8 minute read
1973-74 Jayhawks were a Team
Coach Ted Owens and players planning a 50-year reunion to celebrate their time in the spotlight.
ARTICLE BY David Garfield
PHOTOGRAPHS courtesy KU Libraries Digital Collection
On a beautiful July day in Indianapolis, Dale Greenlee has finished playing nine holes of golf (two birdies) with his daughter, Julie, who’s visiting from Atlanta. He’s looking forward to his 70th birthday in a couple of weeks.
Greenlee, branch manager in industrial sales for FCX Performance, treasures Julie’s birthday gift — an autographed basketball of NBA legend Julius Erving — as he thinks back 50 years ago and reflects on his 1973–74 Kansas basketball Final Four team (23–7). He and his teammates staged the most dramatic comeback in school annals and one of the biggest turnarounds from the previous season (8–18 in 1972–73) in NCAA history. The 1973–74 team was the first team in 23 years to earn a Final Four berth after a losing season.
“It seems like yesterday, especially when the NCAA Tournament starts,” Greenlee says. “It’s like it’s been a few years; the memories keep flooding back. I see Kansas playing in the tournament and think, ‘Oh my gosh, it wasn’t that long ago we were there, but it was.’ It makes you feel young when you watch KU. I think (Coach) Bill Self could put me in and maybe I could get one shot. I couldn’t guard anyone anymore.”
The Return Season
Greenlee, one of the fiercest competitors in KU history and once called the league’s “best pure shooter,” was a sophomore in 1972–73, playing on the team that lost every close game — a “season of challenges.”
The returnees completely “redoubled our dedication in the offseason ... to become a better basketball player,” and the “effort and quality of play in practice was better.”
With the top four scorers returning and the additions of sweet-shooting 6-foot-6 community college transfer Roger Morningstar and 6-foot-9 high school star Norm Cook, KU was still picked by area media to finish fifth or worse in the Big Eight.
KU coach Ted Owens, now 93, was named Big 8 Coach of the Year five times during his tenure at KU. He started senior co-captain Tom Kivisto and Greenlee as guards, Morningstar and Cook as forwards, and junior center Danny Knight, with “Super Subs” 6-foot-10 Rick Suttle (team high scorer in conference play) and 6-foot-4 Tommie Smith, who all gave instand spark when they rotated into play.
“The Comeback Kids” first routed Murray State, 103–71, during which Cook (Big 8 Freshman of the Year) had a magical freshman debut with 21 points (10–10 FG); then the team won a huge home battle with No. 10 Kentucky, 71–63.
“That was critical to our confidence,” Greenlee says. “We’re thinking, ‘We can play with anybody.’”
After next losing at No. 3 Indiana, Greenlee says, “We played pretty well (going forward).” However, after losing to Colorado, 73–71, on December 26, 1973 — KU’s second straight loss — Kivisto told John Hendel in his 1991 book, Kansas Jayhawks: History-making Basketball, that doubt crept in and he called a team meeting.
“We decided we’re going to go with some kids … who worked hard … (and) have a little bit of fun,” Kivisto said at the time.
KU won 14 of the next 16 games, including a pivotal 72–71 win at Iowa on January 2, 1974. Kansas (0–7 in road games the previous season) finally won a close road game and against a Big Ten foe.
“This game made our season,” Kivisto said. He was an All-Big 8 and Academic All-American that year.
The close wins and tremendous team chemistry continued with five players averaging in double figures for the first time in school history. Knight was the team high scorer at 12.4 points per game. Kivisto, a prep All-American, was the consummate leader who sacrificed scoring to help everyone.
“Tom was our most valuable player,” Greenlee says, “… and never happier when giving an assist.”
Playing on a “team without a star,” Greenlee remembers that “nobody cared who scored. We played like brothers. We were really a tight group, watched out, and cared about each other. We hung out off the court, my comrades in arms. You worked, practiced, traveled with, that’s a lifetime experience.”
