Laugh. Think. Cry.

V himself had said that team wasn’t very good.

After a 6-8 conference record, State was seeded sixth for the 1987 ACC Tournament in Landover. But somehow – not unlike a few years earlier on an even bigger stage – Jim Valvano’s Cardiac Pack had survived and advanced to the title game, where they would face top-seeded Carolina, who had steamrolled through the conference to an unblemished 14-0 record. Trailing the Tar Heels 67-66 with only 14 seconds remaining, Vinny Del Negro stepped to the free throw line in the Capital Centre and coolly drained two foul shots for the 68-67 victory.

I wasn’t yet eight years old that Sunday afternoon, but being a State fan had proven bountiful, I decided. In the days and weeks that followed, I relived that scenario countless times on my steep, dogleg-right driveway so typical of the North Carolina foothills, shooting free throws on a goal that measured about 12 feet on the low side while only around nine on the high side.

I’m much older now, and as Davidson tips off against West Virginia in the first game of the Jimmy V Classic at Madison Square Garden, I’m reticent of the fact that many of the current State students weren’t even alive that afternoon on March 8, 1987, when Del Negro sealed State’s tenth ACC title. At that time, we tied Carolina and bested Duke’s total by three. That title stands still as State’s last one, which is even more damnable considering Carolina has since added seven more conference titles, as well as two national titles, while Duke has added nine more conference titles and three national titles. Meanwhile, during the two decades since we last hung a banner, the N.C. State basketball program has stubbornly endured, insufferably, through the indignity of scandal, followed by complete irrelevance, and even still continues its struggle towards recovery.

The real shame of it all is that an entire generation of State fans knows of Jim Valvano only through his legacy. Laugh, think, cry.

It’s important that even the young generation of State fans understands why Jimmy V was such an endearing – and polarizing – personality for those of us that can never remember being anything but a State fan. But it’s not a romantic history; in fact, it’s quite tragic.

Jimmy V built his legend by winning the most remarkable national title and two ACC titles while at State, but it wasn’t enough to prevent his forced resignation from the team he’d once said he wanted to coach until he died – and tragically, he didn’t miss by much.

To be honest, I don’t completely understand it even now, but I no longer suffer the same naïveté as that kid winning championships in his driveway, so by no means would I defend V’s absolute innocence. After all, under his direction, the athletic department had demonstrated inadequate oversight and had lacked accountability – poor qualities, at best, for a leader. These mistakes weren’t – and aren’t – exclusive to Raleigh. In fact, it took a series of factors to even make it an irrecoverable issue.

Fueled by intense mistrust by the university’s academic community towards Valvano’s athletic department, an impossible power struggle had been borne. The consensus among the academics was that Valvano’s basketball program had become uncontrollable and the university would be far better off without it. To their defense, they had a valid point: State’s admissions process for athletes had indeed become comical, considering one of State’s primary recruits, Chris Washburn, had scored only a 470 on his SAT, while eight of Valvano’s recruits over the years had scored under 600.

This strife remained internal, however, until after a vile, poorly written book (which I refuse to even name here, in the fear it would generate curiosity), rife with inaccuracies and egregious, unfounded accusations of corruption within Valvano’s program triggered both the NCAA investigation and then the independent Poole Commission report that ultimately brought an end to State’s national prominence. The four-person Poole Commission investigated the book’s accusations but uncovered only minor infractions, and ultimately found that Valvano’s actions had “violated the spirit, but not the letter of the law.” However, with the lessons from the scandal at Southern Methodist still fresh, over the next six months a variety of investigations into Valvano were conducted, including one by the North Carolina Attorney General’s office.

Yet not one of these investigations unearthed a single academic or financial infraction within the program. Had anything truly damaging been uncovered, State would have undoubtedly faced far more intense sanctions, including a crippling TV ban. But the NCAA had been satisfied with the university’s internal corrective and punitive actions for the minor violations the Poole Commission had uncovered, which had included tighter restrictions over ticket and shoe distributions to players, limitations of off-campus recruiting visits, Valvano’s resignation as athletic director, and most crippling, a reduction in scholarships for three years. The NCAA also leveled the maximum two-year probation and barred State from participating in the 1990 NCAA Tournament (at 6-8 in the ACC, we wouldn’t have made it anyway).

