Les Hunter, member of Loyola’s NCAA title team who played in historic ‘Game of Change,’ dies at 77
He was not on the list.
Les Hunter, a barrier-breaker with Loyola Chicago’s 1963 NCAA men’s basketball championship team, died on Friday morning, the university announced on its website. He was 77.
Hunter passed away after a bout with cancer, a spokesperson from the university has told CNN.
“We are heartbroken to learn of Les’ passing,” said Steve
Watson, Loyola’s director of athletics. “The Loyola family has lost a true
legend, who was a major part our NCAA championship team in 1963. Les was an
accomplished basketball player, but was even more valued for the person he was
off the court. We offer our heartfelt condolences to his family, friends and
former teammates.”
In 1963, Hunter, a 6-foot-7-inch center, was one of four African-American starters in the historic “Game of Change,” an NCAA tournament regional game against Mississippi State. The Ramblers faced an all-white MSU team, winning 61-51 at Jenison Fieldhouse in East Lansing, Michigan. Mississippi State had been forced to sneak out of the state of Mississippi in darkness before an injunction could be served that would have prevented the all-white team from playing Loyola.
Loyola went on to beat two-time defending champion
Cincinnati 60-58 in overtime to win the NCAA title. It’s the only NCAA Division
I men’s basketball championship for an Illinois school. Hunter led all Ramblers
with 16 points in the title game.
“If it wasn’t for Les and the rest of my teammates, I never would have been able to have the success I had,” said Jerry Harkness, a two-time All-American and a teammate with Hunter at Loyola. “Unfortunately, Les never really got the recognition he truly deserved. Everything in our offense went through him and we were all so disappointed when he wasn’t named most valuable player in the NCAA tournament in 1963, because he should have been. Throughout his career Les kept getting better and better and that didn’t stop once he reached the professional ranks. Off the court, Les was the life of the party. We will all miss him.”
A native of Nashville, Tennessee, Hunter finished his three-year varsity college career, which was from from 1961 through 1964 (freshmen were not allowed to play on the varsity then), with 1,472 points and 1,017 rebounds. He’s just one of two players in program history – LaRue Martin being the other – to record more 1,000 points and 1,000 rebounds in his career.
In Nashville, Hunter also was a Pearl High School teammate of Vic Rouse, who hit the game-winning shot at the buzzer for the Ramblers in the 1963 title game against Cincinnati.
Following his collegiate career, Hunter was a second-round pick of the Detroit Pistons in the 1964 NBA draft. He would go on to play 24 games in the NBA for the Baltimore Bullets in 1964-65 and played six seasons in the American Basketball Association (ABA), where he played for five teams.
Hunter was inducted into the Loyola Athletics Hall of Fame
and had his jersey No. 41 retired in 1991.
Hunter was drafted by the Detroit Pistons with the 11th pick
overall (2nd round) of the 1964 NBA draft.
On June 18, 1964, Hunter was traded by the Pistons with Bob
Ferry, Bailey Howell, Wali Jones, and Don Ohl to the Baltimore Bullets for
Terry Dischinger, Don Kojis and Rod Thorn. Hunter played for one season
(1964–1965) in the NBA with the Bullets. He averaged 1.8 points and 2.4
rebounds in 4 minutes per game over 24 games.
In 1965–1966 and 1966–1967, Hunter played for the Twin City
Sailors of the North American Basketball League (NABL). He averaged 23.1 points
and 13.0 rebounds for the Sailors in 1966–1967.
Hunter was drafted in the American Basketball Association
Draft (ABA) by the newly formed league and was signed by the Minnesota Muskies
in 1967. He averaged 17.6 points and 9.6 rebounds in his first ABA season.
Hunter had 7 points and 8 rebounds playing in the first ABA All-Star Game in
January 1968. The Muskies finished 50–28 under Coach Jim Pollard, defeating the
Kentucky Colonels 3–2 in the playoffs before losing to the eventual ABA
Champion Pittsburgh Pipers 4–1 in the Eastern Division Finals, despite Hunter
averaging 21.4 points in the playoffs.
Hunter scored 12 points with 6 rebounds in the 1969 ABA
All-Star Game. He averaged 16.7 points and 9.6 rebounds and 1.6 points for the
Miami Floridians in 1968-1968 as the original Minnesota franchise moved to
Miami. The Floridians finished 48–35 under coach Pollard, defeating the
relocated Minnesota Pipers 4–3 in the playoffs before losing 4–1 to the Indiana
Pacers in the Eastern Division Finals, as Hunter averaged 11.7 points and 8.8
rebounds in the playoffs.
With the New York Nets in 1969–1970, Hunter averaged 16.4
points, 8.5 rebounds, and 2.7 assists, playing under Coach York Larese for the
39–45 Nets. Hunter averaged 16.1 points and 6.0 rebounds in a seven-game
playoff series loss to the Kentucky Colonels.
Overall, Hunter played six seasons (1967–1973) in the ABA
with the Minnesota Muskies (1967–1968)/Miami Floridians (1968–1969), New York
Nets (1969–1971), Kentucky Colonels (1970–1972), and Memphis Tams (1972–1973).
Overall, Hunter scored 5,735 points in his professional career and was a
two-time ABA All-Star.
Hunter played in the first ABA All-Star game in 1968 in
Indianapolis, Indiana alongside Hall of Fame inductees Larry Brown, Cliff
Hagan, Mel Daniels, Louie Dampier, Roger Brown and Connie Hawkins.[24]
Hunter averaged 12.8 points, 7.1 rebounds and 1.7 assists in
his 444 career American Basketball Association games.
Career history
1964–1965 Baltimore
Bullets
1967–1969 Minnesota
Muskies / Miami Floridians
1969–1970 New
York Nets
1970–1972 Kentucky
Colonels
1972–1973 Memphis
Tams
Career highlights and awards
2× ABA All-Star (1968, 1969)
NCAA champion (1963)
No. 41 retired by Loyola Ramblers
Career NBA and ABA statistics
Points 5,735 (12.3
ppg)
Rebounds 3,224
(6.9 rpg)
Assists 752 (1.6 apg)
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