The Kevin Sheehan Show - Conversation w/Billy Packer
Episode Date: April 3, 2021Kevin opened the show with reaction to Mark Turgeon's contract extension. Kevin was then joined by legendary college basketball analyst Billy Packer to talk about a career that spanned four decades as... the sport's #1 television face and voice. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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You don't want it.
You don't need it.
But you're going to get it anyway.
The Kevin Cheon Show.
Here's Kevin.
A Saturday podcast with a very special guest.
I'm really looking forward to having a conversation with longtime college basketball analyst, Billy Packer.
That's coming up in just a few minutes.
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Two pieces of news real quickly before we get to Billy Packer.
two pieces of news that came out after the show yesterday.
One, it's official, Dan Snyder and his family bought out the three minority shareholders,
Fred Smith, Bob Rothman, and Dwight Schar.
That whole squabble, all of the shenanigans going back and forth lawsuits,
that's now all history.
The League approved Snyder's acquisition of the remaining 40.5% share that the three
minority shareholders owned.
$875 million was the price.
They waived the debt limit, allowing him to borrow to buy out those minority shareholders.
It's my guess.
I don't know anything for sure, but it's my guess that Snyder at some point,
John Oran from Sports Business Journal mentioned this to us a week and a half ago or so.
If Dan goes out and sells another minority stake to another group,
of shareholders. This time, it's my guess that it would be a diverse group of investors. The organization
in its hiring practices over the last year has made a real emphasis on hiring diversity, and the
league wants more diversity in ownership as well. Bottom line, netting the whole thing out,
Snyder ain't going anywhere. I mean, we're still waiting for the Beth Wilkinson investigation.
We're still wondering whether or not we'll even get to read it. You know, I would think
think that at least the summary, the executive summary of that investigation would be made public,
you know, because typically the executive summary of an investigation doesn't have names or
identifying information in it. I would hope that at least the executive summary of this big
investigation that Beth Wilkinson and her team have been working on for some time is made
public. But who knows? Bottom line is they wouldn't allow him to buy out the minority
shareholders with their help by waiving the debt limit, I don't think they would if they thought
that the Beth Wilkinson report was going to produce some sort of bombshell.
The other piece of news, which came out since the end of the podcast, or since we recorded the
podcast yesterday, which John Rothstein from CBS Sports broke yesterday afternoon, Mark Turgeon's
contract at Maryland has been extended. Something I talked about this week,
That was my strong lean.
Yesterday on the show, a very, very strong lean.
Yeah, I knew this was something about this.
He's going to get three years on top of the two he already has,
so five in total.
For those of you who don't follow college sports
and have asked me this before,
the reason that they didn't just let him hang on there
and coach out the remainder of his deal
where he had two years left
is because most college football and basketball,
basketball coaches in the Power 5 leagues, they are all working on contracts that have at least
three to four years plus. And the reason for that is if you've got less than three, it can
really affect recruiting in a negative way. Other coaches can say, yeah, you can consider Marilyn,
but Turgeon's got two years left on his deal. He may not be here. You know, so it just is a
recruiting disadvantage when your head coach, especially at the Power 5 level.
doesn't have a comfortable number of years left on his contract.
Look, most of you know this.
I believe Mark Turgeon not only needed the extension,
but I believe very much he deserved the extension.
You know, I believe he's ascending as a coach and the best lies ahead.
Six out of the last seven years in the tournament,
the one year he didn't make it was when one of his better players,
Justin Jackson was injured. They still won 19 games that year. So of the seven years, he's been in the
Big Ten. They've been to the NCAA tournament six times, and it would have likely been a seventh without an
injury. The best team he had didn't get a chance to play in the NCAA tournament because of COVID.
Truth is, if they had played that tournament in 2020 with Anthony Cowan and Jalen Stick Smith,
and they had gone deep enough into that tournament, second weekend, you know, Sweet 16,
Elite 8, which was definitely a possibility.
Well, he would have gotten that extension last year,
and this year would have been a year in which everybody in the fan base would have said,
wow, you know, they did really well last year,
and then they lose Cowan and they lose sticks,
and he still takes him to the tournament, and they win a game.
He's got the third most wins behind Tom Izzo and Matt Painter in the Big Ten since Maryland
joined it.
He's a very good coach who's improved in many ways, especially,
as an offensive coach over the last few years.
His teams play hard.
His players get better.
He's navigated a very difficult move to the Big Ten beautifully.
You know, Maryland's becoming more and more entrenched in this new league that they're in.
You know, and, you know, it's taken a while for a lot of the fan base to get used to it.
It's not something that most of us wanted.
We wanted to remain in the ACC.
At the same time, it's.
not something that Big Ten fans wanted either.
They didn't want us.
We didn't want them, quite frankly.
It still feels strange, but we're all getting used to each other.
As I mentioned the other day, we're getting used to the teams, we're getting used to the
arenas, we're getting used to the coaches, the fan bases.
You know, Maryland's been a consistent high-level performer in the regular season in Big Ten
basketball, and I think they will be in the future as well.
I want better March production.
I want to go to the second weekend more often than he has.
You know, I'm not trying to change the standards of what Maryland basketball should be.
They should be a more consistent second weekend tournament team,
but they're getting swings at it every single year.
I'd like to see a better non-conference schedule too,
but the trajectory of where Mark has this thing going is encouraging to me.
Now, for next year, transfers are going to be very important.
I think a point guard and a big are critical, and I think you'll hear some news on that front soon.
Aaron Wiggins really needs to come back.
You know, that is the most important thing for the team next year.
He's going to test the NBA waters.
Apparently, Eric Ayala is as well.
You know, I think Ayala will be back.
You know, the pitch to Wiggins is pretty simple.
You come back. We're a preseason top 25 or better team. You're a preseason all Big 10 first team selection. You'll get a lot of attention nationally preseason. And if you continue to improve as a player, you know, late first round next year is in play. You know, so you get Wiggins back with Ayala and Dante Scott and Hakeem Hart. And you get the three recruits, James,
Graham came in from Wisconsin. He's a four-star kid. They've got two four-star kids out of Baltimore
coming in. You add another two to three players, two transfers minimum, which I think will happen.
Next year could be a huge year. Could be a really, really big time year. I'm thrilled that
Damon Evans, the athletic director, extended him. I believe that Damon Evans realized that
this was the best thing for the program. Look, he knows, I know.
Everybody knows that not everybody in the fan base was on board with this.
This was a very polarizing subject with Maryland basketball fans, a passionate fan base to begin with.
But hopefully next year the team is good.
They're ranked.
They're playing huge games at Xfinity in front of sold out crowds for the first time in a couple of years.
And maybe a season similar to 2019 has a chance to play out in full.
That would be nice.
Anyway, I'm really happy for Mark.
I'm happy for me as a fan because I think it's the right thing and it's something that I want.
I think it's the best decision for the program.
And we'll debate that, I'm sure, between now and the next time they are playing in a Sweet 16 Elite 8 or Final 4 game.
Up next, Billy Packer will join us right after this word from one of our sponsors.
All right, let's bring in one of my all-time favorite analysts in any sport,
all-time legendary college basketball analyst, Billy Packer.
Billy, I really appreciate you making time for me today.
You were part of truly an unbelievable, multi, four-decade run of being the number one analyst,
you know, with Brent Musburger and Jim Nance at CBS and at NBC with the legendary.
team of Dick Enberg and Al McGuire. And for those of us old enough to remember, you know,
the heyday of the ACC, you know, and C.D. Chesley and with Jim Thacker and Billy Packer, Thacker and Packer,
all of that Bones McKinney that was always so much fun to watch. And you worked with one of our own here
in D.C. Tim Brandt as well. So I thank you for doing this. You know, I want to talk mostly about your
career. When we talked briefly yesterday, you told me that you're really not following today's
game, that you didn't, you know, know that much about the teams in the final four. You don't
watch as much. I'm curious. Why don't you follow the sport as much as you used to? Well, it was a
great part of my life. My father was a college coach. I enjoyed playing the game. I enjoyed
then coaching the game. I enjoyed the part of my life of announcing, although I never
had any goal to be an announcer.
My father was a coach,
and therefore I was around the game
as a little kid.
