As a family, we enjoy learning about the area's rich basketball history through those who have played, coached, or been close to the game. This blog is dedicated to introduce basketball fans to the hidden gems that we have found through our trips, conversations, and experiences. We hope you enjoy.
Storytelling can be one of the most effective ways to teach and coach. Getting a point across can have its challenges. But a well detailed story, delivered with a purpose and passion is a powerful and effective tool to deliver a message. Coaches often use personal anecdotes to get their message through to their team. A compelling story can take us on emotional journeys of excitement, anguish, or humor. They can also motivate, inspire and provide a purpose to those on the receiving end.
If you have never heard former basketball coach and commentator, Doug Collins tell a story, you are missing out. For someone who has been around basketball since the 1960s, Collins has a portfolio of stories larger than the world's longest novel, Marcel Proust's elephantine Remembrance of Things Past. Similar to the book, Collins' chronicles are also a recollection of childhood and experiences into adulthood.
Through books, articles, podcasts or other digital media, you can uncover countless interviews by Collins. He tells stories of playing in the controversial gold medal game against the Soviet Union in the 1972 Munich Summer Olympics, being drafted first overall in the 1973 NBA draft by the Philadelphia 76ers, being named head coach of the Chicago Bulls, which featured a young Michael Jordan entering his third season and then to coach Jordan again in Washington towards the end of his career. He has stories from his broadcasting years, starting with CBS in the mid-1980s, calling mostly playoff games to being lead color analyst for the local broadcasts of the 76ers' games during the 1985–86 season to working for CBS, NBC, TNT, TBS, and ABC/ESPN when he was not coaching, including serving as an analyst for NBC Sports' TV coverage of basketball at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing and the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. More recently, Collins has joined the Chicago Bulls as senior advisor of basketball operations. As a result, Collins can reach into his vast library of life experiences and pull out a personal story for every occasion.
Of all the stories he has shared throughout his time in front of a mic, his stories about his relationship with college coach and mentor, Will Robinson, are some of the most memorable, compelling and inspiring. In an April 2008 interview with Jim Benson of The Pantagraph, Collins spoke about his memories of his coach. "To be honest, when I looked at Coach Robinson, I didn't see a white man or a black man. I just looked into the eyes of a man who was incredible," said Collins. "He was not a great Xs and Os coach. It wasn't about Xs and Os with him. It was about toughness and competition and survival and resilience and team. That was his message."
As players this offseason struggle to stay motivated as they are sheltering in place and have to train by themselves, a specific story comes to mind that Collins shared on the Golf Channel’s David Feherty Podcast in September 2016 about his preparation at Illinois State before success found him. The story speaks to the toughness, competition, survival and resilience that coach Robinson expected from his Redbird team. He knew that changing people’s thinking, can change their behavior. It also speaks to Collins' remembrance of things past.
ISU Horton Field House (The Pantagraph/Lori Ann Cook-Neilsen)
Collins shared that while at Illinois State University, the basketball team had to do three things daily before practice. First, they had to run 50 laps around four chairs placed on each corner of the 94 feet court in Horton Field House. They then had to climb a rope to the top of the gym daily. Finally, they had to box every day for 3 minutes.
Collins said finally one day he approached Coach Robinson and said, “just tell me why I’m doing this.”
Coach responded, “If you want to be great, you gotta have stamina. That’s why you have to run. If you want to be great, you gotta have arm strength and courage. That’s why you have to be strong enough to climb that rope and I’ll know if you have the courage to get up there to the top of the gym. If you are going to be good, you got to learn how to fight, because some point in time, someone is going to try and rip in and take your heart and when they do, they take your game.”
“Don’t ever walk away from that,” Coach Robinson ended the conversation.
photo: illinoisstate.edu
Collins immediately mentioned that he rolled up his sleeves and in 1972, he made the Olympic team and a year later in 1973, he became the first pick in the NBA draft. This from a kid, who in 1968 couldn’t play for his high school team in Benton, Illinois.
