1973-74
UCLA's two big streaks were finally broken in 1974.
On Jan. 19 in South Bend, Notre Dame handed the No.1 Bruins
their first defeat in four years, 71–70, coming from behind to halt UCLA's
all-time NCAA winning streak at 88. Notre Dame was also the victor the last time
UCLA lost a game in 1971.
On March 23 in Greensboro, N.C., David Thompson and N.C.
State ended UCLA's run of seven straight NCAA championships, beating Bill Walton
and Co., 80–77 in double overtime in the NCAA semifinals. The Wolfpack then
beat Marquette for their first title. Walton and Thompson shared Player of the
Year honors, but Thompson was tournament MVP.
Rules change
- Refs can call fouls away from
the ball.
ARTICLE - UCLA'S INVINCIBILITY DIES
Final AP Top 20 (Writers' poll taken after tournament).
|
|
Before
Tourns
|
Head
Coach
|
Final
Record
|
1
|
North
Carolina St.
|
26–1
|
Norm Sloan
|
30–1
|
2
|
UCLA
|
24–2
|
John Wooden
|
26–4
|
3
|
Marquette
|
22–4
|
Al McGuire
|
26–5
|
4
|
Maryland
|
23–5
|
Lefty Driesell
|
same
|
5
|
Notre Dame
|
24–2
|
Digger Phelps
|
26–3
|
6
|
Michigan
|
21–4
|
Johnny Orr
|
22–5
|
7
|
Kansas
|
21–5
|
Ted Owens
|
23–7
|
8
|
Providence
|
26–3
|
Dave Gavitt
|
28–4
|
9
|
Indiana
|
20–5
|
Bobby Knight
|
23–5
|
10
|
Long Beach St.
|
24–2
|
Lute Olson
|
same
|
11
|
Purdue
|
18–8
|
Fred Schaus
|
22–8
|
12
|
N. Carolina
|
22–5
|
Dean Smith
|
22–6
|
13
|
Vanderbilt
|
23–3
|
Roy Skinner
|
23–5
|
14
|
Alabama
|
22–4
|
C.M. Newton
|
same
|
15
|
Utah
|
19–7
|
Bill Foster
|
22–8
|
16
|
Pittsburgh
|
23–3
|
Buzz Ridl
|
25–4
|
17
|
USC
|
22–4
|
Bob Boyd
|
24–5
|
18
|
Oral Roberts
|
21–5
|
Ken Trickey
|
23–6
|
19
|
S. Carolina
|
22–4
|
Frank McGuire
|
22–5
|
20
|
Dayton
|
19–7
|
Don Donaher
|
20–9
|
Note:
North Carolina State won the NCAAs, Indiana won the CCA and Purdue won the NIT.
Consensus All-America (In alphabetical order)
First Team
·
Marvin Barnes, Providence
·
John Shumate, Notre Dame
·
David Thompson, N.C. State
·
Bill Walton, UCLA
·
Keith Wilkes, UCLA
Second Team
·
Len Elmore, Maryland
·
Bobby Jones, North Carolina
·
Bill Knight, Pittsburgh
·
Larry Fogle, Canisius
·
Campy Russell, Michigan
AP POLL
1.
N.C. State
2. UCLA
3. Marquette
4. Maryland
5. Notre Dame
6. Kansas
7. Michigan
8. Providence
9. Indiana
10. Long Beach State
UPI COACHES POLL
1. N.C. State
2. UCLA
3. Marquette
4. Notre Dame
5. Michigan
6. Kansas
7. Providence
8. Indiana
9. Long Beach State
10. North Carolina
NCAA TOURNAMENT
Providence 84, Penn 69
Pittsburgh 54, St. Joseph's 42
Furman 75, South Carolina 67
New Mexico 73, Idaho State 65
Dayton 88, Los Angeles State 80
Notre Dame 108, Austin Peay 66
Marquette 85, Ohio University 59
Oral Roberts 86, Syracuse 82 (OT)
Creighton 77, Texas 61
Regional Semifinals
North Carolina State 92, Providence 78
Pittsburgh 81, Furman 78
San Francisco 64, New Mexico 61
UCLA 111, Dayton 100 (3OT)
Michigan 77, Notre Dame 68
Marquette 69, Vanderbilt 61
Oral Roberts 96, Louisville 93
Kansas 55, Creighton 54
Regional Third Place
East: Providence 95, Furman 83
West: New Mexico 66, Dayton 61
Mideast: Notre Dame 118, Vanderbilt 88
Midwest: Creighton 80, Louisville 71
Regional Finals
East: N.C. State 100, Pittsburgh 72
West: UCLA 83, San Francisco 60
Mideast: Marquette 72, Michigan 70
Midwest: Kansas 93, Oral Roberts 90 (OT)
National Semifinals
North Carolina State 80, UCLA 77 (2OT)
Marquette 64, Kansas 51
National Third Place
UCLA 78, Kansas 61
Championship Game
North Carolina State 76, Marquette 64
North Carolina State leaders: David Thompson, Jr., F; Tom Burleson, Sr.,
C; Monte Towe, Jr., G; Moe Rivers, Jr., G; Phil Spence, So, F
All-NCAA
Tournament Team
Name
|
Cl.