I love playing. I love competing as a
player, and then, unfortunately,
ended up at the right kind of place
where we had outstanding teams,
so that was a lot of fun.
I never had any goal
whatsoever to be
a coach, but then
Bones McKinney asked me to come and join
him to try to rebuild Wakeback
again, and I
I enjoyed that and set that as part of my life's goal to be involved with coaching.
And I never had any goal to be an announcer and was asked to do that as a fill-in for a fellow.
And that lasted a lot longer as a hobby than I anticipated.
But it's kind of like Roy Williams yesterday.
There's a point in time in your life where you say, you know, this has been a great run.
It's something I loved.
I did not like the direction that the game was going with the one-and-done programs
and the fact that the game was changing a lot in terms of how it was played
and how you put together a program.
So I didn't miss other than the friendships and the associations.
I didn't miss getting out of the game as an announcer.
And I like to do things in phases of life where I'm involved in other things
and put the same kind of energy into other things.
So I don't really keep up with the game
because I used to love to study the game,
and since I'm not going to utilize the studying,
it's not something that I ever was.
I've never been a fan of sports.
That's kind of a crazy thing to say with all it's meant to me in my lifetime.
But I love to digest the game and understand the game
and try to predict the game.
So maybe my interest was not,
that of a fan that I'd stay following it.
That's really interesting.
So when you were playing, and a lot of people, you know, obviously remember you for your
broadcasting career, but you were a really good player at Wake Forest.
You led, you know, Wake to the final four.
You coached with Bones McKinney at Wake Forest.
When you were, you know, I've met a lot of athletes and worked with a lot of them over the
years where they were focused on their sport.
They weren't interested in watching them when they had free time.
Was that you when you were playing in coaching?
When I was involved with basketball, it was totally consuming.
And so at that period of time in my life, everything that I could study and learn
and as a player work on and as a coach try to be around the top people to understand
what they were doing and what they were doing to try to win ball games and recruit players
and put together a program.
So it was a real education for me
and something that I loved to do.
And then when I became an announcer,
I loved to study not only the games that were to be played,
but the history of the games and how people got there
and looked back into the history of people that preceded anything
that I was ever involved with a game.
That was and still is very interesting to me,
why people win as opposed to rooting to see them win.
I only ever rooted, and you knew this in your heart, because as a competitor, you have to want to win.
But as an announcer, I only rooted twice in my life when I was announcing a game for somebody to win.
And the first time it happened to me, it was a weird feeling.
It was in John Wooden's last game.
against Kentucky.
Yes, against Kentucky.
My time at the final four as a senior at Wake Forest,
the last game I played in my college career was against a team called UCLA
that I never heard of to speak of,
nor had I ever really heard of John Wooden,
but that was the first final four he was ever in.
And we became very good friends as life went on.
And it was really interesting to see his career grow.
And he helped me a great deal in regard to what I thought about the game.
So it's kind of funny that how much the game has changed now
with the exposure that people get.
And you used to be able to watch a team develop and grow
and a coach develop and grow his program.
Now with the advent of the one and done,
and now we've got the transfer portal.
You don't even get it.
we're not even going to get a chance to watch people develop as a team.
All right, so you rooted for two teams, you said, in all of that time.
The 75 UCLA wouldn't final game against Kentucky was the first time.
What was the other one?
Well, and again, I wasn't rooting for him when the game started because I've never really
been a fan with a rooting interest, but I could feel it taken over my mind as the game was
being played knowing it would be the final time he'd ever coach. The other one was a game
not quite so auspicious as that. I was doing a game where a guy named Bob Stack, who was the
coach at Wake Forest, fell on really hard times and had a year where all the guys were injured,
and he actually started a center in this particular game against NC State who he really
got out of med school because the guy had eligibility to play, and he started against
a really good Jim Valvano team in the Greensboro Coliseum.
And, you know, I felt so sorry for him.
And as the game was going on, I knew it was going to be a blowout.
They had Chris Washburn and all those guys that Jimmy had on that particular team.
And the weight team kept staying with them.
And I could feel myself rooting for stack to, you know, to potentially have the win.
And a week later, and he eventually almost won the game.
It went into overtime and he lost.
And the next week I was doing another NC State game, and I said to Jim Valvano before the game.
I said, Jim, I'd like to talk to you after the game.
And he said, sure, so I went down to see him.
And I said, I really want to apologize.
I like to consider myself a guy when the game starts.
I'm going to say what I see and do the best I can.
I said, but I'll have to be honest with you.
Last week when you were planning against Bob's team, I said, I actually found myself rooting for him because of the rough year.
and he said, you don't have to apologize to me.
I was rooting for him, too.
And I said, why is that?
And he said, he used to babysit my kids when I was a coach of Connecticut,
and he was playing there, and he really needed to win more than I did.
So I didn't feel quite so bad about that one.
Oh, that's hysterical.
I mean, what a small world, really.
Stack was his babysitter in Connecticut.
You know, the thing that I remember mostly about you,
and I wonder if you think,
this is true. In a day
and age where game
analysts, not play by play guys, but
analysts, were, you know,
there to diagnose the game, but wouldn't
necessarily be
constructively critical or question
a coaching move.
I kind of remember, you know,
and my father and I have talked a lot about
this because I watched all those games.
We were Maryland guys. We were ACC
guys and Maryland fans.
And
we've talked about it over
the years that maybe other than CoSell in broadcasting at that time, you were really one of the
first to really in-game, you know, question a coach's substitution or question a strategy or
or be constructively critical. Do you remember it that way as well?
Well, it wasn't in my head, but when I, you know, I never had any formal training as an
announcer or told what to do.
As a matter of fact, the only time I ever had anybody make a suggestion or a criticism
that was critical of the announcing that I really took heart to was the very first game
I ever broadcast.
And it was Maryland against NC State.
When lefty had his first great teams, and Norm was building obviously the great teams
at NC State, and Maryland won that game.
And when the game was, that was the first game I ever broadcast,
and when the game was over, they said, go down the floor and interview Lefty Dressel.
I don't know if people realize this, but Lefty's first game as a college coach was against Wake Forest,
and he beat us in Davidson.
And he kids me about this very day that we were supposed to be a top 10 team,
but he never tells everybody that about five.
of our top seven players never played in that game. Norm Sneed started in that game and the only
college game he ever played in his life. Did you say Norm Sneed? As in the quarterback?
The quarterback of the Washington Reds? Yeah, and then the Eagles, yeah. I'll tell a crazy story about
that. We, all of our guys got injured except the guy named Allie Hart, myself, out of our first
eight players. Lenny Chapel was our best player. He injured his knee right before the season started.
we had to play our first about five games without most of our players.
And the second game we played was against Davidson.
It was Lefty's opener.
And so we go down there and we get beat.
But we didn't even have enough guys to practice.
So Bones McKinney came to me after Lenny got hurt three days before our first game and said,
we got to get some kids from the campus.
And the two best players on campus was a guy named,
Bill Hall, who eventually became a starting player for us, the first guy ever to start in the ACC and both football and basketball in the same season.
The other guy was Norm Sneed.
And Norm was the quarterback.
Now, they were playing that Saturday in their last football game.
And so I went to them and said, hey, guys, when you come back from Columbia, could you come back with – and I'll take you over to Bones' house and we'll show you the offense.
and you guys can play on Tuesday night.
So they both agreed to do that.
And Norm played in that game for us just to give us a body,
but he was a great athlete.
And then he went to the North-South game,
so that was the only game he ever played in college.
But that was our first game, and Lefty was the coach.
So anyway, so I knew Lefty for quite some time
before I go down to interview him.
And I interview him and I said,
Lefty, we all know you're one of the greatest recruiters
in the history of basketball,
but not much of a coach.
And he just looked at me.
I kept on with the interview.
I wasn't even thinking about it.
And the next day, I got a phone call.
And it was a guy that became one of my closest friends in my adult wife, Big House Gaines,
who was the coach for Winston-Sellam State.
Sure.
And he said, son, don't ever talk disrespectful about a coach, whether he wins or loses.
You know better than that.
don't ever want to hear that again and hung up the phone.
And it was something that stayed with me all my life.
But I didn't feel it was being critical when I announced the games.
I felt that what I wanted to do is to get fans to say, you know, let's see why we're
winning, why we're not winning, what can we do to win, what can we do not to lose?
