bell
hit four blistering line drives to leftfield, three of which went over the
fence to make him the first player in major league history to hit three home
runs on opening day. It’s happened
three times since then, including Thursday when Chicago White Sox third
baseman Matt Davidson hit three out against the Royals, also at Kauffman
Stadium.
Danny Manning and Larry Brown. |
There was little chance we would see a second miracle that
night, because Oklahoma was just too good for Kansas. The Sooners had two
eight-point wins over the Jayhawks in the regular season, but the victories
were more dominating than the scores showed.
Besides Manning, Kansas had little more than Milt Newton,
who had exploded for 20 points against Duke defensive stopper Billy King, and a
near-home court advantage, since Kemper is only 40 miles away from Lawrence.
Valvano and the Wolfpack knew a little about that, having lost a double-digit
second half lead two years before in the Midwest regional final, when crowd at
Kemper Arena began screaming in Sensurround: “Rock. Chalk. Jayhawk.”
Even that was unlikely to make this Oz-like fairytale come
true.
Except that Manning showed he had better powers than a
wizard that night. The current Wake Forest coach scored 31 points and grabbed
18 rebounds, easily one of the best individual performances in the 50 years of
NCAA title games. As a team, “Danny
and the Miracles” shot 63 percent from the field to easily overcome its 23
turnovers.
It’s hardly remembered in the same way as the Wolfpack’s
Cinderella victory over Houston in 1983, or Villanova’s out-of-nowhere win over
Georgetown in 1985, but the Jayhawks victory that night 30 years ago still
stands out as one of the unlikeliest titles in a decade of upsets.
Maybe that’s an omen for this year’s championship.
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