|
Pos
|
Team
|
David Thompson
|
Jr.
|
F
|
No. Carolina State
|
Tom Burleson
|
Sr.
|
C
|
No. Carolina State
|
Bill Walton
|
Sr.
|
C
|
UCLA
|
Maurice Lucas
|
Jr.
|
C
|
Marquette
|
Monte Towe
|
Jr.
|
G
|
No. Carolina State
|
|
|
|
|
Top 10
Rank
|
Team
|
W-L
|
Post-Season Result
|
1.
|
No. Carol. St.
|
30-1
|
NCAA 1st Place
|
2.
|
UCLA
|
26-4
|
NCAA 3rd Place
|
3
|
Marquette
|
26-5
|
NCAA 2nd Place
|
4.
|
Maryland
|
23-5
|
Lost in ACC final
|
5.
|
Notre Dame
|
26-3
|
Lost NCAA regionals
|
6.
|
Michigan
|
22-5
|
Lost NCAA regionals
|
7.
|
Kansas
|
23-7
|
NCAA 4th Place
|
8.
|
Providence
|
28-4
|
Lost NCAA regionals
|
9.
|
Indiana
|
23-5
|
Lost Big 10 playoff
|
10.
|
Long Beach St.
|
24-2
|
Probation
|
|
|
|
|
All-America Team
Pos
|
Name
|
Cl.
|
School
|
F
|
David Thompson
|
Sr.
|
No. Carolina State
|
F
|
Keith Wilkes
|
Sr.
|
UCLA
|
C-F
|
John Shumate
|
So.
|
Notre Dame
|
C
|
Marvin Barnes
|
Sr.
|
Providence
|
C
|
Bill Walton
|
Sr.
|
UCLA
|
|
|
|
|
Leaders
Team
Offense: Maryland-E. Shore, 97.6
Defense: Texas-El Paso, 56.6
Individual Scoring
1. Larry Fogle
|
Canisius
|
33.4
|
2. Bruce King
|
Pan American
|
31.0
|
3. Fly Williams
|
Austin Peay
|
27.5
|
4. Aron Stewart
|
Richmond
|
26.5
|
5. David Thompson
|
N.C. State
|
26.0
|
6. Larry Bullington
|
Ball State
|
25.5
|
|
|
|
Rebounding
1. Marvin Barnes
|
Providence
|
18.7
|
2. Carlos McCullough
|
Pan American
|
16.3
|
3. Bradley Robinson
|
Kent State
|
16.3
|
|
|
|
Notes
•
On Jan. 19, 1974, Notre Dame broke UCLA’s 88-game win streak, 71-70, at South
Bend. Oregon State also broke the Bruins’ 50-game Pac-8 Conference win streak.
•
Purdue defeated Utah to win the NIT title.
•
In the lowest scoring game since 1938, Tennessee defeated Temple, 11-6.
1974 Jan 19 Notre Dame end UCLA’s 88-game winning streak -- at South Bend,
Indiana. The Fighting Irish posted a 71-70 college basketball win over the
Bruins of the University of California at Los Angeles.
Sep 03 NBA guard Oscar Robinson retires.
Site: Greensboro (N.C.)
Coliseum
Most Outstanding Player: David
Thompson, N.C. State
Thompson scored 21 points with seven rebounds and Tom Burleson blocked seven
shots in the final, but that game was almost incidental after a spectacular
semifinal. The No. 1 Wolfpack avenged its only loss and ended UCLA's string of
seven titles, twice coming back from 11 points down in the second half and then
from seven down in the second OT. Tim Stoddard missed a jumper with five seconds
left in regulation and Burleson missed a turnaround at the end of the first
overtime, but Monte Towe hit two free throws at :12 of the second OT to clinch
the win. Thompson finished with 28 points and 10 rebounds, while Burleson went
for 20, 14 to Bill Walton's 29, 18.
