Indiana high schools boast a tradition of producing top caliber basketball players. Through the 2009-2010 NBA season, 152 Hoosier athletes have played professional basketball in the world's top league. Considering the size of the state (population 6.4 million),[3] this makes Indiana high schools by far the most successful at developing NBA players per capita.[4] Today there are 22 Hoosiers in the NBA - more than one for every 150,000 male residents. The state's unparalleled ability to produce NBA talent, both statewide and specifically in smaller towns, is featured in this
Deadspin article. In 2017, Indiana natives won the NBA and D-league Dunk Contests, NBA and D-league 3-point contests, and won runner-up in the NBA Skills Challenge.
One-class tradition
Historically, each of the several hundred small towns of Indiana had its own small school system. Before consolidation of many of these rural school districts in the last half of the twentieth century, Indiana high schools had fewer students than those of most other states; basketball was a natural game for these schools since it only required five starters and a few reserves. Even one or two great basketball players could make a high school team a powerhouse, and nearly every Indiana town dreamt of such glory.
The
Franklin Wonder Five was the first team to win the state championship in three consecutive years, from 1920 to 1922. This accomplishment would not be matched for over six decades. The team was led by
Fuzzy Vandivier.
After Milan's Miracle in the 1950s, no school with an enrollment of less than 500 won another boys' State title under the all-comers format. As
school consolidation became more common and as more
rural residents migrated to cities making large high schools grow even larger, smaller high schools had only a mismatch to look forward to come
tournament time, as success concentrated in Indiana's large
urban and
suburban schools. Starting with the 1997–1998 season, Indiana established a controversial four-class system for its basketball championship, although many other sports remain single-class. The state's move to this new system has, to some extent, diminished the phenomenon and public opinion is widely split on the merits of "class basketball."
Aside from the "Milan Miracle," the story of
Crispus Attucks High School ranks as one of the greatest in Indiana high school basketball tradition. In 1955, the year after Attucks had lost in the semistate final (state quarterfinals) to Milan's championship team, Attucks gained fame by winning the Indiana state championship, becoming the first all-black school in the nation to win a state title open to all schools regardless of race. Crispus Attucks repeated as champions in 1956, becoming the first Indiana high school team to complete a season undefeated. The Attucks teams of 1954 through 1956 were led by
Oscar Robertson. Both stories, Milan and Crispus Attucks, are memorialized for their accomplishments and tradition at the
Indiana State Museum as well as at the
Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame in
New Castle.
A highlight of the single-class tournament was the 1990 State Championship game, in which the paid attendance was over 40,000 fans. This phenomenal turnout of fans who witnessed
Damon Bailey's Bedford-North Lawrence Stars win the State Championship stands as the largest crowd ever to witness a high school basketball game.
After the 1997 season (when Bloomington North won the final single-class State Championship), the IHSAA controversially did away with the single-class system, ending the run of single-class champions in Indiana. There are many in Indiana who lament this loss, and who know that Hoosier hysteria has been dramatically and significantly lessened thereby. Hoosier hysteria has not completely diminished however. For example, in 2003, DeKalb High School (1200 students) nearly defeated Pike High School (3000 students). Also, the Indiana tournament is still the most attended in the nation, with final four games for the two larger divisions regularly selling out
Gainbridge Fieldhouse (formerly Conseco Fieldhouse and Bankers Life Fieldhouse).
Perhaps one of the more telling signs of the passion and commitment to basketball at the high school level is the number and size of large basketball
gymnasiums in the state. With considerable cost and effort, Indiana boasts nine of the ten largest high school gyms in the country,[5] and a purported eighteen of the top twenty. Seventeen venues in Indiana today boast a capacity of over 6,000, the largest being the
New Castle Fieldhouse, seating 9,325.[6]
Home of the legendary
Hinkle Fieldhouse, the largest basketball arena in the world from 1928 to 1950 (including professional arenas). Hinkle hosted the
Indiana High School Athletic Association Championships for many years (including Milan's 1954 championship),
Butler University also is notable for its men's and women's basketball teams. The Bulldogs advanced to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament in the
2003 and
2007 seasons.
