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“Right
there, boys, you are looking at the team that’s going to
win the NCAA championship this year,” announced Larry
Joe Bird to his Indiana State (ISU) Sycamores teammates.
They were watching the Earvin “Magic” Johnson-led
Michigan State (MSU) Spartans decimate the visiting
Soviet national team during the 1978-79 college
preseason. The Russians earlier manhandled
Kentucky,
Indiana and Notre Dame, but found a tougher challenge
against
Indiana State.
The Sycamores beat the Russian national team, 87-79,
despite Bird fouling out early in the second half, an
indication that ISU was more than a one-man team. But
when the Eastern bloc team took the court against
Michigan, the Spartans blew away the visitors with
Magic’s terrific rebounding and coast-to-coast drives.
Notwithstanding Bird’s prediction, ISU had them a pretty
good basketball team that year. Despite its small-school
status, the turnaround of the school’s basketball
program and success in recent years (owing to the
transfer of Bird from Indiana U in Bloomington to the
much smaller ISU in Terre Haute) had shot the school
into national prominence. “The Great White Hope” tag was
labeled on Bird; after all, there had not been a great
and marketable Caucasian basketball player since Bill
Walton played for the UCLA Bruins.
The
American sports media took notice and Bird made the
cover of many a national sports magazine, including
Sports Illustrated’s annual college basketball issue.
However,
Bird was uncomfortable with the spotlight and adulation
heaped on him and he scoffed at the lack of exposure for
the rest of his team. Bob King, his former ISU coach,
had to convince him to do the photo shoots because it at
least gave the school and the team some badly needed
media mileage. King used every motivational tool,
including the Sycamores’ low seeding in the Missouri
Valley Conference, in their quest for an National
Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) championship.
The
Sycamores had quite a lineup. Brad Miley and Bird
started at forward. Alex Gilbert, despite being listed
only at six-feet-seven, had 40-inch vertical leap was
the man in the middle, and Carl Nicks and Steve Reed
manned the backcourt. Reserves Bob Heaton and Leroy
Staley provided quality minutes off the bench.
After
disposing of the Soviets (whom Bird was fascinated with
because they had this aura of mystery about them, more
so since beating the US in the controversial Munich
Olympics), ISU mowed down the opposition to go 32-0
heading into the Final Four. There, they met the De Paul
Blue Demons led by Mark Aguirre, who was averaging about
25 points. The game went down the wire with several lead
changes until ISU’s Heaton put in the marginal basket
off an offensive rebound. Indiana State 76. De Paul 74.
The Big
10 champs, the Michigan State Spartans, on the other
hand, had no trouble disposing of overachieving Penn,
101-67, which earlier had upset North Carolina in the
Big Dance.
For all
the marbles
And as
the final seconds of the MSU-Penn game ticked away,
Spartans fans began chanting “We want Bird! We want
Bird!” ISU’s supporters responded with an equally
boisterous “You’ll get the Bird! You’ll get the Bird!”
while flipping them a digit.
So it
was for all the marbles in what was shaping out to be a
game on a par with the Super Bowl. Sports fans sensed it
and they packed the Special Events Center in Salt Lake
City, Utah, to witness a game that little they knew,
would change basketball forever.
ISU was
up against the bigger and more athletic Michigan State
Spartans who went into the National Championship game
with a 25-6 record on the strength of its powerful
starting five of Johnson and Terry Donnelly at guard,
Mike Brkovich and Greg Kesler at forward and Jay Vincent
at center.
It was a
dream matchup. It was the Big 10 vs. the Missouri
Valley. It was black vs. white. The street ballers vs.
the country hicks. It was the Magic Man vs. the Birdman.
And the hype caught
America’s
attention.
Not only
were Bird and Johnson the two best college basketball
players, but they were also versatile athletes with a
keen understanding of the sport. Bird, at six-feet-nine,
played forward-center, while Johnson, at six-feet-eight,
was the best point guard in the country and the
harbinger of tall playmakers to come. Despite their
size, they played the game like players half a foot
smaller and placed a premium on team game, with emphasis
on passing.
Said
Michigan coach Jud Heathcoate, “A lot of guys can find
the open man by driving in and throwing the ball out.
But few can find the open man in the basket area or can
thread the needle like the Birdman and the Magic Man.”
‘I’m a
fan of Bird’
Prior to
the championship match, Heathcoate had Johnson mimic
Bird’s style of play in practice for the team to know
how to handle ISU’s star player. Johnson relished the
task. “I’m a fan of Larry Bird,” he said. “You’ve got to
be a fan of his if you like basketball.”
But the
game displayed none of the drama and hype that preceded
it. The Spartans took control of the game early on and
refused to let Bird take control of the game. “We
thought we had proved that we could beat every kind of
defense, but we had never seen anything like that zone
of theirs,” recalled Bird. “I couldn’t get the ball and
make moves anywhere on the floor. They really did a good
job on me.”
Playing
a 2-3 matchup zone (which was new at that time), the
Spartans threw one man at Bird at all times depending on
his position on the floor. It was equal parts zone and
man-to-man without double-teaming. By halftime, with the
Spartans up 37-28, ISU coach Bill Hodges (in his first
year after replacing Bob King because of health reasons)
was still unable to come up with an antidote to
Michigan’s stifling defense. With Bird all but contained
(he did play superb defense by intercepting Johnson’s
first lob pass for an alley-oop dunk, took several
charges from MSU players and had four steals), the
Spartans closed out the Sycamores decisively, 75-64.
Johnson
scored 24 points, hauled down seven rebounds and had
five assists to grab the MVP award. Bird, who broke down
in tears after the game, had 19 points and only two
assists.
NBC,
which broadcast the game, produced a 24.1 rating, an
all-time high for an NCAA title game. One reason why the
game drew so much interest was that Bird was drafted the
previous year by the Boston Celtics, while Johnson,
despite being only a sophomore, had a game that belied
his years.
The game
captivated
America
and basketball enthusiasts everywhere. The following
season, both Bird and Johnson (who was the first pick by
the Los Angeles Lakers, who beat out the Chicago Bulls
in the coin-toss lottery pick) moved on to the pros,
where they continued their rivalry and helped usher in
an era of greatness for the NBA. |