My companion piece/review of @SECNetwork Southern Hoops - A History of SEC Basketball - Part IV (The Entertainers) 1980-89 aired on February 20, 2023.

Previous reviews for Parts I-III are available at:

threadreaderapp.com/thread/1622108…

threadreaderapp.com/thread/1624860…

threadreaderapp.com/thread/1627849…
FYI, this is more a companion piece than a critical review of mistakes. Partly because this episode doesn't focus on UK (which is my area of focus) but also because frankly by the 80's integration had largely worked out & the producer's favorite punching bag in Rupp was gone.
This episode is more in line with what the entire series should have been IMO, a celebration of the talented players and accomplishments of its coaches and teams over the years.

Even then, they skipped a lot of things which were worthy to discuss IMO.
(3:10) Mentions the unlikely story of Sean Tuohy succeeding at Ole Miss. Many probably already know, but if not, Sean Tuohy was the patriarch of the Tuohy family portrayed in the Blind Side book & movie about football player Michael Oher.
(5:10) Georgia's Dominique Wilkins talks about how angry people got in his hometown of Washington NC when he spurned in-state North Carolina schools to go to UGa.

This is similar story to UK's Bam Adebayo, who grew up in same area & also spurned in-state NC schools to attend UK.
(6:20) Mentions Ole Miss beating Georgia in the 1981 SEC Tournament in Birmingham AL.

They probably should have mentioned somewhere that the SEC Tournament itself had finally been reinstated in 1979, after laying dormant since 1952. A key event in the conference history.
As a Kentucky fan, maybe I'm overreacting but it is interesting they chose to highlight both LSU's Final 4 run in 1981 & Georgia's Final 4 run in 1983 but don't mention UK's Final Four in 1984 at all?

Prior to 80's, only SEC team besides UK to make Final 4 was LSU in 1953.
(22:30) 1984 SEC Championship Game in Nashville is mentioned where Kenny Walker scored winning points to give UK championship 51-49.

bigbluehistory.net/bb/Statistics/…

This shot helped propel Walker into becoming a superstar his next two seasons at UK.
(34:49) Kenny Walker: "We were rolling along but our big prize was we had to beat LSU for the 4th time in the Elite 8."

Narrator: "There were 3 SEC teams in that 1986 Elite 8: Auburn, Kentucky & LSU."

Not mentioned that UK also had to beat Alabama for 4th time in Reg. Semis.
This oversight by NCAA committee led to a change in the NCAA rules which disallowed placing teams from the same conference in the same brackets where they could meet each other prior to the Regional Finals.

One of many Kentucky-inspired rules changes:
bigbluehistory.net/bb/rulechanges…
Section on Chris Jackson (now Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf). He was another LSU player who scored a ton of points versus UK.

In these games UK lost all of them, except last game where he scored 41 but UK won 100-95 over him, Shaquille O'Neal, Stanley Roberts etc.

bigbluehistory.net/bb/Statistics/…
This decade truly was the coming out party for the conference. No longer was Kentucky the lone standard bearer for the conference, but other schools started making waves in NCAA tourney. This episode easily could have been twice as long. They skipped many great players....
Among those not mentioned were: Alabama's Ennis Whatley, Buck Johnson & Derrick McKey; Auburn's Chuck Person & Chris Morris; Florida's Ronnie Williams, Vernon Maxwell & Dwayne Schintzius; Georgia's Willie Anderson & Alec Kessler; Kentucky's Sam Bowie, Mel Turpin & Rex Chapman...
LSU's Howard Carter, Leonard Mitchell, Jerry "Ice" Reynolds & John "Hot Rod" Williams; Ole Miss' Eric Laird & Gerald Glass; Mississippi State's Jeff Malone; Tennessee's Howard Wood, Dale Ellis, Michael Brooks, Tony White & Dyron Nix; Vanderbilt's Phil Cox & Will Perdue etc.
PS, in preview Alex Wolff says: "It was the coaches, they were so entertaining. It was like a comedy routine & everybody gunning for Kentucky so you kind of had your villain built into it."

