xt7g4f1mh99c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7g4f1mh99c/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky 1982 Rupp Arena, Lexington (Ky.) athletic publications  English University of Kentucky Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. University of Kentucky Basketball Programs (Men) UKAW University of Kentucky Men's Basketball (1981-1982) players coaches Hall, Joe B. SEC Men's Basketball Tournament (1982) Vanderbilt University University of Florida Auburn University Mississippi State University University of Alabama University of Georgia Ole Miss LSU University of Tennessee rosters statistics Southeastern Conference Tournament, March 3-6, 1982 text Southeastern Conference Tournament, March 3-6, 1982 1982 2012 true xt7g4f1mh99c section xt7g4f1mh99c Souvenir Program  $ 2.50
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March 3-6, 1982
CONTENTS
4 The SEC: Strain of Endurance
5 Letter from the Governor
7 Tourney '81: Underdogs Were Top Dogs
11 SEC Tournament: Spectacle Second to None
18 ALABAMA
21 SEC Tournament Quiz
22 AUBURN 24 FLORIDA 26 GEORGIA
37 Tournament Pairings
43 SEC Stats & Standings
46 KENTUCKY
48 LSU
50 OLE MISS
54 MISSISSIPPI STATE
56 TENNESSEE
58 VANDERBILT
62 SEC Tournament Records
CREDITS
Editors:
Barry Bronson
Host Communications, Inc.
Elmore (Scoop) Hudgins
Assistant Commissioner SEC
Publishers:
Host Communications, Inc. 120 Kentucky Avenue Lexington, Kentucky
Printer:
Thoroughbred Press Lexington, Kentucky The SEC
Basketball: A Strain of Endurance
rpo the first fifty years of the life JL of the Southeastern Conference the sport of basketball has contributed an admirable strain of endurance.
The typical American family on achieving a position of unexpected prominence, after years of work and study, discipline and sacrifice, takes stock of itself and attempts to identify the outstanding characteristics which enabled it to climb past the many other fine families in the chase to the mountaintop.
In the case of the SEC, several could be cited. Among them Courage: the courage to strike out into the wilderness of intercollegiate athletics with little more than half the members, as they did at organization in the winter of 1932-33. Another, Intelligence: the good sense to seek out the core of their problem (the differences in the good athlete and the good student) and attempt to eliminate it. Another, Perception: the ability to perceive good from bad, right from wrong. Also, Acuteness: they quickly put the most accomplished former students, the Presidents, in charge of
Dr. Otis A. Singletary
SEC President (Kentucky)
By Elmore (Scoop) Hudgins
the operation. Others which apply are Diligence, Patience and Endurance.
The characteristic of Endurance, one of at least a half-dozen strains which made the SEC family strong, is perhaps best exemplified by basketball.
The game was being played during the three meetings of presidents and faculty chairmen of athletics which accomplished the withdrawal of the 13 members (Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, Miss. State, Tennessee and Vanderbilt, plus Ga. Tech, Sewanee and Tu-lane) from the 23-member Southern Conference and organization of the new Southeastern Conference, Dec. 8-9, 1932, in Knoxville, Feb. 16, 1933, in Birmingham and Feb 27, 1933, in Atlanta.
Basketball was the chief intercollegiate sports activity of the proposed members during those three months, against one another and against other colleges within the area. During the week of the final meeting, a tournament of the 13 teams was being played in Atlanta. The Southeastern Conference was pronounced alive by President Frank L. McVey, also President of the University of Kentucky, on Friday, Feb. 27 and on Saturday the 28th Kentucky defeated Miss. State in the finals of the basketball tournament to become the first SEC Champion.
The rapport that came from competing with each other in basketball in that period without a recognized family name strengthened that strain of endurance and helped produce a healthy (pardon the pun) bouncing baby, quickly nicknamed SEC.
The Southeastern Conference is now being mentioned, by sports analysts outside the SEC area, as the strongest overall, certainly the best balanced, in the nation. Last March four SEC teams (LSU, Tennessee, Ole Miss and Kentucky) competed in the NCAA Tournament and two more (Alabama and Georgia) in the NIT. New Year's
Day of 1982, two SEC teams, not one, took a shot at the national championship in football. Last March the fastest swimmer in the world competed for an SEC school, Rowdy Gaines of Auburn. Teams of SEC schools were prominent in the NCAA championships of baseball, track, golf and tennis. The University of Georgia campus has been recognized by the NCAA as the best place in the nation to hold the tennis championships.