And so that's the way I approached the game.
And I realized that didn't make a lot of friends in the Atlantic Coast Conference because there's only one team that's going to win a game.
And when the season is over, there's only one team's going to be the national champion.
So a lot of people felt I was rooting against them when I was really only interested in, hey, here's what's happening.
I may be right.
I may be wrong.
But in my opinion, here's what's going to happen if a team's going to win or lose a game.
And that's the way I approached it.
Well, you know, it was, though, unique for the time.
I think it was, and maybe others would point out other examples.
But, you know, in bringing up Lefty, and that was one of the people I was going to ask you about,
but I can remember many times, you know, Lefty joking about you after game saying,
well, you know, I don't know, I don't know why we lost the game.
Just ask Billy Packer.
He's got all the answers.
But I always had this sense that you had a great relationship with Lefty.
I never had a personal relationship with coaches from a social standpoint, but I love to have a relationship with them.
Here's what I do.
Here's what you do.
How can we both do that better when you're going to be on the air?
So I really respected the coaching profession, as I said, my father was one, and I respected those guys that I knew were really putting their heart into it.
And nobody put their heart and their time and their own.
energy into basketball coaching any more than left he did.
So I had unbelievable respect for what he did.
You've got to remember now when you look back at the history, wherever he went,
he won.
He won.
He built the program, and he won.
You know, Davidson was never much of a basketball program in the nation.
He goes to Maryland and did everything other than win a national championship.
At every place he went thereafter, the same thing, NCAA tournament factors.
I had great, great respect for him.
And I remember he actually called in a game that I was doing one time when I made a statement about shooting.
And raised hell with our producer while the game was being played.
And he told me that Lefty Giselle called in and said,
why the hell are you talking about shooting?
You never could shoot.
And that's when we got into that challenge up at the University of Maryland,
where he said he could shoot better than I could,
which turned out to be a lot of fun.
and I love the fact that he said, let's stop shooting.
Jump shot.
He said, you never shot a hook shot, and then he challenged me to hook shot, and I beat him in
hook shooting.
And that ended that day with a lot of fun, and we kidded about that many times.
I was there that day.
I was a student in College Park, one of the best five and a half years of my life in
College Park.
And you were there, and it was a big scene.
You know, people, I mean, they're probably working.
10,000 people it seemed like in Colfield House. I think it may have been the day before the game,
and you and Lefty were going at it in a shooting contest, and you did. You destroyed him, didn't you?
Well, he won't. I would not say destroy him. Will you beat him? He should have known better to
play against a guy that could shoot as opposed to the way Lefty shot in college. I'll hold that
against him to this day.
We had a lot of fun. I have great respect for them.
By the way, you said something about that first interview, and that really was Lefty's
reputation, even though I always felt Lefty was an outstanding coach, but the reputation
was, you know, Lefty was one of the best recruiters in the country, but he could never
beat Dean. We always know it came down to the last couple of minutes, and somehow Dean would
figure it out and lefty was a bridesmaid so many times against Norm Sloan, against Dean Smith,
et cetera.
Did you feel that that was a little bit exaggerated?
I thought it was very exaggerated.
In this respect, when you think back at that era, and that's another reason why I really
don't miss the game so much, I was fortunate enough, as were you in your lifetime, to see
what I think was the greatest era of college basketball of all time.
When you start talking about when John Wooden started it,
and basically before the one and done started, that was an incredible period of time
because you watched the coach put together a team, you watch that team develop,
and you watch great seniors and juniors play in the college game,
which, in my estimation, will never see another great college team based on that era,
nor will we ever see another great college player,
because we'll never see a great senior player.
And we will relevant to this particular era that we're in right now.
I think Gonzaga is a great college team in this era.
But I don't think Gonzaga would be a great college team going up against
Kareem Jabar's 1967, 68 or 69 team.
So we're talking that that was 100 years ago.
So I think the game has changed an awful lot in that respect.
Well, talking about that greatest era, whenever I'm in a conversation with people
about the greatest college basketball players of my lifetime that I've ever watched,
it's an easy answer for me.
It's David Thompson, one, and then, you know, probably a couple of spots until I get to number two.
What's your answer to that question?
Well, David certainly was as a wing player, the best wing player that I ever saw in the college game.
It's kind of funny you say, how could you say that when Michael Jordan played?
But Michael Jordan was not the player in college that David Thompson was.
Right.
To me, Kareem Jabbar is the greatest college player of all time because you can't duplicate what he did.
I mean, he played three years for his team, All-American National Player of the Year,
and three National Championship Trophies.
And plus what he could do individually.
So, to me, he's the greatest college player of all time.
But you've got to remember when you talk about the greats of all time,
like what we have this year, a guy, we've had freshmen who were picked a college player of the year.
Now, can you imagine that freshman playing against Oscar Robertson as a senior?
or Jerry West as a senior, or Elgin Baylor as a senior, or Kareem Jabar as a senior, or Bill Walton as a senior.
You know, it's David Thompson as a senior.
I mean, it's not even worth talking about.
So I think that that's why I say we'll never see another player like that again,
because now in this era, they may not even enter college, much less than it to be a senior.
You know, so now that we're doing away with the one-and-done player, and we'll have a zero-and-done, because they'll never even be there.
But I understand what you were saying. It's almost like you separate the centers out of the conversation.
It's hard sometimes, you know, because Walton and L. Sinder in college and Wilk, you know, and Russell, they dominated in ways that wing players or point guards or even power forwards couldn't.
but Thompson's the greatest non-center for you?
I would say Oscar was the greatest non-center for me.
I mean, he could do things that whatever was necessary,
and I got to know Oscar as an adult,
and he was so brilliant in terms of his way that he analyzed the game
and what he could do.
he was a bigger body
and if you look at not only
statistically but also
he took his teams to the
final four as well
although he didn't win a national
championship to me
Oscar was the
epitome of a player from a rebounding
a ball handling a shooting
standpoint of his size
he's the best that I ever saw
I think the first time
I was ever legitimately upset
about any of my favorite team's losses was the 1974 ACC tournament final, Maryland and
NC State, often referred to as one of, if not the greatest college games of all time.
You called it with Jim Thacker that night in Greensboro. What was it like? What do you remember about it?
A couple of things I remember, obviously, the incredible competition between that same group of players.
People forget this. They talk about Gonzaga being undefeated. People don't really,
that NC State was undefeated the year before and never even got in the NCAA tournament
because they were on probation.
So when you take Maryland and NC State and UCLA were the three best teams in the country
that particular year, it was the day of only one team from a given conference that would
go into the NCAA tournament.
Those teams had played against each other in epic games leading up to that game.
When that night started, you knew only one of them would go into the NCAA tournament,
which you didn't realize how unfair it was until that game was over.
And then when the players that were on the court that night,
not only from an ability but from an experience standpoint,
you know, basically was a senior-oriented for that night,
John Lucas obviously being one of the changes and David only being a junior.
But, you know, the front line for Maryland and Tommy Burleson,
being a senior. And so it was incredible. And you got two great coaches, a great environment.
And then the guys played as well as they could play on both sides of the floor. And I remember
with about four minutes to go, we went in the commercial break, and I said to Jim Thacker,
I don't want this game to ever end. And he said, oh, it's a great game. I said, no, Jim.
I said I don't want it to end because one of these two teams is not going to have a chance to experience a run for the national championship.
And you could feel how tough that was.
And I remember when the game ended, I went down to the Maryland locker room and lefty came out.
He said the boys decided, and I don't know if it was the boys or him not to play in the NIT.
This is as far as they go in.
And people might not remember this, but they would have easily won the NIT.
and maybe been in the final four about back in those days,
they didn't even have regional setups where teams went out of their region in the NCAA tournament.
So they would have had to probably play if two teams could enter in the same region in the regional final.
So the reason the game to me is, along with the UCLA game against Houston,
which was the first game in a dome nationally televised college basketball,
They were the two most important games in the history of the college game
because the Maryland NC State game was a game that two great people,
Wayne Duke from the Big Ten and Willis Casey from NC State,
who really had no great relation to each other other than their love for the game,
got together and said this is not the right thing to do,
and they're the two guys that had the power in the NCAA to go ahead and say,
let's put multiple teams in the NBA tournament, whether you want a conference championship or not.