The sharing of such an important conversation between a coach and pupil may also have profound influence on a listener's development, both physical and mental. Collins has shared that he is a product of great men and teachers. Every interaction with Robinson was a lesson which Collins carries with him still today.
When you are inspired, you exude positive energy that not only flows through you but also through others. You expand your capability to influence and build confidence in others. Every story is a journey; whereas the storyteller starts with the end in mind. It's then the story receiver's job to take it from there and create a beginning - to see if you have the stamina, courage and fight to make a difference in your life.
Driving west on Missouri Highway 19, twenty miles outside of Hannibal, I type the words "white house" into a text message and hit “send” to my brother. I pass by this small white house and then through the rural town of Center, Missouri in a matter of seconds.
On the receiving end of the text, my brother Jaryt knows exactly what the message means. He understands where I am. More importantly, we both appreciate the importance of the small home, quietly tucked at the far edge of a town of 500 residents. For most people, it is easy to miss. Not so for my brother and I. We understand the lasting impact of both tradition and tribute, in regard to a late friend and former teammate.
Center, Missouri mural
In the summer of 1995, our Clark County varsity and junior varsity teams attended the Norm Stewart Team Camp on the campus of the University of Missouri. The 3-day event allowed our team to spend some much appreciated quality time together in the Hearnes Center competing. Off the court, we made strides in gelling as a basketball team, and in cementing a circle of friends.
Following team awards being distributed at the conclusion of camp, it was time to drive back home to Kahoka. But first, we would stop at Hannibal-LaGrange College for a summer league game. With a handful of hours to spare before game time, five of us decided to waste a few hours in Columbia before heading northeast. That meant going to the one place that any small town kid believes to be a symbol of the splendor and sophistication of a “bigger” city - the Columbia Mall.
With a handful of dollars in our pockets, we wanted only one thing - to win enough candy at the arcade for the long ride to Hannibal. We were failing at this endeavor until our center, Chis Jones, walked up to the Spin to Win game and hit the jackpot. Bounty in hand, Chris supplied both cars with a full bag of Laffy Taffys – always a game changer for any journey.
The infusion of sugar would certainly carry us through to our game, which was now only a few hours ahead – or so we thought. But as we drove slowly through the east side of Center, our car's coolant temperature warning light was suddenly illuminated. Our engine was overheating. We immediately pulled over, concerned that we were going to be late to our game. Pulling up behind us was Chris Jones and Matt Riney, more than curious as to why we suddenly stopped. "What do we do now?", my brother Jaryt griped, as he and I exited Rob Elwell's car. Teammates always, we huddled up to evaluate our circumstances, and then someone suggested that all we need to do is add water to the engine, as we didn't have coolant. As if on cue, our collective focus panned to a small white residence just up the road. We all looked at each other nervously, as if silently drawing straws as to who would make this important journey.
White house on the edge of Center, Mo.
"Who wants to go ask for water?" Rob asked. We all just stared quietly, like we’d done so many times in class, not wanting to be called upon for the answer. Then the quietist of us spoke up. "I'll do it", Chris said. I turned to Chris and asked, "you'd do that for us?". "If you want me to do it, I will", Chris replied. Without another word, he took the first of the few hundred steps separating us from the small white house on the outskirts of Center.
He knocked at the door.
"Come in if you want. It's open", was the response from the voice inside.
A few minutes later, Chris emerged, walking back towards us with a jug full of water. He had a smirk a mile wide across his face, the kind you wear when the fear and uncertainty preceding a new journey, suddenly intersect with the realization that you’ve arrived. "You just have to ask", Chris said to us while pouring the water in the radiator fill.
I think of that response every time I think of Chris. It represented the core of who he is and always will be.
