Tip of the hat to a poster on Pack Pride. Really interesting stuff in this article by Bob Valvano.
The following is just the beginning excerpt of the piece:
It is the late 1960’s and the college coach gets a call from his brother, who is a high school coach. The call concerns a player the high school coach has seen and thinks might make a good college player.
The college coach asks the kid’s name. He is told, “Julius Erving.†The college coach says, “Erving? What is he a Jewish kid?†Told the player is an African-American, the college coach tells his brother he has never heard of the kid who, of course, is destined, just three years down the road, to become a basketball legend, a future Hall of Famer, as the great “Dr. J.â€
It is 1979 and that same college coach has just interviewed for a very prestigious college basketball coaching job.
The interview is just between the coach and the university’s athletic director.
This is an important job. The school had won a national championship just five years prior.
Now the interview was winding down. The athletic director shook hands with the coach and they said goodbye, before the coach flew back to his hometown.
The following day the athletic director called and congratulated the coach. He was being offered the job. The coach was excited and pleased, but surprised it happened so fast.
He asked for a day to talk it over with his wife.
The athletic director expressed some surprise, and said that was fine, but in two days the school was having a press conference to announce their new coach. It was either going to be this coach or another guy, but they weren’t going to wait.
Still no mention of salary.
The coach took the job that next day, only to find that the head coach at North Carolina State was to make the princely sum of $40,000, less than he was already making coaching at a tiny Catholic school in New York, Iona College.
I know those stories to be fact since, as you might have guessed, they both concerned my brothers — my oldest brother Nick, the high school coach, and Jim, the college coach.