At Carolina or Duke, that would have been the end of it. Not a single employee on Valvano’s staff had been found to have intentionally violated any rules or laws, but Valvano had committed the seemingly-treacherous act of failing to hold those in his charge accountable. He was viewed as a man who had lost institutional control, a most unrecoverable sin in NCAA terms. Valvano wasn’t immediately dismissed, but a vote of confidence by the chancellor was declined. This left an opening for the factor that ultimately brought N.C. State’s long reign of national prominence to an end – and not with a bang, but a whimper.

This isn’t a story of any ridiculous Carolina conspiracy or even typical media bias; it was far less impressive. It was nothing beyond irresponsible “journalism” at the area’s two largest news outlets, which had launched vicious attacks and spewed relentless vitriol upon Valvano using baseless, unmerited facts and personal bias to such an extent that it couldn’t have been anything other than opportunism at its absolute worst. Even State’s student newspaper joined the popular character assassination of Jim Valvano, who eventually resigned under intense scrutiny and pressure in April 1990.

I was 11 years old in April 1990 when the era of State basketball during which I’d grown up, the only one I knew, came to an end. Now what?

V returned to Reynolds one last time on February 21, 1993, for the 10-year commemoration of his Cardiac Pack’s 1983 championship, and by then he was dying of metastatic bone cancer. As I watched on TV, a lump moved into my stomach during halftime of that Duke game as he left us with that indelible motto to which every State fan can readily and intimately relate: Don’t give up, don’t ever give up.

Two weeks later at the ESPYs – he was so weak that night that his very close friends, Dick Vitale and Coach K, had to help him on the stairs – he repeated those magnificent words from his Reynolds speech, and they’ve been preserved for generations to come through replays during the annual Jimmy V Classic on ESPN. The singular part of his ESPY speech that best summed up why he was such a dynamic presence for State fans wasn’t his statement on mind, heart, and soul, but rather a few minutes before, when he’d gone over his allotted time for his speech: “They got that screen up there flashing 30 seconds, like I care about that screen. I got tumors all over my body and I’m worried about some guy in the back going ‘30 seconds?’”

Fifteen years later that still gets me, every time.

I was very young when his tenure at State came to an inappropriate and unceremonious end, but even then I was acutely aware of his legacy. I really wish State was the staple team of the Jimmy V Classic, but the truth is that the RBC Center will house Les Robinson Court before this university officially promotes Jimmy V. I guess you can see that I’m older and far more cynical now, but I’m still left searching for answers as to how a man who had once drawn so much ire, all that venom, from so many, could now be revered for offering such a redeeming and lasting message.

Why is it that even now, when I watch his ESPY speech each December – like I am now – I’m left nostalgic for an era of State basketball that I hardly remember, and even more ironic, an era that bears the ultimate responsibility for having created the darkest years of State’s rich basketball heritage?

Maybe I’m not the right one to adequately answer why V’s legacy still rings so proudly among us, especially for those of us keenly aware of the ramifications of his indiscriminate oversight while at State. Perhaps it’s quite simply that his message transcends the very essence, the indelible persona, of what it requires to be a State fan: hope.

For the last twenty years, hope has defined us.

After all, it’s all we’ve had.

About LRM

Charter member of the Lunatic Fringe and a fan, loyal to a fault.

Fans Flashback General NCS Basketball Required Reading Tradition

112 Responses to Laugh. Think. Cry.

  1. Noah 12/16/2008 at 9:32 AM #

    The media picked up on the general weakness that ran ( and still runs) throughout NC State University, as well as some of it’s alums, supporters, and fans, and it became a feeding frenzy.

    No. The media did what all people do. They found the shortest distance between two lines. And the administration did what engineers typically do when the press is involved: They ran and his behind a barricade and peeked out and waited for everyone to go away.

