Brittany S. Frederick is one of eSports' senior writers, specializing in poker and baseball coverage. She comes to eSports after twice trying out for ESPN's "Dream Job" anchoring competition, participating in the College World Series of Poker, and thinking she wanted to be Jim Harbaugh when she grew up. Born and raised in Southern California, Brittany is a sports junkie who enjoys and has played baseball, football, hockey, poker, bowling, and even competitive dodgeball, where she was a university captain. She has a particular affection for the San Diego Padres and Chargers, the Duke Blue Devils, J.J. Redick, Adam Eaton, and the Texas Western (now UTEP) Miners. But her all-time favorite franchise has to be the NFL Total Access Hollywood League's "Tastes Like Chicken," the fantasy team run by actor Paul Rudd.As we prepare for tonight's NCAA championship game featuring Butler University and the University of Connecticut, my thoughts – as they do every year – are drawn back to another title contest, 45 years earlier, when the Texas Western College Miners faced the University of Kentucky.
On March 19, 1966, Texas Western defeated the Kentucky, 72-65. It was an amazing game. It was a piece of basketball, if not cultural, history. Four-and-a-half decades later, it still stands in my memory as one of the most important sporting events ever to be played.
I'm far too young to remember the 1966 NCAA tournament. In fact, until 2006, I had no interest in basketball, college or otherwise. I'm almost ashamed to admit that it took seeing the film Glory Road for me to become aware of the Texas Western story. I'm not ashamed to admit that I cried at the end of the film, because that story hit home.
In 1966, Texas Western was given almost no chance to even have a decent season. They ended up going nearly undefeated, except for a loss in their final regular-season game at Seattle by only two points.
Then they made history by having an all-African American starting five in the national final against a heavily-favored Kentucky team. As if that wasn't enough, they beat Kentucky and became the 1966 national champions. It's a victory that's been credited with setting in motion the desegregation of college basketball. I've heard it referred to as the "Brown vs. Board of Education game," comparing it to that landmark legal decision.
I'm in awe of the game's cultural and social ramifications, certainly. But, almost as admirable in my book are the smaller things. Several members of that 1966 team went on to become teachers, coaches or otherwise involved with young people, including Harry Flournoy, Nevil Shed and Willie Cager. They made the choice to continue helping the lives of others.
As for Coach Don Haskins? He continued to coach at Texas Western (now known as the University of Texas at El Paso, or UTEP) until 1999 – almost 40 years after he had become head of the Miners in 1961. (Sadly, Haskins passed away in September 2008, almost six years after the December 2002 death of leading scorer Bobby Joe Hill.)
These were people who, while they didn't set out to make history – Haskins wrote in his autobiography that he "certainly did not expect to be some racial pioneer or change the world" – changed lives, and didn't stop with that one night. They continued to help others long afterward.
In this day and age, when it seems I'm always hearing some story about improper benefits or recruiting violations, I think on that. There's something that turns in my stomach when I realize that Jim Calhoun can be suspended by the NCAA in February and on the verge of being celebrated as a national champion in March.
Forty-five years is a long time, and call me a shameless optimist, but I admire the integrity of that Texas Western team, and their embracing of what the game – what any sport – can do after the game has been played.
I can't personally speak to every single effect of that 1966 championship season. I'm the wrong ethnicity, the wrong gender and a few decades too young. All I know for sure is that game definitely touched my life.
I guess you could call me an expert on the 1966 Texas Western Miners. After I saw Glory Road for the first of what is now some three dozen times, I sought out the actual film from that 1966 championship game and watched the real game. I've read every book that has been written on the subject. There's a replica Bobby Joe Hill jersey hanging in my closet, and an autographed Don Haskins basketball that sits in a case on my desk. I even wrote my graduate school entrance essay on the 1966 championship game. There are a lot of things I can trace back to the Texas Western Miners.
Most important among them is that as someone who is different, I was emboldened to hold my head high, and know that I could still be a part of something that mattered. I've loved sports my entire life. Yet, as both a woman and as someone who is handicapped, I have had many times in my life where I've also been told that I don't belong or won't succeed.
Hearing that sentiment over and over again – the majority of it from teachers and coaches – eventually made me give up. While I never faced the level of adversity that the Miners did, it was an incredible inspiration to know that there were people who were also ostracized for being different, who had faced worse and come out not just survivors, but champions.
Not to mention that in Don Haskins, I found someone who saw the world the way I do – who just saw players. He didn't care about race. He just wanted to win the game. His example reminded me that there are people out there who are tolerant, and that there's still a place in the world for hard work and integrity. He conducted himself the way I wanted to carry myself. Motivated by Haskins and his team, I decided to resume my own athletic career, and I've never been happier. It goes without saying that I've also become a college basketball fan.
To me, the 1966 NCAA championship game is still relevant. It will always be relevant. Not only for the cultural and social significance it had at the time, but for the values it furthered, and for its countless lasting effects. At the very least, I know I never would have played sports again if not for that game.
I'll be watching tonight's national championship, of course. But, when I do, I'll do it wearing my Texas Western College pin, and with a toast to the late Coach Haskins. Without him and his team forty-five years ago, who knows where we might be tonight?