Showing posts with label Phil Ford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phil Ford. Show all posts

Sunday, December 15, 2013

More Carolina Basketball, more Dean, and Phil Ford

It was more of the same yesterday as Carolina basketball, the style invented and developed by Dean Smith, triumphed over Kentucky for another marquee win for this year's squad.

It was not the most ascetically pleasing contest but it was a win - which IS Carolina basketball.

So is going inside, something the Heels did repeatedly and effectively; so is going to the free throw line; so is sharing the ball and having multiple players contribute.  

The 'sharing the wealth' is becoming the hallmark of this fun and successful team. This year's Heels, especially Marcus Paige, J.P. Tokoto, Brice Johnson, James Michael McAdoo, Kennedy Meeks, Johnson, are fun to watch.  Last year's team had a disjointed feel, a team that had fans nervous for much of the season. The schedule was an exercise in watching Roy try to find combos that worked despite a flawed lineup with too many shooting guards and not much else. High points such as the win at FSU and the 'run' to the ACC tournament final felt like found money, not expected wins.

I think many Tar Heels fans felt the same way heading into this season, especially with Hairston sidelined indefinitely.  But this team has cured any of those unsettling thoughts and feelings. Led by Marcus Paige this year's team almost reminds me of the early 90s Heels, great teams with some great players - Eric Montross and one of the greatest Heels of all time in George Lynch - but without a dominant superstar (Worthy, Jordan, Jamison, May, Hansbrough, Lawson, etc.).*

That lack of a superstar and the use of a deep bench (Henrik Rodl, Kevin Salvatori, Scott Cherry) led many to dub the '93 Heels the ultimate Dean Smith team, where the whole was greater than the sum of it's parts. Dean's humility and Carolina collective triumphed over our society's obsession with celebrity and ego.

And like the '93 team, or any successful team, these Heels simply make plays. Whether we are talking about drives by Paige or McAdoo or Tokoto or Nate Britt, tip ins by Tokoto, Meeks, Joel James or Desmond Hubert, key boards or baskets by Johnson, great passes by Meeks or Paige, or huge steals by Tokoto, these Heels - every Heels player - make plays when they need to make plays.

As great as the win was over Kentucky, the program that blends the worst of Duke (smug entitlement) and NC State (low-brow anti-intellectualism) the half-time ceremony honoring Dean Smith for receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom was even better.

If you have not seen it yet click here. The speeches by Dean's wife, who talked about his commitment to social change, and from Montross were great.  But I want to focus on Phil Ford.

Dean Smith's relationship with Ford epitomizes why Dean is Dean, the kind of person - not basketball coach - we should all emulate.

Ford was an elite basketball player; he won an Olympic gold medal in 1976 (for Dean - and the U.S.), was the ACC and national player of the year his senior year, and the NBA rookie of the year.  

Seven years later his career was over, derailed by the cocaine culture of the early '80s and alcoholism.  He washed out of the NBA in 1985. 

Carolina and Dean did not turn their back on one of the greatest Tar Heels of all time. Dean hired Ford as an assistant coach in 1988. He prospered, and was such a good recruiter that many assumed that Dean had groomed him as his likely successor.

How cool would that have been? Dean to Guthridge to Ford? That's got to be one of the biggest 'what ifs' in Carolina history!

The plan was derailed for good when Ford's demons reappeared, and he plead guilty to DUI in both 1997 and 1999. The second DUI cost him the JV coaching job and his position as lead recruiter under Bill Guthridge. 

Ford left Chapel Hill when Matt Doherty insisted on bringing in his own staff (sheesh, that guy...) but Dean's Carolina family continued to help Ford as he worked as an NBA assistant for Larry Brown in Detroit and New York before returning to Chapel Hill to work for the Education Foundation.

Dean never made a big deal about helping Ford get his life back together; what could be more un-Deanlike?  

Isn't that what one's life should be about, helping those who need a little help? That's why Dean is Dean, one reason why he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Honor, and the main reason folks like us love him and Carolina so much.

Go Heels!

