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1966–67 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team

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American college basketball season

1966–67Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
Record12–12 (6–8 Big Ten)
Head coach
Assistant coaches
MVPJim Dawson
CaptainJim Dawson
Home arenaAssembly Hall
Seasons
1966–67 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Michigan State104 .714167 .696
Indiana104 .714188 .692
Iowa95 .643168 .667
Wisconsin86 .571159 .625
Purdue77 .500159 .625
Northwestern77 .5001111 .500
Ohio State68 .4291311 .542
Illinois68 .4291212 .500
Minnesota59 .357915 .375
Michigan212 .143816 .333
Rankings fromAP Poll

The1966–67 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois.

Regular season

[edit]

A dark cloud loomed over theFighting Illini's men's basketball team as the 1966-67 season commenced. An investigation revolving around a"slush-fund" program which provided funds to athletes within the basketball and football programs had come to the conclusion that many integral parts of the administration, coaching staff, as well as athletes, were culpable and should be punished. The basketball team was the first to feel the brunt of sanctions caused by the"slush fund". For the first few weeks of the season, the 1966-67 Illini team was proving to be one of the elite teams in college basketball. They had defeatedKentucky 98-97 atKentucky in early December, a feat the Illini had done only one other time in theirhistory. Prior to the revelations, the team's only loss was by 2 points at the hands ofWest Virginia on their home court inMorgantown. Then, just two days before Christmas, while the team awaited itsChicago Stadium game withCalifornia, three fifths of the starting lineup were declared ineligible.

Rich Jones,Ron Dunlap andSteve Kuberski never again played for Illinois, andHarry Combes and his assistantHowie Braun was forced to resign at the end of the season. The team that remained bonded together and defeated Cal, 97–87. Remaining starterJim Dawson took over the scoring load from that point on, but the real surprise that night, and for the remainder of the season, wasDave Scholz.

Scholz, a 6-foot-7 sophomore fromDecatur, had seen only limited action in the first five games of the season. From the Cal game and beyond, Scholz utilized his opportunity to play by becoming the second leading scorer on this team and the leading scorer the following two seasons. Not only did he become the leading scorer, he was also named aHelms Foundation first-team All-American each of his remaining years. The dismissal of the three starters also gave impetus to aBig 10 MVP award for Dawson.

Eventually, reality set in, and the Illini finished with a 12–12 record and a seventh-place finish in the Big 10. Based on the negative findings, Illinois was forced to hire a newathletic director and new head basketball coach.Gene Vance was hired to be athletic director and was asked to guide the Illini back to respectability.

The university began the investigation into the"slush-fund" as a good faith gesture to demonstrate to the Big Ten commissioners that they were willing to handle any negative consequences in-house.University PresidentDavid D. Henry found that 12 active football and basketball players had received illegal aid, seven football, 5 basketball. It also found that 17 other athletes had received aid since 1962, totaling approximately $21,500. The salt in the wound came from Big Ten commissionerBill Reed, who emphasized that, even though the university had completed its investigation and dismissed the parties involved, the conference would continue the investigation further and hand down a formal decision on March 4, 1967. The decision, after a fairly brief debate, made by the conference athletic directors, including ex-offendersBiggie Munn andForest Evashevski, called for Illinois to fire Elliott, Combes and Braun or "show cause" why the university should not be suspended or dropped from Big Ten membership. Based on the fact that the committee making the decision was made up of several members who had been guilty of infractions themselves, President Henry became outraged. The university appealed the decision while"friends of the coaches" began circulating petitions with hopes of pressuring the school into keeping them regardless of the consequences. On March 18, the Big Ten issued its ultimatum to the University of Illinois.[1] In a statement from the commissioner, it was demanded that the implicated coaches be fired or the school could face an indefinite suspension. When the dust settled, football coachPete Elliott and basketball coaches Combes and Braun all had their existing contracts terminated on August 31, 1967.

Combes finished his 20-year career with 316 wins, three conference titles (1949,1951, and1952) and his1963 team sharing a portion of theBig Ten Championship withOhio State. Along with the conference championships, Combes' teams finished theNCAA Tournament in third place three times and in the Elite Eight once during his tenure.

The 1966-67 team's starting lineup includedDeon Flessner andBenny Louis at the forward spots, Dawson andPreston Pearson as guards and Scholz at center.

Roster

[edit]
1966–67 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team
PlayersCoaches
Pos.#NameHeightWeightYearPrevious schoolHometown
F10John Prescott6ft 6in(1.98 m)185lb(84 kg)JrLake Forest High SchoolLake Forest, Illinois
G11Benny Louis6ft 2in(1.88 m)175lb(79 kg)JrPinckneyville Community High SchoolPinckneyville, Illinois
F/C12Paul Nitz6ft 6in(1.98 m)195lb(88 kg)SoMarian Central Catholic High SchoolWoodstock, Illinois
G/F14Jerry Mettille6ft 4in(1.93 m)190lb(86 kg)SrMorris Community High SchoolMorris, Illinois
F21Bob Johansen6ft 4in(1.93 m)190lb(86 kg)SrGeneva High SchoolGeneva, Illinois
G24Jim Dawson (C)6ft 0in(1.83 m)175lb(79 kg)SrYork High SchoolElmhurst, Illinois
G25Preston Pearson6ft 1in(1.85 m)195lb(88 kg)SrFreeport High SchoolFreeport, Illinois
F30Deon Flessner6ft 4in(1.93 m)205lb(93 kg)SrFithian High SchoolFithian, Illinois
F32Les Busboom6ft 4in(1.93 m)185lb(84 kg)SoSt. Joseph-Ogden High SchoolRoyal, Illinois
F/C33Rich Jones (S)6ft 7in(2.01 m)200lb(91 kg)JrLester High SchoolMemphis, Tennessee
G/F34Denny Pace6ft 3in(1.91 m)175lb(79 kg)SoCollinsville High SchoolCollinsville, Illinois
C35Ron Dunlap (S)6ft 8in(2.03 m)220lb(100 kg)JrFarragut AcademyChicago, Illinois
F/C40Dave Scholz6ft 8in(2.03 m)220lb(100 kg)SoStephen Decatur High SchoolDecatur, Illinois
F/C43Steve Kuberski (S)6ft 7in(2.01 m)210lb(95 kg)SoMoline High SchoolMoline, Illinois
G45Bill Stefan6ft 4in(1.93 m)185lb(84 kg)SoSt. Joseph High SchoolWestchester, Illinois
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • (W)Walk-on