    If the press shows up and the alarm at the banking is going off and police are running around and the tellers are crying and your standing alone with a bag of money and have purple dye all over you, the press will write a story about you robbed a bank.

    It doesn’t matter if you were actually on your way to the bank after working on painting your 11-year-old daughter’s room and that “dye” is actually latex paint and the “bag” is actually a night deposit pouch.

    The shortest distance between two points is a straight line. Therefore, in times of crisis, administrators, managers, executives, etc., must make sure that there is a point somewhere between “crisis” and “We’re all blaming you!” and make sure that people see it and understand why it’s there.

    Remember when some psycho put cyanide in Tylenol? You know what people remember about that? The way that Johnson & Johnson responded. They turned the meme, “Your product killed people” into “Our company was a victim and here’s how we are going to fix it” in NO time.

    Someone wrote a book outlining just how crooked your basketball program is. Is it true? No. Then change the meme from “Rogue program in the triangle” to “Hack Author Wets Himself.”

    Golenback said that there were millions of dollars in an NC State slush fund. How come no one asked why the IRS never got involved? Remember when Chris Webber and Deon Thomas got in trouble for taking substantial amounts of cash? How do you think they got busted? The IRS wanted to know why their income tax statements for those years read, “$0.00.”

    A good crisis communications team could have turned, “Personal Fouls” into a punchline by the 5 p.m. news. Every day, there should have been a news conference where NC State spokespeople ridiculed the author, the editors and the publisher and pointed out MORE mistakes. They should have kept going until the editorials read, “Maybe NC State is being a bit mean towards this obviously addled writer.”

    Everytime people mention “Personal Fouls” or Golenback, people should snicker. But they don’t. Because NC State didn’t do anything except stand there with a stupid look on their face.

    So…we can’t do anything about that. So you get to live with the fact that Jim Valvano will never get whatever due you think he’s owed by NC State.

    Keep gnashing your teeth though. I’m sure that will fix everything.

  2. redfred2 12/16/2008 at 12:44 PM #

    I don’t have time digest all of that or respond right now, but keep checking back, I’m sure I’ll have something for you. 😉

  3. redfred2 12/16/2008 at 8:00 PM #

    After reading and thinking about all that is contained in those two posts, all I can say is that either I’m making some sense to you, or you’re drinking bipolar expresso. That second post is very contradictory to pretty much everything I’ve been reading from you on this subject in the past.

    In the past you have been VERY QUICK in consistenly jumping on Jim Valvano alone and exclusively, whenever this subject has been mentioned. I have been saying all along that the university could have handled this thing better from day one, but up until now, you have always jumped on just Jim Valvano and you haven’t bothered to mention that anyone else had a share of the blame. Also, as far as the recklessness of the media, ONCE AGAIN, and only N-O-W (???), are you admitting that the media/Golenback were basically unfettered because the buffons at NC State University had no idea how to thwart their negative reporting. I’ll ask again, why are you just beginning to say this stuff NOW???

    AND, please tell me what your point is when you keep bringing up more and names like Chris Weber’s, and saying that you believe coaches such as John Wooden and Dean Smith were cheaters??? I’m not necessarily agreeing or disagreeing with you on that, but to me, it seems to totally contradict every point you’ve tried to make here, and I believe it serves only to reinforce everything that I’ve been trying to tell you and the folks who only see Valvano as a disgrace to NC State University. None of those other guys, the ones you are calling cheaters, were shunned by the universities where they once played or coached BB. As a matter of fact, they are still very much considered heroes to the fans and administrators there. So what exactly is your point?

    So, once again, are you trying to tell that there is a type of cheating that does NOT count, and another type of cheating that does count??? Or are you agreeing me and saying that some administrators at other schools are just better and more determined to do what’s in the best interest of their own universities/employees/supporters/fans and etc, OR WHAT???

    Oh yeah, please try to avoid wasteing more of both of our time by saying that I am dilussional and niave, and just response to the SPECIFIC points that I have raised, because right now, I am about as confused as hell as to anything that you were ever trying to say earlier.