This didn't make the episode but helps show Wolff's negative attitude towards UK at time.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with bigbluehistory

bigbluehistory Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @bigbluehistory

Feb 21
My review of Part III of @SECNetwork series on Southern Hoops in the SEC, which aired Monday Feb. 13, 2023 covering the 1970s.

If you missed them, previous reviews of Part I (1930 to 1959):


and Part II (1960s):


Begin 🧵...
(1:20) Author Keith Dunnavant "C.M Newton was the head coach at Transylvania College, small college in Lexington. One day in 1968 ...he's interupted with a call from Paul Bryant...Bryant wants to talk to him about becoming the new head basketball coach at Alabama."
Narrator: "Before calling C.M. Newton, Bear Bryant had called Adolph Rupp. One SEC giant asking another for a recommendation on a big hire. Rupp's answer?: C.M. Newton"

Dunnavant: "C.M. asked him 'Are there any restrictions on recruiting?' (black players) ... Bryant said no."
Read 33 tweets
Feb 12
My review of Part II of SEC Network's "Southern Hoops: A History of SEC Basketball" which aired Monday February 6, 2023 and (loosely) covered the years 1960-1970).

My review of episode I is available here:



Begin🧵.....

@SECNetwork Image
(3:55) Mentions Auburn's decision to play game in Auburn Sports Arena on 20-FEB-1960. This was a refurbished Army World War II era quonset hut. UK played there once before in 1952 but subsequent games were played in Montgomery's Garrett Coliseum or Birmingham's City Auditorium. ImageImageImageImage
It's true Rupp railed against the poor facilities on SEC campuses and at times shamed them into spending money to improve their arenas. Besides Auburn Rupp complained about Vandy's Hippodrome 'roller rink' & Georgia's Woodruff Hall among others. ImageImageImage
Read 91 tweets
Feb 5
The first episode of ESPN's & @SECNetwork Southern Basketball aired last Monday. A few thoughts on it. 🧵

First it's hard to know what this series wants to be about. Presumably SEC men's basketball but it veers heavily into other areas. (Integration and Women's Hoops).
Not that those aren't important topics, they are. But they honestly deserve their own documentaries.

Integration of basketball is important & certainly a major part of the story, but it is so much bigger than just the SEC. It's much bigger than just the South.
I haven't seen the ACC documentary but that was a 10-part 10 hour documentary on just the ACC men's tournament which started in 1954.

espnpressroom.com/us/press-relea…

To try to cover so much territory with SEC basketball in just 7 episodes seems to require a superficial treatment.
Read 82 tweets
Dec 27, 2020
Usually I don't look at team trends prior to conf b/c the stats tend to be inflated early on. But this is different year so below are some historic charts, showing areas UK is struggling.

Shooting:
FG% - 41.1% worst since 1963
FT% - 66.2% worst since 2013
3pt% - 25.2% worst ever
Rebounds - OK
Blocks - OK
Fouls - OK
Steals - OK
Assists - 10.7 per game - worst since 1967 (when assists were scored differently)
Turnovers - 15.9 per game - worst since 2009
Assist/Turnover Ratio - 0.68 - worst since TO stats are available in 1972
Overall, between the poor shooting & the high turnovers, UK's efficiency is WAY down.

Points per FGA - 1.13 - Lowest since 1973
Points per 100 poss - 95.1 - Worst since stats available in 1972 (in fact no other UK team is < 100)
Net Points per 100 poss - -3.1 - worst since 1989
Read 4 tweets
Dec 25, 2020
UK's 1-5 start to the season has led many to race to the record books looking for the last team to start so poorly.

This has led them to the ill-fated 1926-27 season, a team that started 1-8 & went 3-13 overall.

bigbluehistory.net/bb/Statistics/…

Thread... Image
The 1926-27 team was raw, as the previous year UK boasted one of it's best squads ever (15-3), led by many players who helped win the 1922 High School National Championship with Lexington Senior High (James McFarland, Lovell Underwood & Burgess Carey), but had since graduated. Image
The top returning scorers were Gayle Mohney and Paul Jenkins, however Mohney chose to sit out the season to nurse an injury (ulcerated stomach). He ended up never playing basketball for the Wildcats again, although he was a great football star as quarterback, graduating in 1928. Image
Read 19 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(