In 2006, the Bulldogs won the 2006
Preseason NIT, beating most notably Indiana and Notre Dame to reach the semifinals in New York City. Behind a strong performance from guard
A.J. Graves, the Bulldogs defeated Tennessee and Gonzaga at
Madison Square Garden.[7]
In 2010, Butler reached their first Final Four as a #5 seed, beating #12 seeded
UTEP in the first round behind a flurry of 3-pointers, edging out a very good #13 seed
Murray State (who upset #4 seed Vanderbilt in the first round), and then in the Sweet 16, Butler upset #1 seed
Syracuse, and in a thrilling Elite Eight game Butler upset #2 seed
Kansas State. The Bulldogs made it to the Finals of the NCAA Tournament after defeating #5 seed
Michigan State from the Midwest division. The Bulldogs played against #1 seeded
Duke from the South in the finals but lost in a close game, with a potential game-winning shot by
Gordon Hayward from just inside half-court rimming out.
In 2011, Butler returned to the NCAA title game for a second straight year. However, Butler lost 53–41 to
Connecticut, shooting a historically low 18.8 percent from the field — the worst in any NCAA title game and the worst in any NCAA tourney game since
Harvard against
Ohio State in 1946.[8]
The Evansville Purple Aces have won five national championships in the NCAA College Division (now known as
Division II): 1959, 1960, 1964, 1965 (29–0 record), and 1971. This ranks second all-time.
After joining the NCAA's Division I in 1977, Evansville was a charter member of the
Midwest Collegiate Conference, now known as the Horizon League. The Aces won or shared the MCC regular season title in 1982, 1987, 1989, 1992, and 1993. They also won the conference tournament title in 1982, 1992, and 1993.
Franklin College (total enrollment of around 350 students), known as the "
Franklin Wonder Five", declared national college champions in 1922–1923 season,[10] staying undefeated against teams from major universities, including
Notre Dame,
Illinois,
Purdue, and
Wisconsin.
Had a string of 50 consecutive victories over a 2-season span that ended in February 1924, after the team suffered its first defeat by
Butler University.
In 1924, turned down an offer to play the
Original Celtics, the top professional team in the nation, for a claim to the "undisputed national championship".[11]
Two Indiana State Collegiate Championships (1923, 1924).
Indiana's collegiate basketball squad, the
Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team has several championships to their credit:
Five NCAA National Championships (
1940,
1953,
1976,
1981,
1987), placing them in a tie for fourth most all-time
One
NIT Championship (
1979) over rival Purdue; and one Runner-up finish (
1985) to a UCLA team featuring future member of the
Indiana Pacers,
Reggie Miller
Twenty-two Big Ten Championships (including four in a row from 1973 to 1976), currently two behind rival Purdue for the most all-time
Also, Indiana completed the most recent undefeated season in Division I men's college basketball, going 32–0 in the
1975–76 season under Hall of Fame coach
Bob Knight.
The Hoosiers' five NCAA Championships are the fourth in history, tied with Duke, and trailing
UCLA (11)
Kentucky (8) and
North Carolina (6). Their eight trips to the
Final Four ranks seventh on the all-time list. The Hoosiers have made 32 appearances in the
NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament (fifth-most in NCAA history). In those 32 appearances, Indiana has posted 52 victories, the sixth-most in NCAA history.
Indiana State, led by All-American
Jerry Newsom, was the 1968 NCAA College Division Runner-up. They lost to perennial power Kentucky Wesleyan. Their final record was 23–8.
Eight players from the 1950 team played for Head Coach John Longfellow as the United States' Gold Medal Basketball team at the inaugural 1951
Pan-American Games.
Indiana State was the runner-up in the 1946 and 1948 NAIA championship games. The 1948 team was coached by the legendary
John Wooden; it is the only Championship game loss in Coach Wooden's career.
In 1947, Wooden's basketball team won the conference title and received an invitation to the NAIA National Tournament in Kansas City. Wooden refused the invitation citing the NAIA's policy banning African American players. A member on the Indiana State Sycamores' team was Clarence Walker, an African-American athlete from East Chicago, Indiana. In 1948 the NAIA changed this policy and Wooden guided his team to the NAIA final, losing to Louisville. That year, Walker became the first African-American to play in ANY post-season intercollegiate basketball tournament.