SI's Pick: "All four teams have a chance at the title, a
refreshing situation for the NCAA in recent years. But UCLA is UCLA and the
team's incentive for victory may be even greater than normal. After all, the
Wizard may be coming down the mountain."
Close Call: UCLA had to go to three overtimes to beat Dayton, 111-100,
in the West semifinals. Late in regulation, after his team worked the ball
around to no avail, Flyers coach Don Donoher called for time just as Don Smith
was driving baseline. Smith pulled up and hit a jumper with 14 seconds left, but
it didn't count. After the timeout, Smith missed with :04 on the clock and UCLA
eventually escaped.
Memorable Moment: In the East final vs. Pittsburgh, Thompson went up
for block, flipped over the shoulders of teammate Phil Spence and landed on his
head, opening a 15-stitch gash. He returned to the bench later in the game
wrapped in a bandage.
Significant Fact: Ed Chay of the Cleveland Plain Dealer makes
reference to the "final four" in a story on Marquette coach Al
McGuire—the first known use of the term.
Significant Fact II: In the era of one team per conference, N.C. State
had to beat a Maryland team led by Len Elmore, John Lucas and Tom McMillen,
103-100 in overtime, in the ACC tournament final just to get into the NCAAs. The
Wolfpack, which had gone unbeaten the previous season while on probation, had a
tailor-made road to the title, playing at home in the East Regional and then in
Greensboro.
Future First-Round
Picks: N.C.
State—Tom Burleson (1974, 3rd, Seattle), David Thompson (1975, 1st, Atlanta);
Marquette—Maurice Lucas (1974, 14th, Chicago), Bo Ellis (1977, 17th,
Washington); UCLA—Bill Walton (1974, 1st, Portland), Keith Wilkes (1974, 11th,
Golden State), Dave Meyers (1975, 2nd, Los Angeles), Richard Washington (1976,
3rd, Kansas City), Marques Johnson (1977, 3rd, Milwaukee); Kansas—Norm Cook
(1976, 16th, Boston).
1974 NBA Draft, First Round
First Round |
Player |
College |
1. Portland Trail Blazers |
Bill Walton |
UCLA |
2. Philadelphia 76ers |
Marvin Barnes |
Providence |
3. Seattle SuperSonics |
Tom Burleson |
North Carolina State |
4. Phoenix Suns |
John Shumate |
Notre Dame |
5. Houston Rockets |
Bobby Jones |
North Carolina |
6. KC-Omaha Kings |
Scott Wedman |
Colorado |
7. Atlanta Hawks |
Tom Henderson |
Hawaii |
8. Cleveland Cavaliers |
Campy Russell |
Michigan |
9. Buffalo Braves |
Tom McMillen |
Maryland |
10. Atlanta Hawks |
Mike Sojourner |
Utah |
11. Golden State Warriors |
Keith Wilkes |
UCLA |
12. Los Angeles Lakers |
Brian Winters |
South Carolina |
13. Washington Bullets |
Len Elmore |
Maryland |
14. Chicago Bulls |
Maurice Lucas |
Marquette |
15. Detroit Pistons |
Al Eberhard |
Missouri |
16. Chicago Bulls |
Cliff Pondexter |
Long Beach State |
17. Boston Celtics |
Glenn McDonald |
Long Beach State |
18. Milwaukee Bucks |
Gary Brokaw |
Notre Dame |
HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES
1974
*Joseph R. Brennan,
Player
*Emil S. Liston,
Contributor
William F. Russell,
Player
*Robert P.
Vandivier, Player
The UCLA streak ends - 1974
By Joe Gergen
For The Sporting News
|
TSN Photo
|
John Wooden |
The myth of invincibility had died slowly in the final 3 1/2 minutes of a game
against Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind., where John Wooden had coached a high
school team four decades earlier. Riding the crest of an unprecedented 88-game
winning streak, Wooden's UCLA Bruins failed to hold an 11-point lead and lost to
the Fighting Irish, 71-70.
Ironically, the Bruins had won at Notre Dame to break San Francisco's NCAA
record for consecutive victories (60) a year earlier. Moreover, UCLA's long
winning streak had begun after an 89-82 loss at Notre Dame in 1971. But on
January 19, 1974, the Irish inflicted the first varsity loss on the collection
of players known as the Walton Gang.
