March moment with a legend-to-be

Topeka Daily Capital
March 19, 1958

Adolph Rupp, Kentucky basketball coach, has a particular fondness for Kansas as a state and for Kansas State. He’s a native of Halstead, Kansas. The last time he won a national basketball title, he whipped Kansas State in the finals. And the last time he was anywhere near K- State, he bought some of the cattle he likes so well near Manhattan.

“Fine cattle, too,” he said Tuesday. “I’ve got about 350 head of registered Herefords now. They’re nice to have, except when there’s snow on the ground and you have to feed them.”

Rupp, the Bluegrass Baron, is both a basketball Baron and a cattle Baron. He’s more concerned now, however, with the basketball squad he’ll send after his fourth national title this weekend in Louisville. He plays Temple first, and if he wins he gets the Kansas State-Seattle winner.

“This team isn’t like the others we had that won national tiles,” he said. “The others had big stars. This team doesn’t have a single boy who made all conference It’s the first time in Southeastern Conference history that Kentucky didn’t have a boy on the All-Conference team.

“We don’t have an All American or anybody who was even mentioned for All-American. We’re just a bunch of country boys that nobody has paid any attention to.

This is a unique role for a Kentucky basketball squad in the national playoffs. Kentucky has won more titles – three – than any other school, and has won more NCAA playoff games. But this is the first team to surprise Rupp. “Nobody down here expected this team to go anywhere,” he said. “Certainly, nobody expected us to get to the national semifinals. But we’ve just kept knocking along, and here we are.

“It has been a tremendously satisfying season for me, because we just don’t have the personnel to get this far. But we’ve had tremendous effort, and our last two games (victories over Miami and Notre Dame) were as well played as any games we ever played in the NCAA.

“The effort and performance of this team have been far above the level anybody had any right to expect. My satisfaction comes from seeing that effort.

Rupp’s squad was unranked in preseason polls. But it finished the season with a 19-6 record, won the conference by a slim one-game margin, and wound up 9th in the final polls. Rupp can’t help laughing about this.

“North Carolina and Kansas were ranked 1-2 at the start of the season,” he said. “We weren’t ranked at all, but we’re here and they aren’t. All season, we kept hearing about Kansas, but nothing about Kansas State.

“We honestly don’t know a thing about Kansas State or Seattle, except what we’ve heard in the past couple of days. We know they are both great teams, but we’re not worrying about them.

“We’re worrying about Temple. And this thing, you lose one game and school’s out, So we’re not looking ahead. We’ll worry about Kansas State or Seattle after we beat Temple Dash or if we do.

“From what we’ve heard in the last couple of days, Kansas State must have the best team in the tournament. Cincinnati’s not far from here and we know they are no pushover, so if Kansas State beat them, they’re pretty good.

“It’s a good thing Kansas State did win that one. If Cincinnati was playing in Louisville, I don’t know where we’d put the people. We’d have to play this thing at a race track – and we’ve got some of those, too…

“We’ve had a good year and played probably the toughest schedule in the country. We played five teams in the top ten and seven in the top 15. Who else has done that?

“We’ve got a fine defense. The Big 10 is supposed to be a good league, and Notre Dame took care of them this season. We took care of Notre Dame. They got 56 points against us to our 80.”

(Ed. note – In the semifinals, Kentucky beat Temple by one in overtime and despite a 39-36 deficit at the half in the national title game, cruised to an 84-72 victory over Seattle. Rupp, who played basketball at the University of Kansas under Phog Allen, retired in 1972 after 41 years coaching Kentucky with a winning percentage of .822.)

 

 

Kansas v Kansas State Remembered

Topeka Capital Journal
Oct. 24, 2001

Since Kansas State and Kansas are playing football this week, it is perhaps the right time to pass along a few irrelevant remarks about both institutions of Higher Learning. I can only hope none are construed as irreverent, because many of their fans take this game seriously, and believe everyone should.

For example, it would perhaps be irreverent to sing the I-70 blues and say there isn’t a good football team between St. Louis and Denver, except for Kansas Wesleyan in Salina, which is 5-2 for the season, and ranked in the top 25 in the NAIA poll.

The Rams on the Eastern end are unbeaten, but Missouri, the Chiefs, KU, Washburn, K-State and Fort Hays all have losing records. And at the Western end, the Broncos aren’t all that hot.

* The K State KU game Saturday would be the 100th in a string that started in 1902 if, for some reason, they hadn’t skipped playing in 1910. Why they didn’t play that year is not explained in the weighty press guides published by both schools.

It would have been a good game. K State under coach Mike Ahearn played its first 11 game schedule that season, winning 10 while outscoring the opposition 476 to 20. All but three of the games were shutouts, and the lone loss was to Colorado College, 15-8. It was a Bill Snyder-like season.

KU, in 1910, under coach Bert Kennedy, was 6-1-1 losing only to Nebraska and tying Missouri.

* One of the great characters in the history of the sports rivalry between KU and K-State is Doctor Forest C. “Phog” Allen, a legend as KU’s basketball coach, but also the football coach in the 1920 season. He had a 5-2-1 record beating K-State and Washburn, and tying Nebraska. Continue reading