Indiana State finished third in the 1953 NAIA tourney and fourth in the 1949 NAIA tourney
In 1936, Indiana State was the runner-up in the U.S. Olympics Trials for basketball.
Two
MVC Regular Season Championships and three MVC Tournament Championships.
Four Indiana Collegiate Conference (ICC) Regular Season Championships.
Four Indiana Intercollegiate Conference (IIC) Regular Season Championships
The Notre Dame Men's Basketball team was crowned National Champions of the 1926-1927 basketball season as well as the 1935-1936 basketball season by the
Helms Athletic Foundation.
The Notre Dame Men have a history of upsetting number 1 ranked teams as they have beaten 12 teams ranked No. 1 in the polls. The most notable of these upsets was the 1974 upset of UCLA, who had won their previous 88 contests.
Led by Coach
Digger Phelps, the Irish made a trip to the
1978 Final Four where they lost to the Duke Blue Devils.
The Irish have appeared in the Elite 8 on 7 different occasions. These include 1953, 1954, 1958, 1978 (Final Four),1979, 2015 and 2016.
Since joining the Big East in 1995, a Notre Dame basketball player has been crowned Big East Player of the year 5 times.
10 Notre Dame players have been named consensus All Americans. Three of those players were named to the team in 3 different years. (Only 18 players have been named as consensus All-Americans three times.)
Notre Dame all-time leading scorer
Austin Carr currently holds the record for the most points in an NCAA tournament game, scoring 61 against Ohio in 1971.
The Irish women won the National Championship in
2001 and
2018.
The Irish women went to five consecutive Final Fours from 2011 through 2015, finishing as national runner-up in four of those years—
2011,
2012,
2014, and
2015. The Irish were also runners-up in
2019.
With their only men's national championship coming in the days before the NCAA Tournament, the
Purdue Boilermakers have a basketball history:
National championship in 1932, led by three-time All-American player and Indiana native
John Wooden. (Championship retroactively awarded by the
Helms Athletic Foundation, seven years before the NCAA sponsored a basketball championship)
NCAA Tourney runner-up in 1969, semifinalist in 1980
The Boilermaker women have one National Championship (
1999), one national runner-up finish (
2001 to Notre Dame), seven Big Ten Championships, and have won nine of the 25 women's
Big Ten tournaments.
The
Indianapolis Greyhounds, representing the University of Indianapolis (UIndy), have a storied basketball history. The Greyhounds were led by UIndy Hall of Famer Angus Nicoson throughout the 1950s and 60s, and Nicoson's teams won 8 Hoosier Conference Championships. More recent success has seen the Hounds ranked No. 1 in the country in Division II basketball in 2014, led by former USI standout,
Stan Gouard.
St. Joseph's Pumas
The
Saint Joseph's Pumas, led by current coach Richard Davis, returned to the NCAA Elite Eight for the fourth time in 2010. The Pumas have numerous conference championships and 10 appearances in the NCAA Division II Tournament.
Four Great Lakes Valley Conference regular season championships.
One Great Lakes Valley Conference tournament championships.
One Indiana Collegiate Conference regular season championship.
Memorable run in the 2010 NCAA tournament reaching the Elite Eight by make the tournament as an 'at-large' bid and preceding to win the Midwest Regional (3 games) by a total of 5 point. They won the Regional Championship by 1 point in a thrilling triple-overtime game, defeating Quincy University.[12]
The Vincennes University men's basketball program is the 4th winningest junior college program in the country, with 1,470 victories. The Trailblazers trail Southeastern Iowa Community College (1,519), Moberly, Mo., (1,505) and Hutchinson, Kan., with 1,490.
The Trailblazers' 4 National Titles place them tied with
Moberly Area Community College and
San Jacinto College - Central, which each have four titles. The Vincennes program began in 1903, however, no teams were formed from 1910 to 1912 and 1931–1950.