Junior center, Chris Jones (#52) rebounding
During that upcoming season, Chris entered the rotation as the team's sixth man. He spent most of his junior season as a defensive rim protector and getting most of his points off offensive rebounds or dump downs off penetration from perimeter players. We needed that large defensive presence inside and he was accepting of that role. In fact, one of my favorite moments that season was Chris pulling down the final rebound against Palmyra in the District semi-finals as we held a 3-point lead in the final seconds. As Palmyra's deep threat had two attempts to convert and tie the game, the final attempt hit the back of the iron and rebounded long. Chris ripped the ball out of the air. He wrapped his arms around the ball as though he owned it, never relinquishing possession until the buzzer sounded.
By all accounts, Chris was a player that you enjoyed playing alongside. He would do what you ask him to do. Unfortunately, I only had one season with him, but others had the opportunity to see him mature into a well-rounded, inside threat. His hard work didn't go unnoticed, nor did his fun-loving, easy-going disposition.
"He almost never complained or really said anything to [coach] Church about getting him the ball. He just worked hard all the time and accepted his spot on the team," Aaron Beckmann, a friend and 1997 teammate recalls about their senior season together.
Chris was a late bloomer who really was a baseball first guy, as he would later attend Culver-Stockton College and become a member of the Wildcat baseball team as a left-handed pitcher who went twice to the NAIA Baseball World Series.
Chris was a competitor. His senior season was a testament to that. Beckmann looks back to the first hour of the school day when he was a teacher aide and Chris had physical education class. "I think about 95% of the time, he and I shot the entire hour. It was great because we were both overly competitive. Chris was just quiet about it. I could not beat him one on one and he could not beat me in shooting games. No matter how many times one of us lost, we would always want to play another game."
That 1996-97 season, first year head coach Jason Church recounted, "when Chris asked me about the stats, he always asked, 'How many points did my man score?' or 'How many turnovers did I make?'". It was never about him. It was always about how his role helped the team. He was all business on the court.
At halftime against a talented Fort Madison team, Church remembers keeping Chris in the locker room after all other players had returned to the court. "I was getting on him about stepping up". Fort Madison's star center, Chris Hester, who would eventually play Division I basketball at Eastern Washington had been dominating the game and Church knew that Chris needed to step up. With his Clark County team down by 10 with less than 7 minutes remaining in regulation, Jones would score twelve points that final quarter in route to a triple-double stat line of 21 points, 15 rebounds, and 12 blocks. Chris' two three-point plays, two free throws and a tip-in put the Indians ahead in the final minutes. Clark County would outscore Fort Madison 22-4 and hold Hester to only 2 points in the final quarter.
Some players just need that reassurance and challenge. Sometimes you just have to ask.
Church recalls that during his senior year, "he maintained that role until around the holiday break when he started to come into his own as a skilled post up guy and gain confidence in his overall game. I’ve never seen any player control the defensive end of the floor from the middle of the 1-3-1 as he did. His ability to mirror the ball from block to free throw line and transition with one long cross over step was phenomenal. His wing span discouraged penetration from the top and his length and quickness impacted any shot attempted in the lane or short corner area. He had a unique ability to gather himself after contesting a shot and explode back up and rebound after the miss. He was the rare talent who was a raw athlete but could learn a new skill or move and apply it correctly almost immediately."
"Chris was one of the most genuinely good people I ever knew," Church said. "He rarely had a bad day and his quiet smile brightened any situation. I have little doubt that if Clark Co. had been Class 2A his senior year, he would have lead us to a deep tourney run and have made “The Wall” at CCR-1 HS by being selected first team All-State."
Beckmann agrees that a long postseason run could have been possible if not for the class realignment. "We played Mexico in Districts our Senior year," Beckmann remembers. "We had just moved to 3A that year and were the #1 seed in the district", Beckmann said. "Jones was dominate in the first half but picked up some quick fouls. He fouled out in the second half with a lot of time left on the clock. The game was close at the end but we ended up losing. I have zero doubt in my mind that if he [Jones] was in the whole game we would have come out ahead."
Being the smallest Class 3A school in the state that year was definitely a bad break. "As a first year head coach", Church said, "I didn’t realize at the time what a rarity Chris was. Players with his skills don’t grow on trees."
