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Walker Elliott (Walter Stevenson)
Приєднався 12 бер 2012
March 8, 1957 | Wake Forest vs. North Carolina
Controversial block/charge call involving North Carolina's Lennie Rosenbluth to end the ACC Tournament semifinal matchup against Wake Forest. The Heels advance after the foul was ruled a block.
Culled from the McGuire's Miracle documentary; edited and color corrected to unify game footage. All rights reserved to the Atlantic Coast Conference, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and the producers of McGuire's Miracle. Courtesy of the ACC Digital Network.
Culled from the McGuire's Miracle documentary; edited and color corrected to unify game footage. All rights reserved to the Atlantic Coast Conference, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and the producers of McGuire's Miracle. Courtesy of the ACC Digital Network.
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Відео
March 23, 1957 | Kansas vs. North Carolina | Tournament Final
Переглядів 10 тис.6 років тому
This video is for historical and educational use only. I've spliced this version from three separate video sources and included a short clip of Jim Reid's 1957 WPTF radio call at very end of the third overtime. The result is nearly complete footage of regulation and all three overtime periods. The video quality is poor for latter part of the second half and the first two overtimes, although I'v...
Jan. 29, 1983 | Georgia Tech at North Carolina (hosted by the Greensboro Coliseum)
Переглядів 9 тис.6 років тому
Michael Jordan scores a career-high 39 points against Bobby Cremins's Georgia Tech squad. This video is intended for historical and educational use only. Copyright retained by Raycom/Jefferson-Pilot Teleproductions, the Atlantic Coast Conference, and any other relevant stakeholders. Courtesy of the ACC Digital Network.
Was my first UNC game. I'm old
Future Cavs teammates Daugherty and Mark Price
Wilt paint sitting 4:00
Shoulda done it the whole game
There's only audio for the last few seconds of the game.
RIP Lennie Rosenbluth! One of the biggest legends to wear Carolina blue!!!
Back after Kansas took this year's title and avenged the 1957 loss to UNC. Rock Chalk!
But on Kansas' team in 1957 UNC They had to beat a fellow named Wilt Chamberlain in triple OT. to win their first National Championship.
History is here again
65 years later they meet again
This game made basketball a North Carolina tradition
North Carolina went ( 32-0) in 1957 and won Their first National Title in School History!
Thanks for the upload young fella. I luv watching old games. Keep it up young fella
Oh god that three-point line. I think it's at 17 feet 9 inches, two feet shorter than the key, but it did have the 30-second shot clock.
Thank you so much Walter. I was 14 and watched on a 12 in black and white T.V. Later went to UNC and have seen them play in 4 final fours, including the 1982 victory over Georgetown led by Michael Jordan
if you are BASKETBALL PURE don't get better than this
Let’s go UNC !!!
North Carolina sent little Tommy Kearns out to jump against Wilt Chamberlain for the opening tap.
Wilt said later that set the whole game.
yeah to mess with his mind
i read a book and unc sent wilt chamberlain to the line because he was bad at free throws
Great documentary on UNC in 1957 where, at c. 44 minutes, the coach says that he said this as a joke to Kearns who thought he was serious and surprised the coach when he went up for the tap. ua-cam.com/video/f_WdPFKikXk/v-deo.html
I think it's one of the rare games when Dean Smith allowed MJ to break the rules about him not scoring more than 30 points a game. Although this game was six years before I was born, I am glad to own this on DVD. Also, can't beat Mike Patrick on Raycom/JP Sports (yes, that was before he was on ESPN)
Coach Smith had no such rules
Wow, looks like a HS game. No cross overs, just dribbling the ball straight down
Different rules. A crossover like today would be called a carry back then.
@@handlebucket6285 Most definitely; players then would absolutely not have been able to put their hand *under* the ball while dribbling, which is a staple of today's "handle".