All this comprises a position of prominence for the SEC among athletic conferences of the nation, surely beyond expectations of the men who organized so well during the dread winter of 1932-33.
Sound leadership is also a continuous characteristic of the Southeastern Conference. Dr. Otis Singletary, President of the University of Kentucky, is President of the Conference and Dr. Boyd Mc-Whorter is Commissioner. These gentlemen attend to the needs of the SEC family in the national competition for college athletics on a practical and honorable basis, as have their thoughtful predecessors.
Dr. H. Boyd McWhorter
SEC Commissioner
4 John Y. Browm, Jr.
governor
Commonwealth or Kentucky
fftce of tlje (gobernor
Frankfort, Kentucky 40601
Welcome to Kentucky and the 1982 S.E.C. Tournament. And congratulations to the players and fans. We're proud to be hosting this year's competition here in the heart of basketball country.
While you're visiting with us, I'd like to invite you to share all the great things our state has to offer our history, our arts and crafts, the finest state park system in the nation and, of course, sports and recreation of all kinds. I'm sure the hospitality of our people and the many things therearetodo and see will bring you back again and again.
Enjoy your stay with us in Kentucky. And best of luck to your team.
Governor John Y. Brown, Jr A
Winning Tradition
At Commonwealth, we're proud of the winning tradition that has been a vital part of our continued success in the insurance industry.
Each Commonwealth representative has been thoroughly trained to diagram the plays to help you meet your personal financial goals.
So take a time out and team up with your local Commonwealth agent. You're sure to make some key plays toward a financially secure future.
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6
 Tournament '81:
Where The Underdogs Were Top Dogs
Elston Turner celebrates the Rebels championship.
By John Tishler Ole Miss Associate SID
All Bob Weltlich could do was shake his head. He was totally alone. It was cold outside, and Weltlich felt great despair. It was January 10 and the Ole Miss head coach was sitting in the press room at Ted Smith Coliseum with his thoughts following Alabama's 74-46 thrashing of Ole Miss in a game that saw the Rebels shoot a miserable 31 percent from the floor for the game while the Tide made 51 percent of their field goals. Weltlich had just told the media gathering that the whole Ole Miss basketball program would have to be rebuiltfrom the ground up. Little did he know that that rebuilding job would take exactly 56 days and culminate in the Rebels' winning the school's first SEC Tournament championship.
Ah, the Southeastern Conference Tournament! Ask Bob Weltlich about it and he will praise it all day long. He'll tell you about how it gives everybody a new chanceas if everyone were starting over again. Just like it gave his Rebels a fresh start only last year when Ole Miss finished sixth in the conference. A respectable year. Better than many of the prognosticators had thought. But then the Ole Miss team surprised its most loyal fans, even some of the team members. The Rebels beat Tennessee, Van-derbilt and Georgia to claim the conference basketball tourney title in a shocker. But to be fair to everyone, the 1981 SEC Tournament was filled with more surprises than Tiny Tim's Christmas.
The Tournament started according to plan as Vanderbilt put an end to Mississippi State's frustrating season with a 71-58 victory. Vandy shot the lights out in the first half, connecting on 77 percent of their field goals and running out to a 40-23 lead. That margin increased to 19 five minutes into the second half before the Bulldogs made it very interesting, pulling to within two at 51-49. But just as it looked that State would put it all
together, they fell apart, losing the ball six of the next seven times down court, to put an end to the Bulldogs' hopes. The Commodores got balanced scoring with Al Miller scoring 17, Willie "Hutch" Jones getting 15 and Ted Young and Al McKinney picking up 12 apiece. Jeff Malone, as he had done all year, scored 18 points to lead Mississippi State, while Butch Pierre added 11 to the State total.
In the second game of the first night at Birmingham's Jefferson Civic Center Coliseum, Florida and Auburn squared off and as two arch-rivals will do, played a humdinger of a game, the Gators finally gaining a 50-48 overtime win over the Tigers.
