The images are forever etched in the minds of Arizona basketball fans, from Miles Simon falling to the court clutching the basketball as Arizona won its first and only NCAA title in 1997, to Lute Olson's hair being mussed in the process, to Jason Terry sleeping in his uniform for four consecutive games in the middle of all the madness. All are indelible in wildcats history as Arizona calmly drove the winding and bumpy road to the Final Four and beyond. Before Simon, Terry, and Olson, however, there were the likes of Sean Elliott, Steve Kerr, Fred Enke, and Pop Mckale--all pivotal figures in Arizona's hoops history. There were also Fred Snowden, Mo and Stewart Udall, and a host of others who helped bring prominence to a school looking for respect in the Southwest first, and then in the rest of the nation. Arizona's rise has made them one of television's must-see teams and one of the country's top winning programs over the past 25 years. In Tales from the Arizona Wildcats Hardwood, author Steve Rivera takes readers back to the time when James Pierce wanted to be more of a movie idol than a coach. They will learn about the troubled times of the 1950s and '60s when racial tensions were high and how Arizona's first black player, Hadie Redd, dealt with them. Rivera also details Arizona's participation in the Border Conference, its switch to the Western Athletic Conference, and its current dominance of the Pacific-10 Conference. Fans will hear from Bob "Big Bird" Elliott, who helped Snowden achieve heights never before seen in the UA program as it fell one game short of the Final Four; from favorite son Steve Kerr, who suffered heartache and achieved hero status while at Arizona; and about theups and downs of Miles Simon, the Most Valuable Player of UA's NCAA championship, as he became a star while in an Arizona uniform. The troubles the program has faced are also detailed, like Ben Lindsey failing as coach in his one and only year; the academic troubles of Simon and Joseph Blair; and the unfortunate death of Bobbi Olson, Coach Lute Olson's wife of 47 years. Tales from the Arizona Wildcats Hardwood is sure to be a must-have book for any true Arizona fan.
One night he went too far with then-graduate assistant Craig McMillan in the middle of the 1989 NCAA tournament. The day before Arizona was to play Clemson in the Sweet 16, O'Neill, McMillan, Fraser and others went out for St. Patrick's ...
G Donald G. Gatchel 1940-41 ; Reggie E. Geary 199396 ; Jay L. Geldmacher 1974 ; Barry Genesen 1964 ; George Farrell Genung ... David J. Burns 1974-75 ; Julius Ralph Bush 1918 ; Horatio Cotter Butts 1926 ; Vincent R. Byrne 1932-34 .
Celebrate the Heroes of North Carolina Sport and College Basketball in These Other 2004 Releases from Sports ... CUL BEWARE OF THE PHOG 50 ALLEN TARUDISE LEGENDS OF N.C. STATE BASKETBALL LOCK TOURELY MARYLAND Lowe's Motor Speedway : A ...
Hoop Tales: Arizona Wildcats Men's Basketball
A collection of first-hand accounts, personal recollections, and anecdotes that trace the history of the Syracuse University basketball team.
Wildcat icon Ed Pinckney, along with teammates and other members of Coach Mass's family, relate the tale of how Villa-nowhere, as the 'Cats were dubbed before April 1, fooled the whole world.
Under rookie coach John Donahue ( class of 1908 ) , the team sank to a horrid 6-22 record ( a .214 percentage , which is officially the worst winning percentage in Hawk history ) . That same squad set the alltime record for losses in a ...
These stories are all a part of the little known legacy that led to the modern-day heroics of Dan Dickau, Richie Frahm, Blake Stepp, and many others.
In addition, the book provides readers with stories from and about prominent names like general manager Jerry West, head coaches Hubie Brown and Mike Fratello, and players such as Shane Battier, Pau Gasol, Mike Miller, and Lorenzen Wright.
A Collection of the Greatest Wildcat Stories Ever Told Ed Pinckney ... February 27, 1985 e Villanova Field House, for years referred to (with apprehension, by opponents) as the “'Cat House,” is renamed “ e Jake Nevin Field House.