People don't remember this, but John Wooden was very much against that.
He said nobody should play in the tournament that hasn't won their league championship.
But when those two guys were able to get that legislated, that's what makes what we're seeing today, March Madness.
That game is what instituted March Madness.
So not only was it a great game with great players, great coaches, playing.
the best basketball you could ever want to see going into overtime,
but it also had a historic significance of what made college basketball what it is today.
Yeah, in fact, the following year, Maryland ended up being the first at-large team
from the ACC to go to the tournament.
They won the regular season, but they did not win the ACC's tournament.
They went to next year.
They got to the Elite 8 with Lucas, Brad Davis, and Mo Howard, McMillan and Elmore were gone.
that particular year.
You know the one thing in watching that game?
You just brought up some that I don't think about this stuff,
except if I'm talking to somebody else that I respect it also as the knowledge.
But I used to, Mr. Chesley used to have me announce the starting lineup.
Right.
And the worst place you had to do that was at Maryland,
because you broadcast the game from all the way up the top.
So I used to have, probably couldn't do it today,
but I used to have to go down on the floor and announce the starting lineups.
then run all the way back up that stadium steps to the top to get ready to, you know, as the game started.
Okay.
So I always used to think about that run up there.
And so I'm announcing a team.
And so I did the visitors team first.
I forget who that was.
And now I'm going to do Maryland.
The first was starting at Glengarde, John Lucas, okay, and John runs out.
I had announced a number of their games.
And I looked over at the Maryland team, and John was standing right next to me.
I said, John, who you start with the night in the back court?
I could not remember Mo Howard's name.
I drew a blank, and he goes, he looked at me like I was crazy.
I'm Mo.
And I said, oh, yeah, and the other guard position.
And, of course, nobody knew that I couldn't think of his name.
And it was really funny from that point on.
I always had a card with me, even though I was like Joe Biden.
I needed a card to make sure I could remember the name.
That was good.
By the way, one of the things that the ACC, I think, did before anybody else did, was they would announce one player from each team.
So, you know, was John Lucas from Durham, North Carolina, and then starting a guard for North Carolina from Rocky Mountain, North Carolina.
And here comes Phil Ford.
It's like, I remember all of those players during that era where their hometown was, because you would get that.
And they'd come out and they'd slap five.
And nobody went after Billy more than Buccott.
did. Buck Williams would come out with Ralph
Samson, and he'd try to break his hand during those things.
That's right. I'll tell you a crazy thing having to me one night.
I'm doing a game. NC State against North Carolina. This is the kind of guy
Dean Smith was. I'm standing there on the floor, and the teams, the blow the teams
off, and I'm going to get ready to walk out to introduce the starting lineup.
And Dean Smith comes over to me, and he goes, I don't have
appreciate you wearing a red tie and went right back to the bench. I mean, he never missed a trick.
I didn't even realize it was wearing a red tie. So it's kind of funny, the little things that
happened during those introductions. Was he the best coach that you've ever watched or certainly
of that era, Dean?
You know, the term coach is a very interesting question when you use the word coach, because it has
so many different facets.
You know, can the guy recruit?
Can the guy coach, can the guy teach in practice?
Can the guy orchestrate a game as it's being played?
Can the guy work the referees?
Does the guy know how to treat the fans?
Does the guy know how to treat the press?
Does the guy have a love and a relationship with his players after they leave his team?
And what do his players think of him?
And what is he brought to the game that's new and interesting?
When you take all those things in consideration, not just somebody who says, coach, they're thinking of a guy that wins games,
I think Dean Smith had the total package more than anybody that I've ever seen coached the game.
Yeah, I mean, God, that's a lot of criteria and some things that I haven't even thought about.
I mean, the other thing that I just remember about Dean is he, as an in-game, late-game strategist,
on how to get the most out of the clock, you know, how to extend games.
It seemed to me over the years, as a Maryland guy, we lost more heartbreakers to Dean Smith
in games that we thought we had won than anybody else.
But he did it to everybody.
One of the famous games, of course, and I'm assuming you called it because it was a Saturday
afternoon when they were down eight with 17 seconds to go against Duke.
And somehow Walter Davis banks one of the last.
in from half court, they go to overtime and win?
I did call that game, and what was interesting, with the score where it was,
Mr. Chesley told me to go down in the Florida to interview the coach, the coach from Duke.
Now, this is kind of a trivia question.
So I went down on the floor, the Carolina fans are ripping a living hell out of me,
you know, because they knew that Duke was going to win the game.
And I was right under the basket where all that happened waiting to enter.
you the coach. And I went over and I told during a timeout, this was about two minutes ago,
and I said to the manager of Duke, I said, when the game's over, I'd like you to bring your coach
over to where I'm standing. He said, sure. Does anybody have an idea who that coach?
It was Bill Foster. No, it was not. Oh. Who was it?
It really, this is, his name was Neil McGahey. Okay. That one will be one that's not many people
No.
I never realized was the coach at Duke University for that game.
And I can remember it like it happened half an hour ago.
Of course, Neil was told to come over, and with 18 seconds ago,
he was assuming he was going to do an interview,
and then everything went to hell for Duke at that moment.
It was unbelievable.
But was Foster the coach at the time, but he was just out or something like that?
Oh, McGahey, he was the head coach.
Neil was the head coach.
Got it.
Bill Foster came the next year.
Got it. Wow. I would have never gotten that one.
How many people would know that one?
I do remember, you know, back then, remember, there were, you know, there was a game on Saturday.
There were a couple of games during the week, and that was basically it, you know?
That's right.
And, you know, you called so many of them.
So I wanted to ask you about, you know, the legendary broadcast team of you and Dick Enberg
and Al McGuire, and obviously that was a national opportunity for you. You had become,
you know, huge in our area of the country. And, you know, you go to NBC and you become part of
what I think probably is one of the greatest pairing, certainly in college sports history and
broadcasting, if not both college and pro. How did that come together? And what was it,
what was it like being a part of that team, especially the dynamic and the chemistry that you and Al had?
Well, it's kind of funny.
And this also happened at the University of Maryland.
I was doing ACC games, and NBC called me to do an NCAA tournament game.
And I said I'd be happy to do that.
And I went and did a game, and I did the games in 1974 when David Thompson fell on his head in the regional finals.
Against Pitt, yeah.
That's right.
I did that.
And the next year, NBC called me back and said,
Billy, you did a good job for us last year.
We'd like, would you like to work this year?
And I said, yeah, and I said, yeah, I'd love to do it.
And so they sent me to Birmingham, Alabama.
I'm giving you more than you want to hear.
No, I love all of it.
Excuse me, Tuscaloosa.
So they don't even tell me who I'm going to work with,
and I don't really care.
It's just going to be such a thrill.
And I'm going to be doing Kentucky against Marquette.
And I get to the hotel.
room and a hotel, and I
check in, and I said, there's a message for you here.
And I get this
card, and it opens up, and it says,
Kurt Gowdy would like to have lunch
with you. And I'm thinking somebody's
pulling a prank here, and around the corner
came Kurt Gowdy. And so
he said, so would you like to go to lunch?
And I said, yeah, and I mean, you've got to remember
Kurt Gowdy was the number one
announcer in all sports on
any network. And I'm wondering,
well, wonder who he's working
with. And it turned out he was going to be
to play-by-play, and I was going to be the analyst.
So we go to lunch, and of all people
we go to lunch with Bear Bryant.
So I'm saying, my God, what the world do this is?
And so I do the games,
and the next week, NBC calls me and said,
Billy, would you like to go and do the regionals in Portland?
I said, sure, I go up there.
I'm working with Kurt again.
And so they call me the next week and say,
Billy, would you like to do the finals?
And so I work with Kurt,
the whole NCAA tournament.
And he said, Billy, I really like working with you.
And so the very next year, I get a call from NBC, and they say, we're going to do college basketball regular season.
Would you be interested in being our analyst?
And I said, yes.
They said, well, we'll get back with you because we have selected who we want to be the play-by-play man,
and we want to make sure he wants to work with you.
Well, I figure, ma'am, Kurt love working with me.
I'm sure he'll put in a good word for me.