Bill Walton, the consensus All-America center and star of the team, appeared
bemused by the result. The 6-foot-11 senior left the Notre Dame Athletic and
Convocation Center humming the "Notre Dame Victory March," which had
been played loudly and incessantly throughout the latter stages of the stunning
upset.
Nor did the Bruins appear terribly distraught when they lost consecutive
Pacific-8 Conference games at Oregon State and Oregon four weeks later. Oh, it
was a bit of a shock, but they recovered in time to win their last five
regular-season games and their eighth consecutive Pac-8 title.
Even though the Bruins had fallen behind North Carolina State in the national
rankings, they were supremely confident entering the NCAA Tournament. Their
three losses represented their highest season total since 1966 when UCLA was
18-8, but winning seven consecutive national championships in the interim had
fostered an understandable degree of complacency.
After a first-round bye, UCLA needed three overtimes to squeeze by Dayton.
The Bruins then overwhelmed San Francisco, 83-60, in the West Regional final to
proceed to the Final Four, where only State was conceded a reasonable chance of
dethroning UCLA. But the Bruins weren't worried. After all, they had smashed the
Wolfpack, 84-66, in a nationally televised game earlier that season in St.
Louis.
That loss was the only one suffered by N.C. State in the regular season. In
fact, it represented the Wolfpack's lone defeat in two seasons. A year earlier,
Norm Sloan's team had gone 27-0 but had been denied a berth in the NCAA
Tournament because of recruiting violations.
In the eyes of N.C. State's players, students and supporters, the December
meeting on a neutral court would settle the 1973 championship. It did. The
Bruins won handily as consensus All-America forward David Thompson, a 6-4
Wolfpack star whose 42-inch vertical leap propelled him to heights heretofore
unknown, was grounded by UCLA's consensus All-America forward, Keith Wilkes.
Wilkes not only limited Thompson to 17 points, but scored 27 himself.
Though disappointed by the result, N.C. State did not suffer a competitive
hangover from the thrashing. The Wolfpack emerged undefeated from a taxing
Atlantic Coast Conference schedule, then scored a dramatic 103-100 overtime
victory over Maryland for the ACC Tournament title and a spot in the NCAA East
Regional, where Providence and Pittsburgh were defeated easily.
College basketball fans were eager to watch a UCLA-N.C. State rematch for the
national title, but the Final Four pairings pitted West against East in one
semifinal, meaning that the nation's top two teams would meet a game earlier
than hoped.
The rematch, however, differed from the first encounter in one important
respect: The site of the championship, the Greensboro (N.C.) Coliseum, was just
70 miles up the road from the N.C. State campus.
Not that the talent-laden Wolfpack needed it, but N.C. State clearly
benefited from some fortuitous scheduling. The ACC Tournament was held in
Greensboro and the East Regional semifinals and final were played in Raleigh,
N.C. Now Sloan's team had an opportunity to win the national title without
playing an NCAA Tournament game outside its home state.
"I want North Carolina State to remember that we beat them by 18 on a
neutral court," Wooden said as he prepared his team. "I want them to
think about who has the psychological advantage."
The Wolfpack contended that it had been too anxious in that first game, and
that it had gained experience over the course of the season and was playing at
maximum efficiency.
"We're more versatile than UCLA," Sloan said. "We have
something left to prove. And we still have Thompson. I like the odds."
With all the interest focused on the UCLA-N.C. State matchup, scant attention
was paid to the other semifinalists. Marquette and Kansas had struggled to win
the Mideast and Midwest regionals, respectively, but their meeting provoked
mostly yawns in North Carolina. Kansas coach Ted Owens jokingly referred to the
first semifinal as the "preliminary" game.
And after his Marquette team, which he personally rated only seventh best in
the country, had scored a humdrum 64-51 victory over the Jayhawks, Warriors
coach Al McGuire decided not to waste either his or the media's time.
"We'll answer a few questions," he said, "and then you guys
can go watch the championship game."
Certainly, the game that followed belonged in a championship setting. UCLA
never led by more than two points and N.C. State never led by more than five in
the first half, which ended, fittingly, in a 35-35 tie as Bruins forward Dave
Meyers sank a 29-foot desperation jump shot at the buzzer.