The first half was dull, setting up a wild, wild second half. After one period of play, the Gators led 18-14. But things heated up in the sec-
7 Florida beat Auburn in the final seconds in the first round
ond stanza, the lead changing hands 26 times before being tied and going into overtime where a 40-foot desperation shot almost went in. With the score at 43-43, Vernon DeLancy hit what appeared to be the game-winner with nine seconds to go. But he was called for traveling. Auburn's Byron Hen-son missed a shot from the top of the circle, but Darrell Lockhart tipped it in. Unfortunately for the Tigers, it was after the buzzer had sounded, sending the game into overtime. Florida won the game with 43 seconds to play in the extra period when forward Ronnie Williams scored a layup to boost the Gators into a 49-48 lead. From there, there were plenty of opportunities, but no conversions, as Florida missed two one-and-one situations. With eight seconds to
go, Auburn's Alvin Mumphord was whistled for traveling, and the Tigers were forced to foul the Gators' Mike Moses who made one of the two-shot free throws. As the buzzer sounded, Darrell Lock-hart's desperation heave at the basket hit the front of the rim before bounding away.
The second day, March 5, would go down as a day of upsets, and set the stage for the rest of the tournament. The nation's No. 7 and No. 10-ranked teams would lose and No. 3 would get a big scare. All-in-all, three upsets were recorded in the four games played.
Ole Miss and Tennessee opened up with their annual game in the tournament, and the Rebels came out on top, 81-71, in a game that was close in the first half, but decided in the second by a crucial
8
Rebel spurt early in the period, and then Ole Miss' ability to hit free throws came into play as the Rebels made a tournament record 31 in the process, and Cecil Dowell of Ole Miss hit a record 16-of-18. Both teams shot 50 percent or better in the first half as the Rebs eked out a 39-35 lead over the tenth-ranked Vols. In the second half, Sean Tuohy and Carlos Clark went on scoring binges to give the Rebs a 13-point lead they never relinquished, though the Volunteers threatened, cutting the lead to six points with 4:26 to go. Dowell, after a shaky start in missing the front end of a one-and-one with 3:47 to go, commenced to making 11 of the next 12 free throws to ice the win for the Rebels. Dale Ellis led Tennessee in scoring with 31 points, while Dowell had 22 points and Clark 21 for Ole Miss.
The next game of that Thursday was a great exhibition of offensive basketball as Georgia and the Bulldogs' talented front line of Dominique Wilkins, Terry Fair and James Banks upset Alabama and the Crimson Tide's great inside game of Ken Johnson, Eddie Phillips and Phillip Lockett. The key to this win was that the 'Dogs' front line accounted for 53 points while Alabama's could muster only 40 as Georgia won 88-80. Alabama spurted to a 25-15 lead, but from there, Georgia outscored the Tide 26-9 to take a 43-36 halftime lead to the dressing room. With Lockett in foul trouble, the Tide had a fit keeping up with the Bulldogs on the boards as Georgia steadily pulled away for the win. Wilkins finished with 31 points while Phillips had 25 for Bama. And the upsets kept occurring.
Vanderbilt came to the tournament an embattled team. Their coach was under fire and there had been rumors of problems on the team. But all that was swept away by the Commodores' incredible 60-55 upset of Kentucky in the quarterfinals of the tournament. The Wildcats went up 10-0 in the first half, and it looked like a breather for the No. 2-seeded Cats, seventh nationally. But suddenly, Al Miller began to hit. And Ted Young began to rebound and score. And Charles Davis, the grizzled, veteran forward with the smooth-as-silk jump shot, started to score and breathe confidence into a young team. Suddenly, Kentucky went cold. At half- time, the two teams were knotted at 27. In the second half, with Vandy playing a sticky match-up zone, the Commodores forged a-head 43-42 with 8:07 to play, and from there, Vanderbilt hit their free throws to stave off a Kentucky rally. The win capped a day when upsets were the rule. It made the race for the tourney crown a wide open affair.