  4. redfred2 12/16/2008 at 9:37 PM #

    “Why are you so determined to avoid what I’m saying?”

    I’m not, I’m always open to factual info that makes sense. I just don’t see where anything you have said should convince me or anyone else.

    “Because you really WANT to believe that Valvano was a victim..”

    Wrong, Valvano definitely neglected some of his coaching/leadership duties. What separates my viewpoint from yours is that I DO NOT believe that Jim Valvano set out to intentionally gain any advantages or had total disregard for others, so the word “cheat”, does really enter into my equation.

    “Why do most people refuse to do that (believe that Valvano was a victim)?

    Uh, I don’t know why *MOST* OF US PEOPLE would believe that? I instead wonder why a CERTAIN *FEW* PEOPLE refuse to understand that the man was NOT deliberately hurting anyone and that of the many things he is being held SOLELY responsible accountable for by NC State, and apparently you as well, most were beyond his or anyone else’s control whether they’re true or not..

    “Because they viewed our program as a dirty program.”

    You sir, are rewriting history and putting the cart before the horse while doing so. NO ONE, with the exception of some folks who were already biased to begin with or those who stood to personally gain by it’s collapse, was convinced that NC State’s BB program was dirty at the very beginning. It wasn’t until NC State University itself started behaving in a manner and taking on the characteristics of a thumb sucking, guilt riden, red headed, stepchild, who was afraid of it’s own shadow, did the general public start believing that any substantial amount of guilt was involved in the BB program. Only after seeing that non-reaction and sensing that they had a defenseless national powerhouse BB program on the ropes, did this fiasco really start to take hold. After that, the N and O, Golenbach, or anybody out there, could have said anything sleazy regarding NCSU (who then passed it onto Jim Valvano’s plate), and folks out there, like yourself, were ready to gobble it up with a spoon.

    In summary, NC State made the decision to hire Valvano as not only their Head BB Coach, but as their AD as well, which was an effort to keep in him Raleigh (funny how other great programs don’t feel the need to do that). Valvano accepted the job and it’s added responsibilites, he got busier and busier, and then he failed to use proper oversite in the BB program that he was still in charge of also. He started relying too heavily on his assistant coaches, he had players who lacked integrity and who inturn screwed him to the wall for allowing them his trust. As for NC State University’s role in all of this, well, let’s just say that they pretty much cowarded over in the corner and watched it all unfold. And since that time they (the NC State administrations) have set out to convince everyone in the nation that BB just wasn’t EVER really important to NC State University at any time. And, in that time since they have done one hell of a bang up job in selling that notion to the rest of the planet. But that’s only my personal opinion.

  5. redfred2 12/17/2008 at 12:47 PM #

    ^late correction- “so the word “cheat”, never really enters into my equation.”

  6. redfred2 12/18/2008 at 12:47 PM #

    Oh well, I guess Noah decided that he and his small band of followers don’t need to answer to anything factual.

  7. redfred2 12/19/2008 at 10:10 PM #

    Nothing to add really, but I’m just going to keep posting on this thread, and showing up in the “recent posts” area, so maybe SOMEONE will notice and post a reply.

  8. redfred2 12/20/2008 at 12:15 PM #

    You see, it’s folks like Noah who forget that there is a bigger picture involved, and that their personal perceptions have been swayed by a overwhelming and well oiled machine, known as the media. This is the same media whose human resources departments go to one place to restock their cubicles full of like-thinking individuals.

    At 27-0 in 1973, but David Thompson had previously played in a harmles pick up game, just for fun, with assistant coach Eddie Biedenbach, and all hell breaks lose.

    Fast forward to 2008, a #1 ranked unc BB team with it’s own ‘superstar’, gathers it’s entire team in the off-season with it’s full compliment coaches involved, and in right in broad daylight, and while the cameras are rolling and the MEDIA is taking it all in, they play a game of BB with a politician. But, that’s all fine and dandy, it’s just another example of the double standard and more of Noah’s OK/good/unimportant kind of disregard that blatantly disobeys NCAA rulings without any backlash or even a whimper, and not a single repercussion at all.