But, you know, and so they called me back, and they say, Billy, the fellow that we
worked, that we wanted for play-by-play, has agreed to do it.
We asked him who he wanted as an analyst.
He said he didn't need anybody if every game was going to go down to the wire, but he knew
that wouldn't get to happen.
So he'd like to request a guy by the name of Billy Packer.
And I'm thinking, obviously, you know, why would you?
Kurt think otherwise, you know, and they said, his name is Dick Enberg.
And I started to laugh because what happened is the year before all this started,
Dick was the big announcer on the West Coast for the UCLA.
Yeah.
Right.
And C.D. Chesley and Eddie Inhorne decide to put a game together between UCLA and Maryland
as a nationally televised game.
and so we're going to go to the game.
Thacker and I are going to broadcast.
We think we're going to broadcast the game.
And I get up to Maryland, and Mr. Chesley and Eddie Einhorn,
who I had worked for in the NCAA tournament,
but they didn't like each other.
I think it was the only person ever to work for both of them.
And they called me to breakfast,
and they said, we've got a problem.
I said, what's the problem?
Why am I being called it?
I figured I'm the problem, okay?
And they don't like the way I work or something.
They said, well, Eddie wants Dick Enberg to be the play-by-play,
and Chez said, I want Jim Thacker.
And what do you think?
I said, guys, way over my pace scale here.
And they said, well, here's what we've decided if it's okay with you.
Enberg's going to work half the game with you,
and Thacker's going to work the other half with you.
Oh, my God.
I'm thinking, man, alive.
I don't know this.
I've never met Emberg, but I've heard of his reputation.
I figure he's a West Coast hot shot, you know, and he's going to get back on the plane and go home.
So I can't wait to see we're going to have this meeting, and they're going to explain how it's going to work.
And I'm looking right at Enberg figure, and he's going to just go right through the ceiling.
And I'm watching him.
He's very relaxed, and they tell him how it's going to happen.
And he looks at Jim Facker, and he said, Jim, this is your home turf.
Would you like to work the first half of the second?
and a half, I'll do whichever one you decide not to do.
And I'm thinking, man, is this guy a con man, or is he the greatest gentleman I've ever seen?
And Jim said, well, if it's okay with you, I'll start off the game and that's fine.
And he said to the, to Enderbord, I mean, to Eddie Einhorn and C.D. Chesley, well, I'd rather not just sit around.
He said, how about if I went down the floor and brought up any information that might be available
while the first half is going on.
And I thought, boy, is this guy really something.
Well, there must have been something about that half a game.
Dick and I worked together that made Dick think that we can make a good team broadcasting together.
So that's how he and I started the first network regular season college basketball in the 76 season.
And he worked as a toothsome.
That is crazy.
I'm going to tell you, I was there that night.
My father, we had season tickets to Maryland games, and that was the year after.
They lost the UCLA that night.
David Myers was the star because the year before was the lefty, you know, I'm going to make Maryland,
the UCLA of the east first matchup against UCLA at Pauley, and they nearly ended UCLA's win streak.
That was the Walton, you know.
I did that game.
So I didn't realize you did that game.
So who did you do that game for?
Was that with Thacker?
No, that was, that was, I did that game with, geez,
I think it was, it must have been a TVS, NBC cleared it and TVS put the game on.
And I broadcast that game with a fellow from St. Louis.
but that was a great, great basketball game showed how good the Maryland team was.
You know, last second shot's the only thing that lost the game for.
Well, Lucas kind of got trapped in the corner.
Yep, you've got trapped in the corner.
You've got a great memory.
Well, the other thing I remember about that game,
and I will tell you that that's really the first memory for me of Maryland basketball
was that 73-74 season, it was.
was on at like 1130 at 90s coast time, and my father let me stay up and watch it. That's what I
remember about that. And what's really interesting, this is another crazy story. Dick and I
worked that whole, that particular season, regular season, and then we get to the final four.
And the same thing happened. We had another breakfast meeting. The Kurt Gowdy as contract
said that he worked the final four. Dick Enberg's contract said he worked the final four.
So this is Bobby Knight is going to be playing at 76. He's got his undefeated club, you know,
and so he's going to be playing in the final game. But what they call me in and they say,
Billy, this is going to be on Saturday, we're afraid that that Kurt is going to be very upset
that Dick's going to be announcing one of the games.
And so we want you to stand in the middle.
When the two, we want to have both of them there for the first game,
you stand in the middle and hold the mic so that Kurt doesn't have to give the mic to Dick.
And this is a big like, and they didn't know Kurt.
Well, Kurt was a great gentleman, okay?
And obviously Dick, the ultimate gentleman.
And I said, you've got to be kidding me.
So here I am standing in the middle of these two legendary, well, Dick,
became a legendary podcast.
If I'm going to run the show, okay?
And as I'm standing there,
a manager from Indiana came over.
They just blew the teams off and shooting around,
and he said, Bob Knight wants to talk to you right away.
Well, night and I had played against each other in college.
And Bob was a sub-in-starter.
If he's listened to this, he ate when I bring that up.
But anyway, I go across the court and figure,
you know, this is Bob's first chance.
to win a national championship. This will be my
second one to call,
and he may be neat words of encouragement.
So I strut across that four all by
myself, and I get on the other side,
and nights on his knees,
got one of those plaid coats on,
got all that great team he had with
Buckner and all those guys,
and all those guys, and I kind of push him aside,
and he just lifts up his head, and he
says, and I won't use the exact language
he used, but, hey, Packer,
You've got to remember that was Michigan, it's Indiana.
He goes, where the hell is the ACC tonight?
It's a long walk back across that floor, I can tell you that.
Well, you know, the ACC had that reputation, remember in that era of being the best league,
but the Big Ten always had an issue with that, didn't they?
Well, it just goes to show you how Bob's mind could be working, okay?
and like I said, that wasn't the exact language, but he made his point very well right before the game started.
By the way, that night was that the best team you've ever seen, the 76 Indiana team that went undefeated?
No, I think the UCLA team were the best teams I ever saw.
The cream to bars.
67.
Those were the best college teams I ever saw.
So back to McGuire.
So how does McGuire become part of the group?
Well, what happens? Al, this is a crazy story. I did not like him as a person. I did not like the way he coached in practice. I thought he was a total pain in the neck, okay? And so he, in 1977, he resigns and retires midseason. His team is about, I guess they were about, had a record of like nine and six.
or something like that.
And I'm doing a game in Cincinnati
and against Marquette's playing Cincinnati
and they get killed by Cincinnati.
So I think that makes them something like 9 and 8.
And so I figured, you know, hey, he's had a great run.
I don't like the guy.
I don't like his attitude.
And at least I should, you know, congratulate him on having a great run
at Marquette.
So I go and they're loading up on the bus.
And I get on the bus, and he's sitting in the front seat.
And I say, coach, he never even looks up, like tremendous career and I want to wish you the best of luck.
Never says a word to me.
And all of a sudden he looks up and says, we're leaving.
I get off the bus.
And I say, what a jerk this guy is.
Okay.
So it turns around, they go on a heck of a run.
Right.
And win the national championship.
And he never even goes to practice, Majeris and Hank Raymond's.
They're coaching the team.
And I'm thinking, what a jerk this guy is.
Well, sure enough, he wins the national championship in great fashion.
And that summer, NBC calls and said, hey, you know, we've got a chance to get Al McGuire
and we're going to think about you three guys working.
together, but we're not going to have Al. Al's going to do the halftimes shows, and he's going to
be broadcasting from the locker room. And I said, you know, whatever you guys want to do is
fine with me, and I figured, well, you know, who knows what. So Dick and I, we're happy to have
Al come on board. And so the first game is in Milwaukee, and they have him hooked up in the
locker room. And so Dick and I broadcast.
asked the game, and Dick had a button that whenever he thought there might be something
Al would like to say he would put it and ask Al a question, or if Al saw something in the
game that he liked, Dick's light would come on, and Al could say something, because they
didn't think three guys could potentially do a basketball game all on the court.
So the game went on, and that never came on.
so dick at half time said uh you know we we better go see if there's something wrong with the engineering
and all it already got in there and the man the guy in the locker room said oh he left he's not
here for the second half okay so the second game the same setup was there so dick said to me
billy uh now dick always says it was my my thought i say it was dick's thought why don't we just
have him come out and sit with us so he can, you know, be part of the game. And we did that.
