[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 51 (Tuesday, April 16, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2679-S2680]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LOYOLA UNIVERSITY CHICAGO RAMBLERS
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, last Monday, college basketball fans
crowned their newest champion, the Louisville Cardinals. I wish to take
a
[[Page S2680]]
moment to congratulate another historic college hoops team.
The NCAA recently announced that the 1963 NCAA Men's Basketball
Champions, the Loyola University Chicago Ramblers, would become the
first team ever enshrined into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall
of Fame.
In an era when racism gripped the game, Loyola Coach George Ireland
assembled the first predominately black team to win an NCAA
Championship. Loyola's starting lineup featured four African Americans.
This was unheard of in those days.
Despite hateful comments from the public and threatening letters from
the Ku Klux Klan, Loyola lost only two games all season and marched
through the Final Four. In the championship game they faced Cincinnati,
a team which had been ranked No. 1 all season and had won the
tournament the 2 previous years. If this wasn't pressure enough, the
1963 NCAA championship was also the first nationally televised NCAA
title game.
Les Hunter, starting center for Loyola, remembered it as an
opportunity to show ``that the brand of black basketball was exciting
and it provided for more exposure and recruiting for future players.''
The championship game was an uphill battle for Loyola. After missing
13 of its first 14 shots, they trailed by 15 points with less than 15
minutes to play. Then, with only 9 seconds left and the score tied,
Walter Vic Rouse tipped in a missed shot to put the Loyola Ramblers
ahead by 2 points. When the final buzzer sounded, the Loyola University
Chicago Ramblers were national champions.
To this day, Loyola remains the only school from Illinois to have won
the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship.
To most players, winning the NCAA championship would be
unquestionably the highlight of the season.
As Ramblers point guard and All-American Jerry Harkness says, now
that he has gotten older he is even more proud of a game Loyola played
earlier in that championship season.
On March 15, 1963, Loyola and Mississippi State played a game the
NCAA calls The Game of Change. It was a game which changed college
basketball forever--and helped change race relations in America.
Mississippi State had won their conference for the past 3 years, but
it appeared they would be unable to compete in the 1963 NCAA tournament
because of an unwritten State law barring the team from competing
against teams with black players. Rather than forfeit their place,
Mississippi State's president and coach decided to defy Governor Ross
Barnett's vow of ``segregation now and forever.'' They snuck their team
out of town under the cover of darkness to avoid being served an
injunction barring them from leaving the State.
Loyola won The Game of Change, but both teams, together, made
history. The Game of Change altered college basketball and became a
watershed event in the civil rights era. Three years later, for the
first time in NCAA history, Texas Western, with an all-black starting
lineup, won the championship. The 1963 Loyola University Chicago
Ramblers helped make this possible.
Loyola's basketball team was led by Coach Ireland and Assistant Coach
Jerry Lyne, and featured starters John Egan, Jerry Harkness, Les
Hunter, Ron Miller, and Vic Rouse, as well as reserves Dan Connaughton,
Jim Reardon, Rich Rochelle, and Chuck Wood. All of those individuals
are members of the Loyola Athletics Hall of Fame, and each of the five
starters has also had his jersey number retired.
I congratulate the 1963 Loyola University Chicago Ramblers on their
accomplishments and look forward to their induction ceremony in the
National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame on November 24, 2013.
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