A Few More Things
  •  How great was it to see McAdoo back on track?  Much has been made of his aggressive play on offense, but he outplayed Randall on both ends of the floor.
  • Foul trouble and perhaps some Dean-like insouciance led to Roy playing Jackson Simmons and Desmond Hubert at the same time in the second half yesterday.  Ol' Roy got away with it even though Simmons looked super nervous bricking 4 late free throws.
  • A month ago I was afraid that Britt was the second coming of Adam Boone. Man, was I wrong.  Every minute of every game you can see his confidence and game grow.  In the 3 big wins - against the top three teams in the preseason top 25 - he has been fantastic.  His coast to coast drive late was one of the plays of the game, and like Paige he is money at the free throw line.  His play gives the Heels tremendous balance, especially if he and Tokoto can make an occasional three pointer. 

* I know you knew that list; I just liked typing it.   

 

 

Friday, November 13, 2009

Harrison Barnes

Carolina signed Harrison Barnes today to their 2010 recruiting class.  Barnes is universally regarded as the best high school player in the country, and picked Carolina over Duke, Kansas and UCLA.


The signing is just the latest coup for Roy Williams and the Heels, and cements the perception that Carolina is a cut above every other college basketball program.  


It seems that Roy signs every player he goes after. If you're a potential recruit you'd have to be a moron to resist playing at a school with: 2 championships in 5 years; a record number of final four appearances; a program whose graduates are a who's who of basketball; Michael Jordan's number in the rafters; plays in a great building in front of knowledgeable fans, etc. etc.  


And if a potential recruit turns Carolina down he's obviously dumb and a player who does not deserve to be part of the Dean Smith-Phil Ford-James Worthy-Michael Jordan-Antawn Jamison-Tyler Hansbrough-Roy Williams family.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Tyler Hansbrough

I was 'Obama-wins' happy on Thursday night when Tyler Hansbrough broke Phil Ford's scoring record at Carolina. As it happened, I was in the car so had XM on and got to listen to Woody Durham call the record-setting basket.  

But there were two reasons I was so happy.

One, Hansbrough is Hansbrough. I'm not skilled enough to add anything to his resume, but he really is not only the epitome of Carolina basketball, but of sport itself.  Sport is still important for a number of reasons - fun, exercise, competition - but to me the essence of the endeavor is selflessly giving everything you've got for a greater (team) goal, and of course stepping up. Is there an athlete ANYWHERE who more honestly pays homage to that ethic? When you watch Hansbrough play you are watching pure, honest effort, the essence of what sport should be about.

The Carolina part is there to make that glow even shinier.   His effort is for a greater team and institutional goal - Carolina basketball.  And Hansbrough has a lot of Dean in him - a hyper-competitive yet humble athlete.

Two, it was a brief but great celebration of Carolina basketball complete with Phil Ford on the floor.  For all the Tar Heel heroes - Jordan, Worthy, May, Noel, Hansbrough, Cunningham, McAdoo, Scott, Rosenbluth, Jamison - and despite being number two on the scoring list, Phil Ford will simply always be the greatest Tar Heel of all time. He never won a national championship (but made the 1977 Final Four) and washed out in the pros (after being named rookie of the year) due to drugs (thanks again hippies!) and alcohol (which also cost him the Carolina job; Dean had groomed him to be his or Guthridge's eventual successor) Phil Ford still reigns.  Perhaps those setbacks make him that much more heroic in a Faulkneresque way.

Kudos to Tyler Hansbrough.  Anyone who plays that way and outscores a Who's Who of college basketball cements their place near the top of the list of all-time greatest Tar Heels, the ultimate list in college basketball. Roy Williams spoke for millions when he said there will be no one sadder in college basketball when Hansbrough leaves Chapel Hill than ol' Roy - and the legion of Tar Heel fans across the universe.  

[Note to self: next time you type 'has a lot of Dean in him' you should end the entry right then and there.]

Monday, March 31, 2008

New Poll

In my last post on Tyler Hansbrough I blogged a bit on his place in the pantheon of all time Tar Heel greats.   Now I am asking my half-dozen readers to weigh.  As you can see, you have seven choices - the six players who have had their numbers retired plus one special guest - of who is the greatest of all time.