Oh, and the fourth game? That one featured LSU, who had anything but an easy time of it, with Florida. With LSU playing very poorly, Tiger coach Dale Brown benched four of his five starters late in the half, and the Tigers trailed 41-34 at halftime. But the second half was all LSU as the starters came back in off the bench to lead the favored Bengals to an 85-73 win. Leonard Mitchell came back to hit for 27 points to lead the Tigers, Howard Carter had 20, Rudy Macklin 13, and Greg Cook 15. Florida was led by Vernon De-Lancy's 26 points and Ronnie Williams' 23. And the favored teams for the semi-finals were worried.
Vanderbilt, the '81 Tourney giant-killers, faced Ole Miss in the first game of the semis, and at the half, it looked like the Commodores were going to knock off another team that was favored to beat them. With the score tied 20-20, Vandy decided to hold the ball for the last
Kentucky couldn't find the handle and lost to Vandy
shot of the first half. But Mike Rhodes was called for charging, and the Rebs' Cecil Dowell canned a 22-footer at the buzzer to give Ole Miss a 22-20 edge. Ole Miss' center Roger Stieg helped keep the Rebels in the game, hitting for nine points and pulling down five rebounds in the half. In the second period, it was all Ole Miss as the Rebels took advantage of Vandy's weariness (the Commodores were playing their third game in three days). Ole Miss outscored Vanderbilt 19-4 to open the second half, and at one point, the Rebels led by
24 at 65-41 with 1:32 to go before winning 71-51. Elston Turner paced Ole Miss with 22 points while Stieg finished with 11 points and seven rebounds. The Commodores were led by Al Miller's 13 points while Mike Rhodes became Vandy's career scoring leader when he scored a free throw with 2:43 to play in the first half. He finished the night 1,699 points on his career, 10 for the contest.
While the first game may have broken the form of the underdog winning the game, the second one
(Continued on page 15)
Tennessee lost out on this call and they lost to the Ole Miss Rebels
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Ashland, Record Setting Tourney
SEC Tournament Is Second to None
By OSCAR Y. COMBS Publisher The Cats' Pause
The legendary Adolph Rupp has probably asked for a short leave of absence from the big court in the sky. Babe McCarthy most likely has petitioned St. Peter for a four-day pass to accompany Rupp back for one of their famous confrontations. And those skeptics of basketball in the South can be found nowhere.
You really couldn't expect any other reactions as college basketball's most exciting and famous post season conference basketball tournament tips off at Lexington's Rupp Arena.
And the spectacle will be second to none. It won't be second to any other sport, any other conference or other city. Yes, the facts clearly illustrate that the Southeastern Conference will rule the spotlight this week.
Records will be shattered left and right during the next four days. The Atlantic Coast Conference, which has always prided itself on sponsoring   the   top conference
event in the nation, will finish second. All those attendance records established by the ACC in Lan-dover, Maryland, last March will be washed away.
Consider the following:
* The all-time attendance mark for a post season conference to tourney is 76,140 set last year by the ACC in Maryland. Rupp Arena, which seats almost 23,000, is expected to go over the 100,000 mark.
* With almost 20,000 seats sold two weeks prior to the SEC tournament, this year's event is expected to gross more than $1 million, the first league tourney to ever break that impossible financial barrier.
* The one-game attendance mark for a conference tourney game was set during each of the four ACC tourney sessions last year with 19,-035 at Landover. You can bet that will be shattered this week in Rupp Arena.
Rupp and McCarthy and Tennessee's John Mauer who won the tourney twice, never dreamed the game would become so popular in the South. Yet, they are prime ex-
amples of pioneers who have made the SEC what it is today.
Way back in 1932, the Southeastern Conference was formed and the tourney began as a continuance of tournament play in which all SEC members participated while members of the old S.I.A.A. (1921-23) and of the Southern Conference (1924-32).
The first two SEC tourneys were staged in Atlanta, as had been the S.I.A.A. and Southern tournaments, with Kentucky winning in 1933 and Alabama in 1934. The following year saw the tourney dropped, but it was quickly reinstated in 1936 in Knoxville and held again there in 1937. After one year in Baton Rouge, the tourney returned to Big Orange Country for 1939 and 1940.
After that, the tourney was moved to Louisville, Kentucky, where it met great success from 1941-52. There, Kentucky dominated the tourney so often (10 titles in 13 tries) that officials decided to forego the tourney since the NCAA wasn't recognizing the tourney champion, anyway. Often, the NCAA ignored the champion when What is the Ronald McDonald
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14 A super effort by Dominique Wilkins in a losing cause.
