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1974–75 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team

1974–75 season of University of Kentucky men's basketball team


1974–75 season of University of Kentucky men's basketball team

FieldValue
sportBasketball
year1974–75
teamKentucky Wildcats
image
conferenceSoutheast Conference
short_confSEC
CoachRank4
APRank2
record26–5
conf_record15–3
head_coachJoe B. Hall
hc_year3rd
asst_coach1Dick Parsons
asst_coach2Ray Edelman
asst_coach3Leonard Hamilton
stadiumMemorial Coliseum
champion[NCAA Tournament](1975-ncaa-division-i-men-s-basketball-tournament), runner-up
SEC champions
bowl[National Championship Game](1975-ncaa-division-i-basketball-championship-game)
bowl_result
L 85-92 vs. [UCLA](1974-75-ucla-bruins-men-s-basketball-team)

SEC champions L 85-92 vs. UCLA

The 1974–75 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of Kentucky and was the 1975 NCAA runner-up. The head coach was Joe B. Hall. The team was a member of the Southeast Conference and played their home games at Memorial Coliseum.

Regular season

On December 7, 1974, Indiana and Kentucky met in the regular season in Bloomington with a 98–74 Indiana win. Near the end of the game, Indiana coach Bob Knight went to the Kentucky bench where the official was standing to complain about a call. Before he left, Knight hit Kentucky coach Joe B. Hall in the back of the head. UK's assistant coach Leonard Hamilton, a former FBI agent who was about 6 feet 5 inches, had to be restrained by Hall from hitting Knight. Hall later said, "It publicly humiliated me."

Knight said the slap to the head was something he has done, "affectionately" to his own players for years. "But maybe someone would not like that," he said. "If Joe didn't like it, I offer an apology. I don't apologize for the intent." ... "Hall and I have been friends for a long time," Knight said. "If he wants to dissolve the friendship, that's up to him." Knight blamed the furor on Hall, noting in his inimitable style, "If it was meant to be malicious, I'd have blasted the fucker into the seats." Indiana finished the regular season unbeaten (31–0).

NCAA tournament

Following the contentious regular season game, Indiana and Kentucky met in the 1975 NCAA Mideast Regional Final in Dayton, Ohio. Coming into that game, the Hoosiers were on a 34-game winning streak, and the number one ranked team in America. Kentucky was ranked number five. However, Indiana had lost star player Scott May to a broken arm in the regular season finale against Purdue. May scored 25 points in the regular season IU-UK meeting, but he managed only 2 points in seven minutes in the Tournament game, which he played with a cast on his left arm that limited him to 7 minutes. IU surged to an early seven-point lead before UK rallied to tie it at 44 by halftime. Despite Indiana's Kent Benson scoring 33 points (on 13-of-18 shooting) and grabbing 23 rebounds, Kentucky would win by just two points, 92–90. The game made USA Today's list of the greatest NCAA tournament games of all time.

The loss for Indiana prevented what could have been back-to-back undefeated seasons and national championships as the Hoosiers went on to take the national title in 1976. Bob Knight would later say that this 1974–1975 team was the best he ever coached, even better than the undefeated national champions of 1976. The win put UK in the Final Four in San Diego, where they dropped the NCAA title game in what would be John Wooden's last game.

  • East
    • Kentucky 76, Marquette 54
    • Kentucky 90, Central Michigan 73
    • Kentucky 92, Indiana 90
  • Final Four
    • Kentucky 95, Syracuse 79
    • UCLA 92, Kentucky 85

Team players drafted into the NBA

7113Mike FlynnPhiladelphia 76ers

References

References

  1. "Recapping the rivalry".
  2. ''Atlanta Constitution Journal'', 28 February 1982.{{verify source. (April 2017)
  3. Laudeman, Tev, ''Louisville Courier Journal'', 8 December 1974. {{verify source. (April 2017)
  4. Delsohn, Steve. (2006). "Bob Knight: The Unauthorized Biography". Simon & Schuster.
  5. Mike Douchant - [https://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/basketball/men/02tourney/greatest-games.htm Greatest 63 games in NCAA Tournament history]. The Sports Xchange, published in USA Today, March 25, 2002
  6. [http://www.databasesports.com/ncaab/tourney.htm?yr=1975 "1975 NCAA basketball tournament Bracket > Mideast & Final Four"], ''databasesports.com''.
  7. "1975 NBA Draft on". Databasebasketball.com.
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