Chris would earn many accolades his final season. All-conference, all-district, all-area and most importantly, all-around good teammate.
After Chris' senior season, I remember asking why he never played that aggressive the year before when we played together. His response? "I wasn't asked to". That always stuck with me, and I ponder what may have been if we would have asked Chris to take more control inside, like we asked him to get us that small jug of water the summer before.
On the morning of July 5, 2005, our friend Chris set out on a much different journey, although once again a walk he would take alone. There was an accident - one that slowly turns everything as white and vivid as that small house in Center – and then to gray. This journey also ends at a house - a much different house, but one just as welcoming as a decade earlier. There is a wrap at the door – the kind of crisp, knowing knock someone makes when they arrive back home after years away – untroubled by the slightest bit of uncertainty.
"It's open,” a voice calls. "You’re early, but you can come on in, if you’re ready."
Chris opens the door slightly, takes a step into the heavens and responds, "You don't have to ask, I've always been ready."
God asked us for our best that day. When he picked Chris Jones, he selected what represents the very best in all of us. The years since have been dotted with inspiring stories, beautiful life lessons, and amusing memories of a great friend. It is through these memories that a legacy is created, shared and cemented in the minds of those left behind. We are all grateful for the very fact that he was given to us, if only for a short while.
"I remember how his many former classmates made the trip back to Linn County for his funeral. They came from all over the Midwest to pay their respects," Church added. "He was a beloved teammate. Trying to summarize his character and basketball talents is as daunting as delivering his eulogy. There is no way to properly memorialize Chris Jones in all the ways he was special to family, friends and teammates."
Arguably, one of most important benefits of amateur athletics is to create memories that last a lifetime. The lens to that memory will differ based on your point of view - an athlete on the court or a supporting fan in the stands. Some memories may be painful, while others may be euphoric, nevertheless, everyone has an opportunity to create and experience one.
Today, memories are captured through every type of devise imaginable, leaving a digital footprint, becoming shareable, never to be erased but that was not always the case. In some instances, the only memory you have is the one temporarily etched in your mind, and as the years go by those images start to lose shape and fade, as though an eraser is being taken to it. Then there are those memories that are clear and cemented in your mind. A moment worth remembering because of its impact on others.
One of my favorite memories as a basketball fan was during the 1998 Missouri State High School Activities Association (MSHSAA) Class 4 State Championship game. It was also one of the best basketball games I ever witnessed in-person. This personal memory is written in permanent ink.
As a fan, you could not have planned a better match-up for the final game of the 1997-98 season. On one bench, you had the state's top team, 30-0 unbeaten Liberty Blue Jays, coached by Mark Nusbaum, and led by their all-staters Nick Robinson who had committed to be a Stanford Cardinal following a two-year commitment in Brazil as a Mormon missionary, and Matt Rowan, who would briefly play for the Missouri Tigers.
On the opposite bench was Lafayette (Wildwood), coached by Dave Porter, whose Lancers entered the state championship with a 30-1 record and nationally ranked (24th) by USA Today. Lafayette High School, located thirty miles west of St. Louis, was led by all-staters Scott Brewster and Terry Layne, as well as a 6’11” center transplant from Dunfermline, Scotland named Robert Archibald, who would go on to play college for the Fighting Illini of Illinois and professionally for the Memphis Grizzlies, Phoenix Suns, Orlando Magic and Toronto Raptors.
Lafayette looked strong, tall and a team looking to prove a point following their come from behind win in the state semi-finals against powerhouse Vashon, as they had trailed 69-60 at halftime. With a strong third period, the Lancer's Brewster and Layne brought their team back to secure a date with destiny.
