Hoosier Hysteria

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Hoosier Hysteria is the state of excitement surrounding the Indiana high school basketball tournament. In part, the excitement stemmed from the inclusion of all Indiana high schools in the same tournament, where a small town's David might knock off a large city's Goliath. The most famous example occurred in 1954, when Milan (enrollment 161) defeated Muncie Central (enrollment over 1,600) to win the State title. The plot of the now famous movie, Hoosiers, was based on the story of the 1954 Milan team and seems to typify the hysteria related to basketball in the state of Indiana.

Indiana's passion for basketball was observed and written about by basketball's inventor, James Naismith. In 1925, Naismith visited an Indiana basketball state finals game along with 15,000 screaming fans and later wrote, that while it was invented in Massachusetts, "basketball really had its origin in Indiana, which remains the center of the sport." Hoosiers have a traditional love for basketball similar to the love for football in Texas, and Minnesotans' love for hockey. It truly is one of the State's most cherished traditions.

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[edit] High School Hysteria

[edit] One-Class Tradition

Historically, each of the several hundred small towns of Indiana had its own small school system. Before consolidation of many of these rural school districts in the last half of the twentieth century (Milan itself is now a consolidated school whose enrollment is twice what it was in 1954), Indiana high schools had fewer students than those of most other States; basketball was a natural game for these schools since it only required five starters and a few reserves. Even one or two great basketball players could make a high school team a powerhouse, and nearly every Indiana town dreamt of such glory.

However, after Milan, no school with an enrollment of less than 500 won another boys' State title under the all-comers format. As school consolidation became more common and as more rural residents migrated to cities making large high schools grow even larger, smaller high schools had only a mismatch to look forward to come tournament time, as success concentrated in Indiana's large urban and suburban schools. Starting with the 1997-1998 season, Indiana established a controversial four-class system for its basketball championship, although many other sports remain single-class. The State's move to this new system has, to some extent, diminished the phenomenon and public opinion is widely split on the merits of "class basketball."

Aside from the "Milan Miracle," the story of Crispus Attucks High School ranks as one of the greatest in Indiana high school basketball tradition. In 1955, the year after Attucks had lost in the semistate final (state quarterfinals) to Milan's championship team, Attucks gained fame by winning the Indiana state championship, becoming the first all-black school in the nation to win a state title. Crispus Attucks repeated as champions in 1956, becoming the first Indiana high school team to complete a season undefeated. The Attucks teams of 1954 through 1956 were led by future professional star and Hall of Famer Oscar Robertson. Both stories, Milan and Crispus Attucks, are memorialized for their accomplishments and tradition at the Indiana State Museum as well as at the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame in New Castle, Indiana.

A highlight of the single-class tournament was the 1990 State Championship game, in which the paid attendance was over 40,000 fans. This phenomenal turnout of fans who witnessed Damon Bailey's Bedford-North Lawrence Stars win the State Championship stands as the largest crowd ever to witness a high school basketball game.

After the 1997 season (when Bloomington North won the final single-class State Championship), the IHSAA controversially did away with the single-class system, effectively ending the run of single-class champions in Indiana. There are many in Indiana who lament this loss, and who feel that Hoosier Hysteria has been significantly lessened thereby.

[edit] High school gymnasiums

Perhaps one of the more telling signs of the passion and commitment to basketball at the high school level is the number and size of large basketball gymnasiums in the state. With considerable cost and effort, Indiana boasts nine of the ten largest high school gyms in the country[1], and a purported eighteen of the top twenty. Seventeen venues in Indiana today boast a capacity of over 6,000.[2]

See also: Largest high school gyms in the United States

[edit] College Hysteria

Hoosier Hysteria may have its roots firmly planted in the high school game, but the college tradition brings its own depth to Indiana's passion. In NCAA Division I basketball, Indiana's colleges and universities have a storied past. Big Ten rivals Indiana University and Purdue University are the most notable, with national and conference championships to boast. Yet, even the more football-oriented University of Notre Dame and smaller schools such as Ball State University, Butler University, the University of Evansville, Indiana State University, and Valparaiso University add to the mix. In recent years, even the largely-commuter campus of IUPUI and the Division II University of Indianapolis and University of Southern Indiana have added their own successes to the legend of Indiana basketball. It is sometimes said that the terms "Final Four" and "March Madness" have grown out of the tradition of Hoosier Hysteria.