(Continued from page 9)
reverted to form as Georgia upset LSU, the No. 3 team in the country, 68-60, to move the Bulldogs into the finals against the Rebels. In a
game that may well have been one of the most exciting due to its seesaw nature and last minute heroics, Dominique Wilkins showed what kind of player he wasto the tune
of 18 points in leading the balanced Bulldogs past the faltering Tigers. It was hardly easy for Georgia, as they trailed 32-31 at the half, and 44-39 with 12:46 to play. But Wilkins and Co. kept chipping away, playing good defense and getting good shooting from the inside from Wilkins and James Banks, who finished with 12. With under four minutes to play, Georgia got a big break. Down 52-51, LSU's Ethan Martin stole the ball from Vern Fleming, who had 15 points for the eventual winners, and was fouled while going for the snow-bird. Martin, a 74 percent free throw shooter, missed both shots, giving the Bulldogs new life. Wilkins promptly came down and canned a baseline jumper and Georgia was never in trouble from there. Down the stretch, the Bulldogs connected on 11-of-11 free throws, and that was the ball game.
And so it was on to the finals, where two underdogs would play each other for the championship of a tournament that had come to be a Waterloo for favored teams. LSU, the No. 1 seed, had lost to Georgia; Kentucky, the No. 2 seed, had lost to Vandy, who had lost to Ole Miss;
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15 Tennessee, the No. 3 seed, had lost to Ole Miss; Alabama, the No. 4 seed, had fallen to Georgia. So, in a way, it was fitting that Georgia and Ole Miss would hook it up in the finals, each at least having had a hand in the demise of those "favored" teams. And once again, the underdogs would come out on top, the No. 6-seed Rebels would tag No. 5-seed Georgia with a 66-62 loss in the finals. And as much as a cliche it is, neither team went home the loser. If nothing else, both schools gained a lot of credibility for their growing basketball programsprograms at two schools that for 40-some years had been the jokes of the league in basketball.
The first half went pretty much as planned for the 9,743 witnesses to this game, Georgia completely dominated. And when you say Georgia, you mean Dominique, who made eight of 11 field goals for 20 points in the first half alone, while the Rebels struggled to score 30 as a team. Wilkins looked like he would not be denied a championship. And in a slump was Ole Miss' big gun, Elston Turner, who was guarding Wilkins and not doing a real bang-up job of it, either. He wasn't doing much offensively, making four of 12 floor shots for only 10 points. But the Rebs weren't out of the ball game, trailing 38-30. In the second half, it took All-SEC point guard Sean Tuohy to wake up the slumbering giant that was the Ole Miss offense. Tuohy, a 6-1 junior who earned All-Tourney honors, began driving on Georgia's inside game, and scoring, or handing off for easy jumpers to Turner or Carlos Clark. In the end, with under 10 minutes to play, Ole Miss still trailed. And Weltlich jerked Turner out of the game. For one minute, "E", as he was called by Ole Miss fans, sat and listened to Weltlich who told him to either start playing like he had all season long, or to sit out and watch the Rebels come so close, only to lose it all. That got Turner going. He reentered the game at 8:42 to go, and promptly got fouled by Wilkins. Then, he went wild on the offensive end. While holding Wilkins to four points the rest of the way, the All-SEC senior scored a 15-foot baseline jumper to make it 53-50, then slammed one home on a Stieg steal to make it 53-52, and then he canned a 20-footer to give Ole Miss its first lead of the game, 54-53. That
did it for the Rebels. Though Wilkins came right back down to score on a 20-footer, Chris Barrett answered that basket with a 20-footer and the Rebels never trailed again. Turner finished the game with 22 points, making the All-Tournament team along with Wilkins, named Tourney MVP, after scoring 28 in the finals. Al Miller of Vandy and Howard Carter of LSU were also named. He was backed up by Carlos Clark's 13 points, and Tuohy's 12 points and 10 assists. When the buzzer sounded, making the Rebels the champions of the 22nd SEC Tournament, it signaled the
arrival of a basketball program that had been the butt of basketball jokes for so long. Now Ole Miss had a team that would have to be dealt with on a yearly basis, and could no longer be taken for granted, or overlooked.