Destiny arrived to the Hearnes Center, on the campus of the University of Missouri, in the form of a well conditioned and fundamentally sound team from Liberty, located approximately fifteen miles northeast of Kansas City. Liberty was less than 1 second away from not making the trip to Columbia, Mo. if it wasn't for an offensive rebound put back by Jacob Street with 0.2 second remaining in the sectional game against Raytown South at Lee's Summit. A week later and after having survived another overtime game against Truman, all-stater Nick Robinson scored 22 points in Liberty's state semi-final contest to secure the Blue Jays place in the seasons' final game with a nine point victory over the Jefferson City Jays. The championship game would be a battle of East versus West - a St. Louis area team versus a Kansas City area team. Bragging rights for their respectable part of the state. A clash to determine who the state's #1 team would be.
Back in 1998, MSHSAA did not stream the games. Spectators were not recording the game and posting it on their YouTube channels for everyone to see. Those platforms didn't exist then. In fact, the only way you could really see the entire games outside of witnessing it first hand was to special order a VHS tape to arrive weeks after the games concluded. Even then, special moments were not always captured on tape.
And that is exactly what happened.
After trailing 41-36 with three minutes left in regulation, most fans in the Hearnes Center thought the game was over, but remember, destiny favored Liberty. The Blue Jays would hold Lafayette scoreless in those final three minutes as Matt Rowan and Nick Robinson took over. Rowan scored on an offensive rebound to cut their deficit by 3 and then with a minute left, Robinson made two free throws to cut the Lancer lead to 1 point. As the clock clicked down under a minute in regulation, Liberty walked the ball up the floor, patiently but with some urgency, trying to put it in the hands of an open scorer. Robinson fought to free himself up from the Lafayette defender. He would exchange passes with Scott Fleming, then take two dribbles to his right, losing his man for just a brief moment but enough to take a sixteen foot jump shot. Robinson later said, "I had an open look...It was a shot that I had hit before and it just happened to be in a big game and I was glad that it went in". The shot put the Blue Jays ahead by 1 point with thirty-two ticks left on the clock but enough time for Lafayette to have one final chance to tie the game or win it in regulation.
Lafayette had two nail biting opportunities - a lane-driving shot with 4 seconds left and then a baseline inbound lob to Archibald cutting to the basket with 0.9 seconds remaining. Neither attempts converted, so at the moment when the clock turned to zeros, the Blue Jays became champions and their fans cheers and yells echoed throughout Hearnes Center. Liberty scored the final six points of the 42-41 game to remain undefeated (31-0) and take with them the title they had worked hard to attain.
The ending was one of those, you had to have been there, did that really happen type of moments. Newspapers can do their best to describe the excitement, intensity and nervousness of those final minutes, but nothing compares to watching the game from the seats in Hearnes Center, especially the first row where fate had set me down for this game.
Nothing beats looking around at the basketball fans who paid an entry fee to watch a competitive game, arriving with no alliances to either team, and reading the lips as they mouth the words, "wow" and "unbelievable".
Nothing beats turning to the stranger next to you and exchanging that look of amazement and a high-five as this game connected thousands even for just a short time, but also forever.
I can only imagine nothing beats walking off the floor as a player, as a champion, one last time. What would you do in this moment? What action would your emotions bring you to take before you leave the arena and the cheer of the fans fade.
It may have been Rowan who was high scorer for the Blue Jays with 14 points, but it was Robinson’s late free throws and short jumper that sealed the coveted state championship for Liberty. It was a perfect ending to a stellar and decorated high school career. The "shot" that Robinson may be best known wouldn't happen for another 6 years at Maples Pavilion when he would get a pivotal steal and hit a 35 foot off-balanced shot at the buzzer to give his #2 ranked Stanford Cardinal team their twentieth consecutive win and a Pac-12 victory against the highly touted #12 ranked Arizona Wildcats. That shot secured Stanford's record remained unblemished. The following a week, Stanford would rightfully receive the No. 1 ranking in college basketball.
However, it was Robinson's final moment during the state championship victory that I would remember most. A hidden gem that not everyone saw and most likely, no one captured. It was not a long runner to catapult a team to the top of the college ranks, nor a short 16 footer to secure Liberty's legacy in Missouri basketball history. It was another short-lived moment at half court that would be etched in memory and retold throughout the years when the topic of what was you favorite basketball moment topic would be debated.