    I wonder if Chris Washburn had actually gone to unc instead? I wonder if he had enjoyed the force field and human shield surrounding him throughout his collegiate career that ALL of the rest of unc’s BB players have enjoyed over the many years? I then wonder, what OUR OWN perception as Wolfpack fans would be of a tarheel known as Chris Washburn right now and today? I also wonder if maybe any unc players have ever sold an autograph to a friend, article of clothing, some shoes, or a jersey, or even a pair of socks? I wonder if we would have ever known about it? And more importantly, if we did know, would we even really care anyway? I don’t think so. That’s because we are generally a rational group of fans, who while hating their close neighbor and eternal rival with a burning passion, also collectively understand what is important, and also what is total horseshit and unimportant in the total scheme of things. Unfortunately though, for some NC State fans that type of sound rational is applied only when viewing other programs outside of our own. You let something similar happen in Raleigh, and it’s Katy bar the door, we are immediately quilty as sin, there is no need to even defend our position, just passively take whatever punishment is doled out by anyone who wants to pile on, and then go run and hide in shame for another decade or so.

    It’s just like when we seemingly don’t really care when their entire powder blue BB team, along with all of their coaches, gathers and blatantly breaks NCAA rules by playing an unofficial game right in front of their own MEDIA representatives, and for all of the nation to see. Something much more grandiose, but also not unlike the harmless little pick up game that was quietly played, and also all in fun, involving a kid named David Thompson and his assistant coach so many years ago. But that other unimportant, meaningless little BB game that cost a similarly talented and great, undefeated and hardworking, group of coaches and kids to be stricken from consideration for their first chance at glory, and denied them their undefeated right to participate in post season play altogether. Which also scarred and denied an ENTIRE BB program the type of postseason play and notoriety that eventually leds to more and more success in future years.

    Instead, that particular BB team and it’s coaches had to sit and watch, and did it with a black eye and a huge cloud hanging over their heads. But, that’s all supposedly fair somehow? Now, skip forward a just few more years, that program has already shrugged off the impact of those majors penalties that some very trivial allegations had caused for the university, and fought it’s way back into national prominience. But then again, if you’re inclined to take a stance that’s similar to Noah’s, then at that later time and just a few short years after the David Thompson debacle, and not forgetting all of the still functioning as of TODAY, outside influences that were mentioned above, back in the the early 1990’s, and at least according to Noah, it was, and still is, ALL the fault just one single man. It’s all laid at feet of the Head BB Coach, Jim Valvano alone, he is totally responsible.

    Correction, or at least he was in the past, UNTIL Noah changed his entire tune on this particular thread. I guess next, he’ll be telling me that though the rulebooks haven’t changed since those times, that the very same MEDIA that shaped his own thoughts way back when and the one that shone has a very bright light on some of the most trivial events regarding NC State’s BB program for so many years, but never wasted time reporting the good, is totally correct and all over it this time around here in 2008. That what happened way back in the early 1970’s, and regardless of the same NCAA rules still being intact, that what happened to OUR team back then just isn’t the same as what recently took place over in CH, and the same MEDIA’s total disregard of that event at this particular time, is all of the verification that he needs to make it somehow correct his mind. Just like it verified things in his mind many years ago, regarding a certain NC State BB coach.

  9. cowdog 12/20/2008 at 2:29 PM #

    OK Red, I’ll take the bait while watching a darn good bowl game. I hate to see you suffer like this, man.

    I’ve read the posts that seem to be giving you the hair shirt and for the life of me, all seem to spread plenty of culpability for the Valvano devastation. Most mention worm like authors, unchecked assistants and players, and our own knock-kneed admin. Nowhere do I see the body laid at one man’s feet.

    This thread revolved around honoring a coach or providing some sort of reconciliation, perhaps by giving a name to a court in his memory. Good God, when has State ever done that for any coach? OK, Case Athletic Center and Doak Field. Hmmm, rather weak.