And it didn't work out so well because it was Dick, and then I was in the middle, and I was
on the other side of me. And Al wasn't put much in the game. So again, I don't know who gets
credit for this. Dick said, you know, he's not really paying much attention. How about if we put him
in the middle? That way, I'll know what you're doing, and we know how to work together, and maybe we can
get him into the game. And that's how that took place. So it was always Dick, then Al in the
middle, and then me on the end. And as time went on, it started to work pretty good. And although
he never spent any time with Dick and myself, he'd show up for the game. When the game was
over, he'd go. And we'd never see him. And we did the whole first year that way. And I'm thinking
he's the worst guy than I thought he was.
And it was Easter Sunday.
It's kind of funny.
That's a long time ago.
I went to church down.
It was a final four is in St. Louis.
And I went to church for Easter Sunday.
And they have a little chapel down underneath the arch.
And it was all crowded and packed.
And there were people down there.
And there were, you know, there were some homeless people down there.
And it was quite a scene.
And so I go into Mass.
and when it came to time to go up for communion, I go up and I notice this guy with old beat-up
clothes on is sitting on the first row, and I look, and it's out.
And I'm thinking, what in the world's the matter with him?
And so when the church ended, I go out, and he's waiting for me.
And he says, in his first time, we ever had like a personal talk, and he said,
you want to go to lunch?
And I said, yeah, sure, so we start walking down on the piers there.
and he hollered to some guys on a boat.
And he said, I've got to come on.
I'm from the city's Food Inspector.
And I'm thinking, what in the hell is he talking about?
So we get on the boat.
He pretends he's there inspecting sanitation on the way that they're going.
He says, where's the kitchen?
So we go down, and he has to make us lunch.
We eat lunch, and I'm thinking, this guy is approval.
And we get off the boat, he says, that was a good way to get a cheap lunch,
with it. And from that point on, he became the greatest adult friend that I've had.
That is, that's crazy. Now, do you think it's because he realized you were a Catholic and you
were at Mass on Easter Sunday? I think, I think Al was an incredible person, and he lived a
life on a one-way street. And if you ever got a chance to be on his street, during that period of
time, you had a wonderful, wonderful experience. But he really, he really decided who and when
got on that street with him. And I was fortunate to be on that street a lot. Yeah, well,
I mean, it sounds, too, with the boat and the lunch story, that he was one of those guys that
just felt he belonged anywhere and would talk himself into any place. It made no difference. If it made no
difference if it was the president of the United States, whether it was some guy in a street
corner, he had an unusual way to deal with him. He was never really into study in the game of
basketball, but he had great instincts about what was happening in a game or something about people,
and he was one of the most entertaining people that I've ever seen that really didn't put on any act.
It was just all natural.
Did he come to respect your knowledge of the game?
I mean, it certainly seemed that way on the broadcast,
but did that click after that one get-together?
I think I annoyed him in the fact that I really did understand the game.
More than he did.
Why are we wasting time with this nonsense about zone defense?
Let's talk about something else.
Right.
Let's talk about aircraft carriers.
Dick was the great orchestrator of keeping the two of us from going after each other.
A couple more for you because there are just some games that you got to call,
and I'm curious what your memories are.
You know, March 26, 1979, it's still the most viewed college sporting basketball game in history,
Magic in Michigan State against Larry Bird and Indiana State and Salt Lake City.
you know, give me a minute or so on that game and those two players in particular?
Most overrated basketball game in the history of the sport.
Michigan State was the far superior team.
From the very second the game started until the end, there was no question who was going to win.
Larry Bird was, and people don't realize this, but Larry Bird and Magic Johnson were team.
teammates the summer prior to that game in what was called the World Invitational Tournament,
a thing that I had a chance to be partners with Eddie Einhorn on.
And I broadcast two of those three games.
They played against the national team of Yugoslavia, Cuba, and the Soviet Union's national team.
And it was great and show you how basketball has changed.
that team was made up of the American team was made up of Joe Hall's starting lineup for Kentucky that won a national championship.
And then we picked up players.
We played three different cities.
We picked up players from those areas.
And then we had two guys that Eddie put on the team that were played on all the games.
And those two guys were Magic Johnson and Larry Bird.
Larry Bird, to this day, would probably admit it was probably the worst experience of his basketball career because he hardly got to play at all.
And I thought, man, this guy's got a big reputation.
He can't play a lick.
And Magic, you know, he needs, where is he going to find a position?
He can't play guard.
He doesn't have a shot.
He's got a great personality, and he loves to play the game.
So I saw them that summer, or that after that Kentucky National League.
championship.
So when that game came on, I'm giving you more than you want to know, we had a game
at Duke, and in that game, if the team that lost, I guess it was Marquette, they were
playing, the losing team, it looked like Indiana State that was undefeated could move
the number one.
The game ended early, and the team that was number one was going to go out of there.
So we have an interview after the game, and Dick Enberg looks at Al and says,
now who do you think is number one?
And Al says, Indiana State's got to be number one.
I said, you've got to be crazy.
Who the hell will they play?
And have you ever seen them play?
Maybe a starter on the team.
Of course, Al, you know, like Al was giving me hell.
And so what happened was we decided, and Eddie Horn, Einhorn was brilliant.
Indiana State had never been on TV.
So Eddie Einhorn called Ray Meyer at DePaul and said, Ray, I know you're going to be on TV next week,
but I'd like you to cancel that game on TV because I want to show Indiana State.
And so they changed it in Indiana State, played Wichita up at Indiana State.
So I'm looking forward to going up and seeing this team, and I knew Al was going to rip the hell out of me.
But I had death threats from Terre Haute, Indiana.
took me off the game.
So I went and did a game
with Gowdy in Louisville,
but then when the
NCAA tournament started, NBC
had me do all the Indiana
State games. So they were
not real happy with me at all
at Indiana State, including their
players. And in practice,
when I walked down on the floor,
they all had a basketball on their
hands, and they all threw basketball
at me at the same time,
trying to knock me on my rear end. So
it was not a good introduction to their team.
But they worked their way all the way of the final four.
A great regional final against Arkansas,
and each game I saw a little bit more about Bird in terms of,
first of all, he was unbelievably competitive.
He was really nasty.
He had great hands, and he knew how to play,
and he had a great ability to make his teammates better,
but they were not good enough to play against Michigan State,
and Michigan State won the game.
And when late in that game, Dick Enberg said to Al,
all right, Al, if you were going to start an NBA team,
which one of the two would you pick?
And Al looked at him and said, Greg Kelser.
And Dick said, what are you talking about?
And Al said, if I was picking an NBA player for my team, I'd take Greg Kelser.
So Dick tried to get off that subject in her.
hurry and he looked at me.
And I said, I really don't know.
I said, Magic has no shot.
Where is he going to play in the NBA?
And I said, Bird really is not maybe athletic enough to be playing small people as a
forward.
He's not big enough to be a center.
I said, I said, there's got to be a lot of questions in my mind about either one of them.
And the very next year, Magic leads the Lakers to the World Championship playing center.
and he and Bird turned out to be two of the legendary players of all times.
So it shows you how little both Al and I knew about the game.
Well, he was much further away than you were with Kelser, obviously.
But, you know, the funny thing about that is magic had become, you know,
really almost a brand even before that.
And then I do remember when the whole country watched Indiana State on television for the first time,
because you wanted to see what this guy was.
They did, correct me if I'm wrong, didn't they beat DePaul in the final four?
Was it DePaul they beat in the final four?
A really good DePaul team.
And now that was the first great game I ever saw Larry Bird play.
They had a choir and Byrd had one of the great semifinal games of all time.
And as a matter of fact, Sidney Montreif from Arkansas,
saw.
They had the triplets.
The triplets.
And that regional final was, I did that game with Jim Simpson,
and that regional final was a great game.
And but then that semifinal bird played was tremendous.
And but in the final game, some of the things that you wondered about
with that the matchup zone that Michigan State played,
he had a hard time.
And you didn't realize, you know, he was a brilliant shooter from the outside
because primarily he played as a power forward for Indiana State.
Right.
You know, the ACC wasn't there because of that.