[edit] Ball State Cardinals

One of Indiana's oldest basketball programs, the Ball State Cardinals have won several conference championships and earned a number of NCAA Tournament berths over the years, including:

[edit] Butler Bulldogs

[edit] Evansville Purple Aces

[edit] Indiana Hoosiers

The most decorated of Indiana's collegiate basketball squads, the Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team has several championships to their credit:

  • Five NCAA National Championships (1940, 1953, 1976, 1981, 1987), placing them third most all-time
  • Twenty Big Ten Championships (including four-in-a-row, from 1973 to 1976), currently the second most all-time
  • Also, Indiana completed the last perfect season in Division I men's college basketball, going 32-0 in the 1975-76 season under Bob Knight.

The Hoosiers' five NCAA Championships are the third-most in history, trailing only UCLA (11) and Kentucky (7). Their eight trips to the Final Four ranks seventh on the all-time list. The Hoosiers have made 32 appearances in the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament (fifth-most in NCAA history). In those 32 appearances, Indiana has posted 52 victories, the sixth-most in NCAA history.

[edit] Indiana State Sycamores

  • Led by the legendary French Lick standout Larry Bird, Indiana State was the runner-up in the 1979 NCAA Tournament. They lost to Magic Johnson's Michigan State Spartans.
  • Indiana State was also the runner-up in the 1968 NCAA College Division championship game.
  • Indiana State won the 1950 NAIA championship game.
    • Eight team players played under Head Coach John Longfellow at the United States' Gold Medal Basketball team at the 1951 Pan-American Games.
  • Indiana State was the runner-up in the 1946 and 1948 NAIA championship games. The 1948 team was coached by the legendary John Wooden; it is the only Championship game loss in Coach Wooden's coaching career.
    • In 1947, Wooden's basketball team won the conference title and received an invitation to the NAIB National Tournament in Kansas City. Wooden refused the invitation citing the NAIB's policy banning African American players. A member on the Indiana State Sycamores' team was Clarence Walker, an African-American athlete from East Chicago, Indiana. In 1948 the NAIB changed this policy and Wooden guided his team to the NAIB final, losing to Louisville. That year, Walker became the first African-American to play in any post-season intercollegiate basketball tournament.
  • Indiana State finished third in 1953 and fourth in the 1949 NAIA tourney.

[edit] Notre Dame Fighting Irish

  • Like Purdue, the 1936 Men's Irish Basketball team won the Helms Foundation National Championship.
  • The Irish women won their first National Championship (over Purdue) in 2001.

[edit] Purdue Boilermakers

With their only National Championship coming in the days before the modern NCAA Tournament, the Purdue Boilermakers have a strong basketball history:

  • National Championship in 1932 (sponsored by the Helms Athletic Foundation, seven years before the NCAA sponsored a basketball championship)
  • One NIT Championship (1974); the first for the Big Ten Conference and two Runner-up finishes (1979, 1982)
  • Twenty-One Big Ten Championships (including a "Three-Pete" - a play on their mascot - from 1994 to 1996)
    • Currently the most all-time
    • Currently third all-time in Big Ten Conference victories with 822.
  • The women Boilermakers have one National Championship (1999), one National Runner-up (2001), seven Big Ten Championships, and have won six of the thirteen women's Big Ten Tournaments.

[edit] USI Screaming Eagles

[edit] Valparaiso Crusaders

[edit] National Hysteria

[edit] Big Ten Tournament

At the conclusion of the regular Big Ten season, a tournament is held to determine the conference winner, who receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Indianapolis has played host for the men's tournament on three occasions to date. Indianapolis has hosted all but one of the women's tournaments since its inception in 1995. Beginning in 2008, the Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament will be held exclusively at Indianapolis' Conseco Fieldhouse.

[edit] The Final Four

Indianapolis, Indiana, often referred to as the "Amateur Sports Capital of the World" has hosted a number of collegiate basketball events. Aside from the multitude of regional games held during the NCAA tournament, Indianapolis has hosted five men's NCAA Final Fours (1980, 1991, 1997, 2000, 2006) and one women's (2005). Indianapolis is scheduled to host the men's 2010 Final Four as well as the women's in 2011. Previous events were held in the Conseco Fieldhouse or the RCA Dome, but given the new stadium being built for the Indianapolis Colts, Lucas Oil Stadium will host future events. When the NCAA Headquarters relocated to Indianapolis, it was stated that Indianapolis would then host the men's Final Four once every five years.

[edit] World Championships

In 2002, Indianapolis hosted the World Basketball Championships, an event that takes place on even years opposite the Olympic Games. In the fifty-plus year history of the event, Indianapolis is the only city in the United States to have hosted the event.

[edit] Homegrown Hysteria

Here follows a list of notable Indiana natives who have achieved success in basketball:

Here follows a list of those who gained basketball fame in Indiana's tradition:

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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