    What sorta got me to respond was reference to ’72 -’73. That incident had personal implications, and not minor in the acts. Not only did Eddie play in that pick-up game, there were articles of clothing bought for DT. It was dumb and almost cost my football team a future Peach Bowl game. You see, we didn’t know until about 2 weeks prior to our season opener that we would not be sanctioned. That’s how serious the consequences and how the NCAA operated back then. Whole athletic departments could be punished and the threat of actions taken against other sports was very real. Least one forgets or does not know, Duke was penalized in their recruitment of DT also. What was cool though, nobody threw Eddie under the bus.

    Times have changed. Did I cast a baleful eye at the Obama media event? Hell yes. But writers and other folks did too. It was bad form and doubt we shall see it repeated anywhere, anytime soon. Times have changed and I believe it’s also time to get over the collective persecution complex that some of us wear on our sleeves.

  10. redfred2 12/20/2008 at 4:16 PM #

    cowdog, fair enough. But I think maybe you need to go back and revisit some the posts on past threads. Like I already admitted earlier, this the first thread I’ve seen where a certain somebody didn’t jump to blame it ALL on Valvano.

    Oh, and about the “articles of clothing” that THE NCAA found to be in question, what a shear disregard for all that is important in amateur athletics, I do surely feel guilty about that right now. And especially when I look on youtube and see certain “amateur” athletes waving wads of cash right in the faces of that same group that some people hold up as holy and unquestionable. THAT VERY SAME, FAIR, UNBIASED, GROUP OF HUMAN BEINGS THAT HAVE NEVER, EVER ALLOWED ANY OUTSIDE INFLUENCES TO SWAY THE DIRECTION OF THEIR FOCUS, that good old group known as “THE NCAA”.

    Yessiree, and just think, I’m the one who gets called “niave” around here.

    John Swofford/the BCS committee, unc, ESPN and the pundants, “on the verge” and “in the hunt”… UNTIL!!! Does anyone honestly believe that ANY committee is above and beyond being directed and influenced to dig harder, or that it cannot be blinded to certain events, by certain insiders, as well as those who work outside of it’s immediate framework?

    “It was bad form and doubt we shall see it repeated anywhere, anytime soon.”

    Um, “bad form”, well OK, if you say so. I think that’s kind of harsh wording though for simply breaking the rules contained within the NCAA’s rulebook, don’t you?

  11. cowdog 12/20/2008 at 6:19 PM #

    ” Does anyone honestly believe that ANY committee is above and beyond being directed….”
    Come on man, it doesn’t take a black helicopter theorist to know it happens all the time in the world we live, from the first Cave Bear clan and will to the last of mankind.

    The NCAA, as society in whole swings to a different tune these days.
    It’s all about the money. Let’s just look at oh, for memory sake, the last 5 yrs. How many schools have been investigated? Several.
    How many have received post season suspension? None that I can think of. Inhouse, university ” cleansing ” seems to do the trick for the NCAA in this era and for infractions far worse than a suit and a new pair of dress shoes. However, my buddy Eddie knew exactly the ramifacations of the time. Had ol’ Barrack looked for a pick-up game in Raleigh, does anyone really believe that State would have been subjected to NCAA scrutiny? Look, it was in bad taste and the questions were covered by the media and the NCAA. I’m tellin’ ya’ it’s the New Age, not a shielded favorite son thing.

    So, with a Merry Christmas Mr. Fred, I just see it for what I beleive it is. Hypocritical institutions in hypocritical times dealt in equal portions to all.

  12. redfred2 12/20/2008 at 6:38 PM #

    I have to agree with the Obama/unc deal, the way I see it neither of those two will never be scrutinized in anyway or in anyhow. Oh well, I got off on a tangent there, and I lost focus of my intended point. My point is that though mistakes WERE made by Jim Valvano, they were NOT of the intentional or malicious type that should have ever led people to hold those errors against HIM in such a personal manor. And they surely shouldn’t still be held against HIM today, not by anyone involved with NC State University, or any one of it’s fans. He just got a little off track, just like I did on this thread.

    Oh, and by the way, a very Merry Christmas to you and yours too, cowdog.

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