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Chris007

Favorite Coach Knight Stories

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12 minutes ago, Chris007 said:

When I was 16 we had a guy come to our high school who wanted a couple of football players to work for his furniture company. That is when I met Fred Bimrose who owned Bimrose Furniture Company. Bob Knight was the spokesman for Bimrose. He would do a couple of commercials a year for them, and Fred would give him free furniture. Coach Knight would come into our showroom which was by IGA in Ellettsville to look around. He always had his fishing cap on, he would walk around looking at couches. We were told to never bother coach. If he found a couch he liked, he would sit on it and sometimes even lay down to take a small nap. It would be funny to walk into the showroom and see this large 6'6 man lying down with a fishing cap over his face. Even though we weren't allowed to talk to him, he would come down to the warehouse to talk to us delivery boys. He always asked how we were doing in school, what sports we played, and things like that. When we delivered furniture to his house, Karen would always make us drop it off in the garage and tell us Coach would make players come over to move things around. 

Highlighted IMO the extraordinary part of a wonderful post.

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Some of these stories show that calling Coach Knight complicated would be an understatement.  He could be a generous man, or an incredible boor that left you walking on eggshells; as much as he expected out of his players he rarely held himself to that standard.

I remember watching IU games with my dad when RMK was coaching.  Sometimes I think my dad, a 21 year Air Force vet, had a worse temper than Coach did.

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My senior year in highschool (89) my best friend recruited me to play for the AG basketball team. I have no clue about AG but I had to take a class in order to play on the team. Our teacher and Coach was a PU alumni and wrote for the student paper.  Some how he had interviewed coach Knight when he was in school. Fast forward to my senior year and at a awards banquet our teacher brought me and my best friend up to the podium. He knew how much we loved IU and Coach Knight. He had contacted the IU athletic department and got us two autograph pictures of coach Knight. Both pictures were signed by coach himself and not just a stamp.

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My cousin's Grandmother had given him her season tickets and he was as big an IU fan as there is. The university once stepped in and tried to keep him from renewing the tickets and based on his teacher salary he would not have been able to see many games if he had to buy individual tickets.  Coach stepped in and made sure he did not lose these tickets.

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To this day, I am still floored by what happened at IU in the early '70's.  This is not my personal story.  It's Indiana basketball's story.  It's Coach Knight's story.

I was very young at 17 in the fall of '69 when I got a room at Briscoe Quad as a freshman.  Walking over to the football stadium and the basketball Fieldhouse was easy.  Sitting right next to the basketball court floor was a trip.  Those basketball players are so very large.  Sawdust and dirt floor of the Fieldhouse put a fog-like haze everywhere.  But IU wasn't doing really well.  In the last few years of Lou Watson...But he did get Steve Downing, Joby Wright and George McGinnis together along with a more than decent backcourt of John Ritter etc.   Do you realize just how imposing those giants were when they were dialed in?  But that was part of the downfall of Lou Watson.

In '70 -'71 the team was in position to compete for the B10 title.  But that team imploded.  Fans held signs messaging:  Lose Lou.  Team members talked to the administration about negative things about the head coach.  Lou Watson resigned.  Little did we know that the Hurryin' Hoosiers...running offense, was gone.  McGinnis bolted to the ABA.

In comes Bobby Knight.  31 years old.  A disciplinarian, defense first, man-to-man defense, methodical offense.  He had to tell the fans that if the opportunity arose, they would in fact go on a fast break, too.  A new stadium, too.  Assembly Hall...omg!

I enlisted in the Navy in February of 1971.  Was in for 4 years.  Learned about IU from the east coast and inside of a submarine deployed near Europe.  Re-enrolled in the fall of '75.  Got on the 'other Dean's List'.

In Bobby Knight's 2nd season, he took the Hoosiers to the Final Four for the first time in 20 years.  Glory!  His second season!!!!  This!

We all know what happened in '75-'77.  The winningest program ever!  Bob Knight would take the microphone and school the fans.  More noise!  This is what we need to do...defense creates offensive opportunities.  Those other schools do not hold a candle to IU's willingness to work at basketball all of the time...on and off of the court.  My gf and I got engaged, IU won the NCAA Championship, and we graduated, got married.  (That was phenomenal!   I mean the basketball part...just kidding...well kind of.  Still very happily married to my sweetheart.)  I still reflect on IU beating Michigan...lol.  

That is what Coach Bob Knight did when he was in his 30's.  Brought Glory back to IU.  He loved it.  We loved the teams and him.  We bought in.   What a tale.  What a ride.  Thanks Coach Knight and the players...and staff.  

And he added 2 more NC banners!  

 

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I played HS ball from 87-91. A thrill every fall was to go to the open practice in Assembly. One side was literally filed. One time in the lobby with with my HS coach, Coach Knight happened to be walking in and my HS Coach who had worked his camps said "Hi Coach" and he came over to speak to his under 5 year old son and I got to shake his hand. I'll never forget the 5 year old looking up at him. So intimidating to all of us really!

Another thrill that was so great and gives me goose bumps was when he'd walk in a minute or two before the tip off. Assembly went crazy!!

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