Thompson was every bit the force he hadn't been in St. Louis, and 7-4 senior
Tom Burleson was conceding little to Walton. And Monte Towe, a 5-7 whippet of a
guard, was creating havoc in UCLA's erratic backcourt.
Still, the Bruins surged ahead in the second half. They scored 14 of the
first 17 points after halftime to open a 49-38 lead. An 8-2 Wolfpack run reduced
the deficit to 51-46, but then UCLA scored the next six points to go up by 11 a
second time at 57-46. Only 10:56 remained.
Although they had a chance to put away the Wolfpack then and there, the
Bruins responded with turnovers.
Walton was whistled for traveling. Backcourt leader Greg Lee and Meyers
forced passes. Senior Tommy Curtis took questionable shots. Wilkes, who was
hounded into a 5-for-17 shooting performance, couldn't steady the team.
N.C. State closed the gap to one at 57-56 and again at 61-60. Suddenly, there
was Thompson elevating himself above the crowd, taking a lob pass from forward
Tim Stoddard, slamming the ball through the hoop and drawing a foul. His
three-point play pushed the Wolfpack into the lead, 63-61. UCLA rallied to tie
at 65-65 with a little more than two minutes left.
The Bruins worked more than a minute off the clock before Walton rolled to
his left and attempted a hook shot.
"Down at the end, all they could do was go to Wilkes or Walton,"
Wolfpack guard Moe Rivers said. "And we had them covered."
Walton's shot rolled off the rim, and Burleson rebounded.
N.C. State had a final chance. With Burleson and Thompson blanketed, the ball
went to Stoddard in the corner. His jump shot missed.
Lee's shot at the buzzer also missed for the Bruins, forcing an overtime.
The extra session was played in slow motion. After Lee matched a basket by
Burleson, the Wolfpack killed most of the final three minutes setting up a last
shot. But Burleson's potential game-winner was off-target, so with the score
still tied, 67-67, a second overtime was necessary.
UCLA appeared to be the fresher team at the start of the extra five-minute
period. Walton and Wilkes combined for the first seven points, opening a 74-67
UCLA lead.
"The thought went through my head that we had two opportunities to win
this game," Towe recalled. "And when we were seven points down, I
thought maybe this was their turn."
Curtis obviously thought so. The cocky UCLA guard took the occasion to wave
his right index finger at the pro-Wolfpack crowd with 3:27 left. Moments later,
he answered two free throws by Towe with one of his own. It would be the last
point his team would score until it was too late.
Turnovers by Curtis, Lee and Walton enabled N.C. State to gain control. The
Wolfpack edged in front, 76-75, on a bank shot by Thompson, and his two free
throws with 34 seconds left made it 78-75 and gave him a team-high 28 points.
Towe's two foul shots clinched the 80-77 victory.
The sentiment in the UCLA locker room was that the Bruins had beaten
themselves.
"There's nobody better than us," Lee said. "We're better than
that team. You think they don't know that? We helped them. We got careless with
the ball.
"We made the mistakes."
At least one N.C. State player was inclined to agree.
"Once it got down close," Rivers said, "they seemed to
choke."
No matter what the cause, N.C. State had succeeded in handing UCLA its first
NCAA Tournament loss in 39 games -- a stretch that began after successive losses
in the 1963 tournament -- and in toppling what everyone but Wooden called a
dynasty.
Still, the Wolfpack had yet to fulfill its goal.
Shortly after the Walton era officially ended with UCLA's 78-61 consolation
victory over Kansas, the Wolfpack won its first national championship with a
convincing if uninspired 76-64 victory over Marquette.
In the finale, N.C. State had considerable help from McGuire. The rival coach
earned two technical fouls late in the first half, helping to transform a 28-27
Marquette lead into a 37-28 deficit. Including the two technical-foul shots
converted by Thompson, the Wolfpack scored 10 unanswered points in a 53-second
span to take charge of the game.
"We never got back on our feet after that," Warriors center Maurice
Lucas said.
McGuire took the blame.
"I cost us the game," he said.
Still, he didn't want to detract from the Wolfpack's performance or talent.
"The simple truth of the matter," McGuire said, "is that State
is a better team. If we played them 10 times, we might win three, we might win
two. We might not even win one."
When it mattered most, N.C. State was triumphant. The Wolfpack led 39-30 at
halftime, stretched its margin to 19 five minutes into the second half and won
handily. And college basketball finally had a new champion after seven years of
domination by UCLA.