I think this was the year when Carolina lost a pen in Raleigh
and Duke lost because Duke was the other really good team that year.
On the same day.
Yeah, on the same day.
We call it Black Sunday to this day down in this part of the country.
Right.
This is so much fun for me, Billy.
You have got a great memory and are a great.
storyteller. And I want to ask you next about the championship game that you called two years
later at the Spectrum in Philadelphia. And I will ask you about that right after this word from
one of our sponsors. So two years later, it's the Carolina Indiana final at the spectrum, the day that
Reagan got shot early that day. And they decide to go on with the game. What do you remember about
that day and, you know, was there a possibility that they were going to postpone it?
What do you remember about that day in 81?
Well, Al was out doing his toy soldier shopping, and I was studying for the game, so neither
one of us had seen any television. So we went over to the game together in a cab, and as we
were walking into the arena, a guy hollered about, how about President Reagan? Neither one
of us knew that he had been shot.
And so Al said, I love the man.
And I said, me too.
You can kind of, I'm a Reagan supporter.
But we didn't realize that the guy was talking about him having been shot.
When we got in the arena, we heard about the news and NBC was running around saying,
okay, you guys need to go and spend some time deciding what you're going to say and all
this kind of stuff.
And the same guy I mentioned before Wayne Duke was the head of the end.
NCAA committee at the time, and Wayne is a very powerful guy.
We had a guy who was the head of NBC thought that he was going to call the shots
as to whether the game was going to be played or not.
And it turned out the NCAA tournament committee said to NBC,
you have nothing to say about this, we'll determine when and if the game is going to be played.
And so Al said, well, let's get out of here.
and I said,
Al, we've got to be thinking.
I said, look,
if the president has been shot,
the last two guys NBC is going to want to talk about that is you and I.
And it turned out that that was truthful.
And what the word came out to us,
they're going to play the Virginia game against North Carolina.
Remember back in those days,
you have a consolation game,
and we're going to determine whether the championship game is going to be played
is going to be determined as to whether or not Reagan is out of trouble.
And so Bobby Knight did not know whether the game was going to be played for his team
in the same way in case of the opponent.
So the word came out to us that President Reagan said there's no place I'd rather be than in Philadelphia.
And so everybody assumed that meant, and that turned out to be a lie.
Reagan wasn't lying, but the word came out from the White House, whoever,
and so they decided to play the game.
So Brian Gumble did a great job leading everybody, making the transformation from NBC News to Dick Enberg to start the game.
Brian was fantastic as how he handled that, and the game was played.
But it was a very, very unusual situation.
Bigger upset in your mind, Valvano and NC State over Faislamma Jam in Houston or Villanova over Georgetown?
You know, I would have to say Jimmy's win, and the reason I say that is that in the case of Villanova and Georgetown,
I really made a big mistake in that game.
Those teams knew each other so well.
And Villanova had played well against Georgetown and St. John's during that season.
As a matter of fact, I think Villanova faced them and played really competitively against them.
So there was an awareness of what they were going up against.
Had Villanova never seen, let's suppose they were from the Big Ten,
had never seen Georgetown play or gone up against the Patrick Ewing,
I think Georgetown would have blown them out.
But they were used to it.
And then I think that Raleigh had his guys believing that they could beat them.
And, of course, then even with that, they played the perfect game
and the substitution patterns that he had in that game were unbelievable,
and the longer they lasted, the more the pressure went to Georgetown.
I think in the NC State game, when you look back at that NC State team,
Derek Wittenberg, who came up from your area.
To Matthew, yep.
NC State was right there with Virginia, with Maryland,
with Wake Forest that year, and with Carolina.
The league was unbelievably great that particular season.
And Derek had an incredible game against Virginia.
I broadcast that game at NC State.
I think he had 26, 27 points at half time,
and they were taking care of Ralph Samson,
and then he sprained that ankle.
Right.
And then they went into a downturn.
But that NC State team, had Wittenberg not been hurt in the regular season, would have been a top 10 team.
And they were fortunate, as everybody knows, to win the ACC tournament,
and having to win all three of those games just to get in the NCAA tournament.
And then that incredible run.
So I would say that the NC State turnaround and the way that Louisville and Houston played in the semifinal two days before,
that was a bigger
upset to me. And the fact
that when Houston took the lead
and Guy Lewis decided to slow the game down,
he played right into Jimmy's hands.
And it was an incredible game on their part
and an incredible, you know,
we talked about the term coaching,
the way a coach orchestrated the game,
Guy Lewis had a real bad game
and Jimmy had a phenomenal coaching game.
You know, the villain
I had a feeling you were going to say that. Villanova and the Big East teams that year,
I mean, they were fearless against Georgetown. They'd seen them too much. And you're probably
right, had it been somebody else, it would have been a one-sided beatdown. There was someone I was
going to ask you about because this June will be 35 years since his death. And on the way to
Villanova's title, they beat Maryland in the Sweet 16 in Bias' worst game of his career. He was
three for 17 from the floor, and they lost to Villanova that year in the Sweet 16 by a point,
and then Villanova beat North Carolina before beating Keith Lee, Memphis, et cetera, and then Georgetown.
But Len Byes, what did you think of him in watching him and calling so many of his games?
Well, there again we get to the difference between today's basketball on college level and back in those days.
if Lenny Byes was playing in this era, based on potential, he would have left Maryland after one year.
Right.
Instead, and this is why the game was so much better than both on the college level and the pro level.
He had an opportunity to mature as an individual not only physically but mentally and understand the game
and keep getting better each and every year of his stay at Maryland.
So by the time he was midway through the junior year,
he said, you know, this guy is really special.
And then his senior year, obviously he was, you know,
as good as you can get on the college level.
The disaster of him passing away, I'll never forget that.
I did not know his parents prior to his passing, but I did get to know them right thereafter
because Don Omar called me and wanted to do a television show about Lenny Byers,
and I got to know his parents immediately at that time.
And to this day, I'll always remember meeting his mother for the first time,
and it had to be two, three days after he passed away,
and it was an incredible experience to see what they had to go through.
But without question, I think he was one of the great players,
one of the great college players to come along,
and I think he would have been, much like Michael Jordan,
I think he would have been an even better pro and go down
as one of the real great ones of all time.
I've always felt whenever we've had these conversations
on the various shows I've been on over the years.
I've always said, and we got a chance here to work with Coach Thompson,
who did a radio show before mine for 10 years,
and I got to know him well at the station.
And we used to talk about that, and I said,
I always thought bias was more Dominique Wilkins.
He was more of a forward, where Jordan was a true two guard.
I didn't think that he was the next Jordan.
I thought he was the best Dominique, the next Dominic.
you know the thing
about Michael is
and I've told this story
a million times
the biggest
loss that Dean Smith ever had
was when his team
the best team he ever had in my
estimation was in 84
when he had Perkins
and George Kenny Smith
and that bunch and they lost to Indiana
Michael
and Bobby Knight was the Olympic
coach and Bobby told me
before the Olympic tryouts.
Jordan will probably make the team,
but he said he's really going to be difficult for a start.
And I said, why is that?
He said, because he can't shoot the damn ball.
And he said, how can I have a second guard that can't shoot the ball?
That was Bobby Knight, a guy that really understands basketball pretty well,
talking about Michael Jordan, who he had seen for three years,
and had coached against in the NCAA tournament.
and before that.
So what we eventually saw Michael become was only because the guy never stopped,
like all the great ones, they never stopped trying to get better,
and they never stopped working on their weaknesses.
And so when you say Michael was a guard,
Michael really became a player that could play any position
because he kept working on it even after he left North Carolina.
And I think the same thing would be true with Lenny.
There were areas that I think he would have kept working on ball handling, passing,
and things of that nature to make him a very special player,
more special even than Dominique.
Yeah, ball handling would have been it.
All right, you've been so generous with your time.
I did want to ask you, were you ever as you were announcing games over the years
and people obviously, you know, knew you as a former coach
because you were and a player, were you ever offered jobs to coach?
Yes, it was.
And what were they?
I'm not going to say what they were, but it was something that I stopped in a moment.
When I, I've kind of been lucky in my life.
I've been able to do what I want to do when I want to do it.
And when I, when Bones McKinney asked me to be a coach, I set a goal to be a head coach at a place that I thought I could be comfortable and I could win at the highest level.
