UK basketball turns 100 today

By Chris Duncan
The Associated Press 2003

LEXINGTON, Ky. - Kentucky fans have loved their basketball from the start. On Feb. 6, 1903 - 100
years ago today - Kentucky played its first game before a
capacity crowd in an on-campus gymnasium that is still used today.










Coach Adolph Rupp and guard Adrian Smith (50) celebrate with fans and cheerleaders after
Kentucky won the 1958 NCAA championship over Seattle in
Louisville.
(AP/file photo)
| ZOOM |  
The loosely organized Kentucky State College team lost 15-6 to a more experienced team from
nearby Georgetown College.

The opening loss aside, Kentucky has evolved into college basketball's winningest program, and a
century later is celebrating a history that has been
tainted by scandal, but defined by a record 1,834 victories, 43 NCAA tournament appearances and
seven national titles.

And what a way to celebrate an anniversary. On Tuesday night, the sixth-ranked Wildcats topped No.
1 Florida 70-55 for their 11th straight win.

Coach Tubby Smith appreciates the program's success, and its deep roots.

"The magnitude of it can be overwhelming if you're not humble," current coach Tubby Smith said. "If
you ever get to the point where you think you're the one
who built it, whether you're a coach here or a player, you're wrong. It's bigger than any individual. It
always will be."

UK HIGHLIGHTS
• 1,834 victories (NCAA record).
• 1,834-571-1, 76.3 winning percentage (NCAA record).
• 43 NCAA tournament appearances (NCAA record).
• 89 NCAA tournament victories (NCAA record).
• Seven NCAA championships (1948, 1949, 1951, 1958, 1978, 1996, 1998).
• Three-time NCAA runners-up (1966, 1975, 1997).
• 13 Final Four appearances.
• 41 Southeastern Conference championships.
• 23 Southeastern Conference tournament titles.
• Ten 30-win seasons.
• Key moments in UK basketball

An account of Kentucky's first game in the Lexington Herald-Leader said, "The gymnasium was
packed with rooters who continually applauded the brilliant
plays of their respective colleges." Outside, more fans awaited game updates from a caller with a
megaphone, according to Kentucky basketball historian
Russell Rice.

For the Wildcats' home games this season, a logo featuring a bold "100" is painted on the court at
Rupp Arena, the facility named for Adolph Rupp, who
built the program's foundation. A short video chronicling the history has been played on the
scoreboards before every game.

The program wasn't immediately successful. In fact, Kentucky endured 13 losing seasons in its first
27 years.

The wins started coming in 1930, when athletic director S.A. "Daddy" Boles hired Adolph Rupp, a high
school coach in Freeport, Ill.

It didn't take long for Rupp to see Kentucky basketball developing into more than just a curiosity. It
was becoming a unifying force for the people of the
state, his son, Adolph Jr., said in a telephone interview.

"This became the one thing all the people - from the Ohio River to the Tennessee border - could all
look at and say, 'We're better than you at this. We don't
care who you are or where you're from. We can beat you in basketball,"' Rupp Jr. said.

"My father was aware of that. When he went out to coach a team, he knew he was representing the
whole state of Kentucky."

His players sensed the excitement, too.

Ralph Beard played for the elder Rupp from 1945-49, when the Wildcats won their first two NCAA
championships. Beard remembers hundreds of fans
meeting the team at each stop as it traveled by train through eastern Kentucky on its way to
postseason games in New York.

"Whole towns would turn out. They'd make us food and come on the Pullman and give it to you,"
Beard said. "In 1949, somebody made life-size action
pictures of each player and hung them up on telephone poles. I still have mine."

Beard also was a key figure in one of the program's darkest chapters, when he and four other players
were caught up in a point-shaving scandal.

Beard said fans recognize him today only for his on-court accomplishments.

The scandal "is never mentioned by people unless I bring it up," he said. "But the scandal was really
a blip on the screen for Kentucky basketball. You just
can't kill something that big."

Fan support never dwindled.

In 1941, H.L. Donovan became the school's president and began a push to build a state-of-the-art
basketball arena. Nine years later, the 11,500-seat
Memorial Coliseum opened.

Cynics said the arena was too big, but every home game between 1950-76 was a sellout.

By the 1960s, however, Rupp's run was fading. The Wildcats failed to reach 20 wins in four of the first
six years of the decade.

They won 24 of 25 regular-season games in the 1965-66 season and reached the NCAA
championship game, where they lost to Texas Western, a team
with five black starters.

Rupp had never recruited a black player, and the climate in the country fueled the game's
significance, said Smith, who is black.

"Back then, college basketball wasn't that big a deal. But, boy, that made an impression on me," said
Smith, who was 14 at the time. "Those were some
changing times. The uproar of civil rights was at its highest point and then here comes (Coach) Don
Haskins with his five black starters.

"We were saying, 'Boy, you don't see black people on TV doing that!' That was unbelievable."

Rupp retired after the 1971-72 season. He departed with 876 victories, an all-time record until North
Carolina coach Dean Smith passed him in 1997.

Kentucky hired Joe B. Hall, Rupp's lead recruiter. Hall had helped lure the program's first black player
- seven-footer Tom Payne - in 1971. Others followed,
like Jack Givens, Sam Bowie and Dirk Minniefield.

The changing landscape of Kentucky basketball was what attracted Kenny Walker, who grew up in
rural Georgia and went on to become the school's
second-leading career scorer in the early 1980s.

"Could it have been done sooner? Probably. But to just single out Kentucky in that way is a little
unfair. You could probably look at a lot of Southern schools
at that time and say the same thing," Walker said. "I look at where we are right now. African-American
players are a big part of this and now we even have
an African-American coach. That says to me Kentucky is doing all the right things in that regard."

Shortly after Walker departed, scandal rocked the program again. In 1988, an overnight package
sent from Kentucky and stuffed with $50 bills was
intercepted on its way to the father of a basketball recruit.

The NCAA put Kentucky on probation for three years and imposed a two-year postseason ban and a
television blackout.

Eddie Sutton was fired after just four seasons, and Kentucky hired Rick Pitino on June 1, 1989.

A dizzying three years later, Kentucky fell one heartbreaking, last-second shot by Christian Laettner
short of reaching the Final Four.

The stunning loss to Duke only delayed Kentucky's return to prominence. Pitino led the Wildcats to
the 1996 NCAA championship, and the 1997 title game
before leaving for a chance to run the Boston Celtics.

"I don't believe any coach could have the situation I've had at Kentucky," Pitino said on the day he
resigned, May 7, 1997. "It's better than any situation you
could go into."

Smith delivered a seamless transition, guiding Kentucky to the 1998 NCAA championship.

"Kentucky has been a force in every decade since the 1930s and kids admire that," said Walker.
"The foundation and the tradition that was built a long,
long time ago is so strong
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100 yrs