It was an improbable ending to an impossibly frustrating tournament for the favored teams. But it bore out the idea that Weltlich had had when he entered the tournament: It gave every team there new life. Weltlich just didn't know it would be his team that would be born again and benefit from it the most.
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16 CHAMPIONo
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The official ball of all NCAA championship games. a Alabama Alabama Alabama Ala
PAUL"BEAR" BRYANT
Athletics Director
rphe world watches in amaze-JL ment as Alabama athletic director and head football coach "Bear" Bryant builds on his legendary reputation. This past season he set the all-time record for football victories. Coach Bryant passes milestones and breaks records which never again may be threatened.
In 25 seasons at Alabama, Bryant has won an astonishing 83 percent of his games. His Crimson Tide teams have won six national championships.
His coaching career has spanned five decades. He has been named National Coach of the Year three times and SEC Coach of the Year seven times. He was honored as SEC Coach of the Century and the NCAA picked him as Coach of the Decade for the 1960s.
DR. JOAB THOMAS
University President
Dr. Joab Langston Thomas assumed the presidency of The University of Alabama on July 1, after serving since 1976 as Chancellor of North Carolina State U.
The 48-year-old native of Holt, Ala., is certainly no stranger to this University, though, having served here in both faculty and administrative roles for 15 years, prior to accepting the chancellorship at North Carolina State. A noted and widely published botanist, Thomas joined the Alabama faculty in 1961 as assistant professor of biology, rising to professor of biology, assistant dean in the College of Arts and Sciences, and vice president for student affairs. In 1965, he received the Outstanding Professor Award.
Thomas received his bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees from Harvard University. He is married to the former Marly Dukes of Boise, Idaho, an alumna of Harvard and Radcliffe. The Thomases have four children, Catherine, David, Jennifer, and Frances.
He has maintained a keen interest in college athletics, serving as chairman of the collegiate athletics committee of the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges and as a member of the President's Commission on Collegiate Athletics of the American Council on Education. Last Spring, Thomas was named to a three-year term on the executive committee of the SEC.
WIMP SANDERSON
Head Coach
Entering his second yearashead coach at the University of Alabama, Winfrey "Wimp' Sanderson can hope for only one thing. That is to get as much out of his players in 1982 as he did last year, for it was generally conceded that his first year produced as close to getting 100 percent utilization of available talent as possible. And that is a credit to any coach, especially a first-year mentor.
He joined the Alabama staff in June, 1960, as a graduate assistant and earned a Master's degree in School Administration in 1961, at which time he was made a full-time assistant coach on the Tide staff with oncourt coaching, recruiting and scouting responsibilities.
Sanderson also has been the director of the National Association of Basketball Coaches-Converse Co. Basketball Clinic in Birmingham since 1977. The clinic annually is the largest in the South and one of the largest in the nation.
The esteem in which he is held by his peers was never more in evidence than his selection as Chairman of the Assistant Coaches Committee of the National Association of Basketball Coaches for the four years preceeding his appointment as head coach at Alabama.
18 Ennis Whatley
6-3, 177, Fr. Birmingham, Ala.
11
Eric Richardson
6-3, 190, So. Birmingham, Ala.
22
Rex Jones
6-3, 185, Fr. Florence, Ala.
33
Cliff Windham
6-5, 200, Jr. Emelle, Ala.
41
Terry Williams
6-8, 205, So. Elkmont, Ala.
44
Mike Davis
6-4, 195, Jr. Fayette, Ala.
53
Mark Farmer
6-11, 245, Fr. Arab, Ala.
Benny Dees
Assistant Coach
12
Vance Wheeler
6-2, 180, Jr. Nashville, Tenn.
20
Eddie Adams
6-0, 175, Sr. Phenix City, Ala.
34
Bobby Lee Hurt
6-9, 240, Fr. Huntsville, Ala.
40
Maurice Myers
6-7, 215, Sr. Birmingham, Ala.
50
Phillip Lockett
6-9, 225, Sr. Livingston, Ala.
51
Eddie Phillips
6-7, 225, Sr. Birmingham, Ala.
Leroy McClendon
Assistant Coach
Don Maestri
Assistant Coach
19 UCKY
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