Robinson's game winning shot
Following the sportsmanship line of exchanged handshakes, "congratulations" and "good game", both teams began to walk towards the sidelines or tunnels leading to their respective locker rooms. I scanned the players but did not see Robinson. At that moment a second wave of cheers could be heard. My attention shifted to center court. Standing in the circle was Robinson, taking a final bow. It was not one of ego but of appreciation. One bow to the Liberty fans that were in a sea of blue throughout the lower section and then bows in the remaining directions to all other basketball fans who had just witnessed something special.
"After such an incredible title game, I was so filled with emotion and gratitude!", Robinson reflected after 22 years. "The bow at half court was something I considered, but didn't really think I'd go through with it. But in the moment, that was my last high school basketball game and I wouldn't play again competitively for another two years - so I went for it"
Robinson's bow was a sincere gesture. Very similar to one you would suspect from a leading actor following a magical theatrical performance. It was so fitting in this moment as Robinson and his career was deserving of a standing ovation and a curtain call.
"All I was thinking about was - THANK YOU - for all the support from the Liberty community to our team and coaches the past two seasons and for enjoying an incredible ride with us to a State Championship", Robinson said.
I write about this moment now because in response to the coronavirus pandemic, MHSHAA announced it has canceled the semifinal and championship boys and girls games for Class 4-5 that were scheduled to be played in Springfield this weekend. This decision came on the heals of the Class 1-3 semifinal and championship rounds being played a week earlier but only in front of 150 fans to limit the risk of exposure of the virus. Both, correct decisions based on the information at the time.
If only the world was healthy enough to allow events to take place across the nation, including state tournaments to be played, more moments would be witnessed and permanently inked inside those watching. I think about those moments that could have connected players, fans, and communities. But, mostly I think about those memories that would have lasted a lifetime.
"My high school career was flooded with great memories, Robinson said,"both in the classroom, on the court and on the field - because of the amazing people I got to be around everyday. Once I got to college, I again was surrounded by incredible people everyday. The lessons I learned in high school from friends, coaches, teachers, administrators allowed me to be myself in college and work towards a championship year in and year out on the court as well as excellence in the classroom."
Fortunately, for Robinson, he continued to create basketball memories that will live on well into the years to come. Following his graduation from Stanford, where he was team captain his junior and senior years, including the 2003-04 season in which his Cardinals went 30–2, Robinson remained connected to basketball through coaching. He was a volunteer high school assistant coach in New Mexico for a season before returning to Stanford to become men's basketball director of operations and then a year later being promoted to an assistant coach. For the 2008–09 season, basketball took Robinson back home to Liberty, Missouri where he was named an assistant at William Jewell College, a NAIA school. Over the next few years, Robinson would lake his talents to LSU where he served as an executive assistant and director of operations before becoming an assistant coach once again. After years of gaining experience, in 2012 Robinson became head coach at Southern Utah but his tenure ended after the season in 2016.
Robinson may have taken that bow at half court twenty-two years ago, as a show of thanks and support for all those that helped him up until that point, but he is not ready for that final curtain call and bow just yet. Ahead of the 2017-18 season, Robinson was hired to be an assistant coach at Seattle University and then in April 2019, he was named as an assistant coach at Brigham Young University.
As Robinson reflected on his basketball career and legacy, he concluded by saying winning a state championship will always be one of his top highlights of his basketball experience.
"The 1998 Liberty State Championship season was awesome and glad we could set the standard for many other teams to follow. It's so hard to accomplish, especially going undefeated that season, for any team. The only comparison I'd make between my high school and some of my college highlights would be: all of the best moments happened with amazing teammates and coaches!"
Don’t let anyone tell you amateur athletics don’t play an important role in the lives of those participating or watching it. Those memories as teammates, coaches, friends and fans stay with you, as well as connect you with others for a lifetime. Next time you are at a game, look around, observe, adjust your personal lens and take in every moment because in a split second, special moments will present themselves, they will take a bow and then walk behind a curtain forever.