Fact Friday 177 - Remembering UNC Charlotte's Historic Run to the Final Four

Fact Friday 177 - Remembering UNC Charlotte's Historic Run to the Final Four

Happy Friday!

Since we're on our 177th Fact Friday, I sought out to find something cool to share with you all that happened in 1977...

 

 

Former Charlotte basketball coach Lee Rose (right) and then-49ers radio announcer John Kilgo share a moment in 1977, when the team advanced to the NCAA Final Four in Atlanta.

Former Charlotte basketball coach Lee Rose (right) and then-49ers radio announcer John Kilgo share a moment in 1977, when the team advanced to the NCAA Final Four in Atlanta.

Cedric Maxwell remembers it all, the tastes and smells nearly as much as the nervous energy and excitement surrounding the Charlotte 49ers men’s basketball team on its way to the 1977 Final Four.

Forty years removed, those memories are just as fresh.

“When someone says 40 years, it doesn’t seem like it’s been that long,” said Maxwell, 61. “In terms of my thinking, it seems like it was about 10 or 15 years ago.”

Maxwell, his former teammates and coaches celebrated their lone Final Four team’s 40th anniversary during the annual alumni game at Halton Arena in 2017. 

The crowning jewel in Charlotte’s athletics history, the 1976-77 team’s Final Four appearance remains a source of inspiration.

“For them to come back, I hope our guys know their history and they understand what a big deal that was and what a great accomplishment it was,” coach Mark Price said. “(I hope) to use that as motivation for what we want to get this program back to.”

The 1976-77 team, playing in just its seventh NCAA Division I season, had no such precedent.

But the 49ers’ newcomer status didn’t deter coach Lee Rose. After replacing Bill Foster in 1975, Rose sought to improve Charlotte’s schedule. He scheduled games at Maryland, Texas Tech and N.C. State during the 1975-76 regular season, which the 49ers finished with a 21-5 record.

Charlotte didn’t make the NCAA tournament. Rose, however, flew to New York, hoping to persuade the National Invitation Tournament committee. His pitch sold.

The 49ers received the final bid before upsetting San Francisco, Oregon and N.C. State on the way to the NIT final before losing to Kentucky.

“We thought we were good, and we knew we could play,” Maxwell said. “But we didn’t know we were really that good until (Rose) kind of led us into the NIT.”

Charlotte returned four starters, including Maxwell, for the 1976-77 season, its first in the Sun Belt conference. Freshman guard Chad Kinch assumed the final starting spot, and the team posted a 25-3 record en route to the conference title and a bid to the 32-team NCAA tournament.

After an overtime win against Central Michigan in the first round, the 49ers upended Syracuse and Michigan to reach the Final Four in Atlanta. North Carolina, UNLV and Marquette, their national semifinal opponent, joined them.

Charlotte trailed early against Marquette before tying the game at 49 with three seconds remaining. It wasn’t enough to force overtime.

Marquette’s Jerome Whitehead caught a length-of-the-floor pass, reaching over Maxwell without being called for a foul, and made a layup. The officials determined the basket came before the buzzer, and Marquette won 51-49 before defeating North Carolina 67-59 in the championship game.

“As we walked off the court, there was a coach standing, getting ready to bring his team on the floor,” said Rose, 80. “He said to me as I walked by, ‘Your kid got fouled on that play.’ That man’s name was Dean Smith. That always kind of stuck with me.”

Smith was North Carolina’s legendary coach.

Maxwell, who led all players with 123 points during the NCAA tournament, was selected by the Boston Celtics with the No. 12 overall pick in the NBA draft that June. He won two NBA titles with the Celtics and was the MVP of the 1981 NBA Finals.

Yet, he said the memory of that final play against Marquette still lingers.

“I would give a championship back or a Finals MVP if I could have just played in that final game against Carolina,” said Maxwell, a Kinston native. “That is what I ultimately wanted for our team, for our city and for our fans. I think they deserved it.”

The Final Four team brought newfound attention to the university. However, in many ways, the 49ers keep chasing a return to the national stage after its ensuing trips to the NCAA tournament didn’t extend past the second round.

“Maybe it’s like somebody playing golf and they hit a hole-in-one,” Rose said. “They cherish that moment, but then they never have another hole-in-one.”

1976-77 Charlotte 49ers

No.

Player

Ht.

Yr.

Pos.

Hometown

10

Jerry Winston

5-9

So..

G

Jersey City, N.J.

12

Jeff Gruber

6-0

Jr.

G

Cary

21

Chad Kinch

6-4

Fr.

G

Perth Amboy, N.J.

22

Todd Crowley

6-4

Fr.

G

Charlotte

23

Lew Massey

6-4

Jr.

F

Charlotte

24

Lee Whitfield

6-1

Fr.

G

Charlotte

25

Kevin King

6-7

So.

F

Lakewood, N.J.

31

Phil Scott

6-6

Fr.

F

Columbia, Md.

32

Melvin Watkins

6-4

Sr.

G

Reidsville

33

Cedric Maxwell

6-8

Sr.

C

Kinston

35

Greg Spain

6-8

Jr.

C

Baltimore

42

Henry Caldwell

6-2

Sr.

G

Columbia

43

Ken Angel

6-8

Sr.

F

Covington, Ky.

44

Mike Hester

6-7

Fr.

F

Burlington

Coach: Lee Rose. Assistants: Everett Bass, Mike Pratt


Former Charlotte 49ers coach Lee Rose is pictured here in 2007, when he was an assistant for the NBA’s Charlotte Bobcats.


Former Charlotte 49ers coach Lee Rose is pictured here in 2007, when he was an assistant for the NBA’s Charlotte Bobcats.


Former Charlotte 49ers All-American Cedric “Cornbread” Maxwell shoots over Michigan’s Phil Hubbard in the 1977 NCAA tournament’s Mideast Regional final. Charlotte beat the Wolverines 75-68 to advance to the Final Four.


Former Charlotte 49ers All-American Cedric “Cornbread” Maxwell shoots over Michigan’s Phil Hubbard in the 1977 NCAA tournament’s Mideast Regional final. Charlotte beat the Wolverines 75-68 to advance to the Final Four.


Former Charlotte 49ers star Cedric “Cornbread” Maxwell waves to fans during a basketball game at Halton Arena in 2014. After leading the 49ers to the 1977 Final Four, he spent 11 seasons in the NBA. Maxwell won two championships with the Boston Celtics.


Former Charlotte 49ers star Cedric “Cornbread” Maxwell waves to fans during a basketball game at Halton Arena in 2014. After leading the 49ers to the 1977 Final Four, he spent 11 seasons in the NBA. Maxwell won two championships with the Boston Celtics.


Click here to read more about Cedric Maxwell, his NBA career and the origin of his nickname, "Cornbread."



Until next week!  

Chris. 

Email me at chris@704shop.com if you have interesting Charlotte facts you’d like to share or just to provide feedback!
 

Information taken from:

"How an underdog basketball team continues to inspire... 40 years later", Pat James, Charlotte Observer, February 24, 2017.   

 

“We have to do with the past only as we can make it useful to the present and the future.” – Frederick Douglass

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