Roster

Schedule

[edit]

Source[2]

Date
time, TV
Rank#Opponent#ResultRecordSite (attendance)
city, state
Non-Conference regular season
12/3/1966*
ButlerW 82-51 1-0
Assembly Hall (7,822)
Champaign, IL
12/5/1966*
at No. 3 KentuckyW 98-97 ot2-0
Rupp Arena (11,500)
Lexington, KY
12/10/1966*
at West VirginiaL 88-90 2-1
WVU Field House (6,500)
Morgantown, WV
12/19/1966
WisconsinW 87-74 3-1
(1-0)
Assembly Hall (8,525)
Champaign, IL
12/22/1966*
StanfordW 81-67 4-1
Assembly Hall (7,435)
Champaign, IL
12/23/1966*
vs. CaliforniaL 72-89 5-1
Chicago Stadium (8,000)
Chicago, IL
12/27/1966*
vs. Arizona
Los Angeles Basketball Classic
W 93-77 6-1
Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena (3,473)
Los Angeles, CA
12/29/1966*
vs. Southern California
Los Angeles Basketball Classic
L 72-73 6-2
Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena (12,100)
Los Angeles, CA
12/30/1966*
vs. Georgia Tech
Los Angeles Basketball Classic
W 83-71 7-2
Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena (12,130)
Los Angeles, CA
Big Ten regular season
1/7/1967
Michigan StateL 74-76 7-3
(1-1)
Assembly Hall (11,047)
Champaign, IL
1/10/1967
at Northwestern
Rivalry
L 96-104 7-4
(1-2)
McGaw Memorial Hall (7,748)
Evanston, IL
1/14/1967
MichiganW 99-93 8-4
(2-2)
Assembly Hall (7,141)
Champaign, IL
2/4/1967*
vs. Notre DameL 75-90 8-5
Chicago Stadium (17,024)
Chicago, IL
1/29/1967*
vs. No. 1 UCLAL 82-120 8-6
Chicago Stadium (10,025)
Chicago, IL
2/4/1967
Northwestern
Rivalry
W 93-83 9-6
(3-2)
Assembly Hall (8,145)
Champaign, IL
2/7/1967
at Iowa
Rivalry
L 89-96 9-7
(3-3)
Iowa Field House (12,822)
Iowa City, IA
2/11/1967
at MinnesotaL 81-93 9-8
(3-4)
Williams Arena (8,317)
Minneapolis, MN
2/18/1967
PurdueW 94-92 10-8
(4-4)
Assembly Hall (7,244)
Champaign, IL
2/20/1967
at Indiana
Rivalry
L 81-96 10-9
(4-5)
New Fieldhouse (8,035)
Bloomington, IN
2/3/1967
at PurdueL 86-98 10-10
(4-6)
Mackey Arena (8,035)
West Lafayette, IN
2/27/1967
MinnesotaW 84-71 11-10
(5-6)
Assembly Hall (5,562)
Champaign, IL
3/4/1967
Ohio StateW 80-70 12-10
(6-6)
Assembly Hall (10,733)
Champaign, IL
3/6/1967
at Ohio StateL 79-100 12-11
(6-7)
St. John Arena (5,898)
Columbus, OH
3/11/1967
at WisconsinL 92-102 12-12
(6-8)
Wisconsin Field House (11,722)
Madison, WI
*Non-conference game.#Rankings fromAP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are inCentral Time.

Player stats

[edit]
PlayerGames PlayedField GoalsFree ThrowsReboundsPoints
Jim Dawson[3]242149373521
Dave Scholz[4]2319483250471
Deon Flessner[5]208573162243
Preston Pearson[6]237549123199
Bob Johansen[7]22584272158
Rich Jones*[8]5521866122
Denny Pace[9]2229285486
Benny Louis[10]2332385986
Les Busboom[11]1826216077
Ron Dunlap*[12]526216073
Steve Kuberski*[13]5721216
Paul Nitz62347
Jerry Mettille92357

*Jones, Dunlap and Kuberski were deemed ineligible on December 23rd due to the"Slush-Fund" scandal.

Awards and honors

[edit]

Team players drafted into the NBA

[edit]
PlayerNBA ClubRoundPick
Jim DawsonChicago Bulls162

[15]

Rankings

[edit]
Main article:1966–67 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings

References

[edit]
  1. ^Big Ten Decision
  2. ^University of Illinois Fighting Illini Statistics Summary for 1966-67Archived 2014-01-16 at theWayback Machine, FightingIllini.com
  3. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  4. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  5. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  6. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  7. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  8. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  9. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  10. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  11. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  12. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  13. ^"Season Stats". Archived fromthe original on January 16, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  14. ^"List of MVPs"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on October 30, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2014.
  15. ^1967 NBA Draft
Venues
Rivalries
Culture & lore
People
Seasons
Helms and Premo-Porretta national championships in bold; NCAA Final Four appearances in italics
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