When I decided to get out of coaching, when I didn't get that job, which I wanted, which was Memphis, when I didn't get that job, when I didn't get that job, I went on to do other things with my life.
and I've never looked back to want to go back and do something over again.
So it's kind of like that movie about having things you want to do in your life.
I never wanted to do that again, not because I didn't love it,
but there were other things that I wanted to do with my life.
And so Memphis was the job that you thought you could win.
And obviously they were, you know, a power and played UCLA in one of those finals.
No, no, no. This was, I was coaching at Wake, and when I went to work for Bones, I said, coach, I want to do this, but I'm going to set a goal.
I do not want to be your assistant coach for, I want to coach through three years as an assistant and be responsible for the recruiting of getting our team back in play.
At that time, I want to make a judgment in my own mind. Am I good enough to be a head coach?
and if so, where do I want to be a head coach
because I don't want to be in a situation
where I can't competitively win
against the very best.
So, when that year, Bones had to step down
my very first year as an assistant.
But when that time came and I've been there for three years,
I said, I can coach this game,
and I can coach, and I can be a winner.
And I was the first one of assistant coaches
in the ACC,
to be involved with bringing in black athletes to the conference.
And I felt very comfortable with kids that really didn't come from high-faluent surroundings,
and I wanted to go to a school where that would be comfortable.
And Memphis was having all kinds of problems,
but I felt that they had a great natural recruiting territory.
I love the opportunity for kids to be able to go to school there and get an education,
even though they weren't the best of students.
And I felt that I could coach that team up and have them as a national powerhouse.
And I applied for that job.
I think they won six games that year, and I lost it.
I was in the hunt for that job and lost it to Gene Bartow.
and he got that job, and my decision was, I found out the day he got that job.
I was in Arkansas at the NCAA, at the National Junior College Tournament,
recruiting artist Gilmore of all people.
And Bucky Waters said to me, why are you doing what you're doing?
And I told him, and he said, by the way, did you hear that Memphis filled their job?
with Gene Bartow, who I did not know.
I never heard of them.
And I called my wife and said, Barb, I didn't get the Memphis job.
I'm going to go into business.
And that was a decision I made.
And my life has been great without that.
But I like to set goals for myself and not look backwards.
So once I got into business doing the things that I do,
now and then had that opportunity to broadcast, I never wanted to say, oh, I'm going to go back
and do that again.
But just to make sure that I'm clear, while you were broadcasting, you were offered a head
coaching job.
Yeah.
More than one?
Yes.
And were any of them tempting?
Nope.
Nope.
It's like now, somebody said, I've been asked to go back and broadcast games.
The day I decided that it's time to move on, I thought Roy Williams said it a lot better than I could.
I'm not the man for this job right now, and there's other things I'd like to do with my life.
So I never wanted to do something else.
So it's just maybe I'm weird that way, but I like to set out goals, work hard to do them,
and then maybe do something else.
Other than missing completely on Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, you know, at any other point during your career, you know, I certainly remember you were tough on mid-majors on Selection Sunday.
Any of that stuff you've had second thoughts about, you know, over the years.
You know, this is kind of funny. When I did a ballgame, I love to go into the post-game press conference.
and I would listen to the questions and the coach's responses
because I always like to do a double check on
was there something that they felt was important in the game
and did I miss on that?
And if I missed on that, try to make sure I never missed on that again.
So I like to have my own scoreboard of broadcasting every game.
and I did that until I did the next game, reviewing and report carding on myself.
The only guy that I never paid any attention to in the post-game comments
as to whether or not I felt it was reflective of something,
not only that I said, but how the game was played, was Dean Smith.
And the reason for that was, Dean Smith, if there was a problem with one of his players
or there was a problem of something they weren't doing well,
he would always talk, let's suppose he had a player that was in a slump.
And somebody would say, get ready to say something, he'd say,
well, Johnny Jones today did things that I didn't even know he was capable of.
Did you see that screen in a two minutes?
And it would be something totally irrelevant, okay?
So I never listened to what he had to say, even though he was a brilliant basketball man.
But most of the time I did that.
So there are a couple of things that I said.
One of them involved Raleigh Massimino, as a matter of fact.
He took a team down and played at Kentucky.
Kentucky was much better than his Villanova team.
And his son got in the game, and late in the game.
And his son was a walk-on player on the team.
And I said, you know, that's really interesting, Raleigh's son.
the ball game. I said the SEC probably had the greatest father and son combination of all time
in Pete Marevich and Press Marevich. And I said, unfortunately, for Raleigh, Raleigh's
son will never score as much in his career that Pete scored in two minutes of the game.
And it's one of the worst things that I ever said. There's a couple like that I wish that I
had never said. But I don't look back in a game and, in, in some, you know, and there's a couple like that.
say, you know, that was kind of stupid.
Well, I mean, as you were talking about that, it reminds me,
lefty put Chuck Drezel into the game at Carolina against Jordan and that team at the
end of the game and called the play for Chuck to shoot the last shot.
And Jordan basically threw it into the third row, although we all think it was
goaltending.
And he just said afterwards, he said, he said, well, you know I was going to give my son a chance
to win the game. And only lefty could get away with it. That's right. I can remember that.
Yeah. I really, really enjoyed this. I hope you're doing well. So, you know, you said at the very top,
you move on and you find other things to do when you've moved on past certain portions in your life.
What are your hobbies? What are you doing these days?
Well, everything's been, fortunately, for me, kind of a hobby in life. I spend most of my time now
70% of my time
involved in real estate projects,
primarily buying land and
developing land. I've got
a real neat project in the North Carolina
mountains now we're building
a high-end class A
motor coach park.
So I just like
the competitiveness. And right now in business,
things are very competitive. And where our
country's going right now, maybe the
most competitive period of time
we've got ahead of us that I've ever
seen, but I just like the competition of being in business, finding something that I'd like to buy,
think I'm buying right, and try to sell it right. So that's what I do with most of my time.
One final one. Are you going to really, you won't watch these games tomorrow and Monday
night, or will you? Yeah, I'll watch these games. I, again, I don't watch them in the same
way that I used to watch them, and I don't watch them rooting for one team to lose it up,
but I'll be very interested.
My wife hates when she has to sit and I watch the game because I'll make comments
that she says, you know, you don't know anything about it anymore.
Why don't you keep quiet so long?
But I do like to have an opinion.
And again, on a note with Roy Williams, I had great respect for him,
but I watched Roy's teams play this year, and I don't know how many times.
I said to my wife, I said,
Roy needs to get out of this.
This is not where he needs to be
anymore. And so I was not
surprised yesterday
because he's had such an incredible
career. I think the way
he got out with dignity is
really great, not happy for him.
But who do you think, Caroline, his next coach will be?
You know, we could talk
for hours on this. Not about the
person, but I really think
that if I was an athletic director,
I would demand that college
basketball, put together a committee to sit down and say, where are we going?
Because what is this next, as an example, let's suppose he's a brilliant basketball man
and a teacher.
His first assistant coach may be the guy that becomes the expert on the kids that can transfer.
So you no longer recruit high school kids.
You recruit other college teams to know who you're going to go after in the transfer portal.
Your next best assistant coach may be like Russ Potts used to be at Maryland.
Your marketing director because you've got to go out and find companies that want to endorse the recruits you bring in.
It's going to be an entirely different methodology of how you pick your head coach than it was 25 years ago.
And unless somebody understands that's where the game is and where it's going,
they're going to make a big mistake, whoever they pick.
I really, really enjoyed it.
Thank you so much.
It was really my pleasure.
I'm glad you're well.
You sound well.
Take care.
And somewhere down the road hope to do this again with you.
Okay, well, I appreciate this time.
Thank you.
Man, that was a lot of fun.
For me, anyway, I hope it was for you guys.
That was a lot of fun listening to him tell
stories about his career primarily. It's also interesting that he pays attention to the game,
but not that much anymore. But I really enjoyed that. I really hope you guys did as well.
The final four games today, you know, I gave out my smell test picks yesterday on the podcast.
I gave out the two underdogs, UCLA and Houston, and I gave out both unders.
Personally, I think Baylor and Gonzaga win the games, but I don't think they cover.
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Really enjoyed it back on Monday.