4
NJCAA National Championships; 1965, 1970, 1972, 2019
National Finalist in 1986
National Semi-Finalist in 1974, 1983, 1992, 1993
National Tournament Top 10 finishes: 1967, 1968, 1969, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1988, 1989, 1995, 1997, 1998 and 2000
The Indiana Pacers are a professional basketball team that plays in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The team is based in the state's capital and largest city, Indianapolis, located in the center of the state. The Indiana Fever of the WNBA, also owned by Melvin & Herb Simon, are the Pacers' sister team and also play in the
Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
Founded in 1967 as a charter ABA team.
Joined NBA in 1976
Won 3 ABA Championships (1969, 1970, 1972)
Won 5 ABA Conference Championships (1969, 1970, 1972, 1973, 1975)
Won 3 ABA Division Championships (1969, 1970, 1971)
Won 1 NBA Conference Championship (2000)
Won 5 NBA Division Championships (1995, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2013)
The Indiana Fever is a professional women's basketball team that plays in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). The Fever are based in Indiana's capital and largest city, Indianapolis. The Fever normally play at Gainbridge Fieldhouse, located in downtown Indianapolis, but will be displaced for the entire 2020 and 2021 seasons, plus at least part of the 2022 season, by a major renovation of that venue. During that time, the Fever will play home games at the Butler Bulldogs' Hinkle Fieldhouse. The team is the sister team of the NBA's Indiana Pacers.
At the conclusion of the regular Big Ten season, a tournament is held to determine the conference winner, who receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Indianapolis has hosted all but one of the
women's tournaments since its inception in 1995, and
Gainbridge Fieldhouse has hosted every tournament since 2002, as well as the 2000 edition. The
Big Ten Conference men's basketball tournament began a five-year stint at the then Conseco Fieldhouse in 2008.
Final Four
Indianapolis, headquarters of the
National Collegiate Athletic Association and often referred to as the "Amateur Sports Capital of the World" has hosted a number of collegiate basketball events. Aside from the multitude of regional games held during the NCAA tournament, Indianapolis is tied with
New York City for having hosted the second most
NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championships (
1980,
1991,
1997,
2000,
2006,
2010,
2015, and
2021).[13] The city will host the men's Final Four next in 2026 and 2029.[14]
Previous events were held in the
Market Square Arena or the
RCA Dome, but given the new stadium built for the
Indianapolis Colts,
Lucas Oil Stadium began hosting Final Four events in 2010. When the NCAA Headquarters relocated to Indianapolis, it was stated that Indianapolis would then host the men's Final Four once every five years.
In 2002, Indianapolis hosted the
FIBA World Championship (now known as the FIBA Basketball World Cup), an event that takes place on even years opposite the
Olympic Games. Since inaugural event in 1950, Indianapolis is the only city in the
United States to have hosted the event.
Firsts
In a game on December 9, 1916, Purdue became the first to use glass backboard on its hoops. Afterwards Coach Mefford, of the Rose Poly team, claimed that the glass backboards in the Purdue gym handicapped his team..."[15]
Patent no. 1,757,350 granted on May 6, 1930 to William Wallace of Lafayette, Indiana for a "Basket-Ball-Ball Suspension" is an improvement on earlier removable goals. In this instance, the goal merely folds up against the ceiling. This innovation provides the flexibility seen in gymnasiums today where basketball goals are simply raised and lowered by the flip of a switch.[16]
Local basketball stars
Here follows a list of notable Indiana natives, as well as non-natives who were raised in the state, who have achieved success in basketball.
Hoosiers, a 1986 film about a small-town Indiana high school basketball team that wins the state championship. Loosely based on the 1954 Milan state championship team.
Sweet Sixteen, the boys' and girls' high school championship tournaments of another neighboring state,
Kentucky, which also has a similar relationship with basketball. Most notably, Kentucky's Sweet Sixteen still uses the single-class model that Indiana abandoned in the late 1990s.
References
^White, Charles W. (December 19, 1955).
"The Hoosier Madness". Sports Illustrated. Vol. 3, no. 25. pp. 18–23, 45–46. Retrieved February 9, 2024. Basketball in Indiana is an obsession with far-flung psychological and social effects. Look, for example, what happens in
Muncie.