Greenlee has warm memories of living with teammates at Jayhawker Towers, attending KU football games, and visiting the homes of Owens and assistants Sam Miranda and Duncan Reid. The coaches viewed the team as “family.”
The Big Eight Title
On March 6, at Allen Fieldhouse, in what the Wichita Eagle termed the “The Game of the Year,” KU beat K-State, 60–55, clinching the Big Eight title. Students stormed the court, the KU team cut down the nets, and the players were carried off the court.
“We’ve won a lot of championships, but this means more than any we’ve ever had,” Owens said in the jubilant locker room.
“We went up on the Hill afterwards,” Greenlee says, where 7,000 fans celebrated at midnight. “Nobody wanted to sleep. It felt as if you almost won the national championship because you had to win the conference to get into the NCAA Tournament.”
The best was just beginning.
After KU beat Creighton, 55–54, in Tulsa during the Jayhawks’ opening game (they received a bye for the first round), the Kansas team went up against the high-scoring Oral Roberts squad for the Midwest Regional title on ORU’s home court, the Mabee Center, which remains “The Game” in Tulsa.
ORU led 81–74 with 3:19 left. The Jayhawks scored the last seven points to tie the game in regulation and went on to win 93–90 in overtime.
“We had a season when we’d come back a lot,” Greenlee says. “I’ll never forget the timeouts. I’d look at Kivisto. He’d look at me, we’d look at Roger, and Rick and Norm. We figured we’d do what we had to do to get back in it.”
The Jayhawks were overjoyed afterwards. Owens called the victory against a great team on its homecourt the “gutsiest thing I’ve ever seen.”
“You’ve climbed the next mountain,” Greenlee says now. “The first mountain was winning the conference. (Now) you’re standing at the peak of the mountain and ... moving on to the Final Four.”
In the 1991 Hendel book, Kivisto said, “It was as talented Final Four group, with the exception of our team, as there ever was in a Final Four.” The rosters of the Final Four teams included numerous future first-round NBA picks as well as future hall of famers Bill Walton and David Thompson. The Final Four wasn’t near the huge media event it is today, so there was just a small sign at the Holiday Inn at Greensboro, North Carolina, where the Jayhawks were staying, that read, “Welcome, Kansas Jayhawks.”
On March 23, No. 6 KU played No. 3 Marquette in the undercard game in Greensboro while No. 1 N.C. State took on No. 2 UCLA in what was billed the “Dream Game.”
“We were thrilled to be there,” Greenlee says. Newspaper headlines used “Mystery Team” to describe Kansas.
After KU led 24–23 at halftime, Marquette coach Al McGuire directed his players to a full-court press on Kivisto and Kansas lost 64–51. In the 1991 book, Owens said, “We did not have a lot of other ballhandlers except Tom Kivisto, so what they did was fullcourt pressed him and trapped him. It was good strategy on their part. They trapped him and took the ball out of his hands and put the press of ball handling on other people …”
The Jayhawks fell against UCLA in the consolation game, 78–61, after leading by eight points at halftime.
Even with both losses, the KU players felt immense pride. Owens said later, “This team probably gave as many thrills and excitement in the great history of Kansas basketball. It was this kind of unity, spirit, and togetherness which made us such a great team.”
The Brotherhood
Greenlee says the team’s brotherhood remains strong.
“Definitely for life,” he says. “That’s not something that changes.”
The squad regularly comes back for reunions and is planning a 50-year reunion in Lawrence this season. Greenlee talks to his close friend Morningstar every week and regularly speaks to other former teammates on a regular basis. He also keeps in touch with Owens. He says his former roommate Tommie Smith still calls him “roomie,” and the team has a group text.
“You slide right back into the relationships (at reunions),” Greenlee says. “There’s that feeling of joy, warmth, the hugs. You’re right back where you were in 1974.”
Greenlee can’t hold back his emotions when expressing what that miracle comeback season 50 years ago meant to him and his lifetime “brothers.”
“It was one of the greatest moments of my life,” he says. “I believe we had as good a group of guys that ever wore Kansas on their chests. I’m proud to have been part of that group.”