KU basketball legend Clyde Lovellette dies at age 86
He was not on the list.
Former Kansas basketball player Clyde Lovellette, the most
outstanding player of the 1952 NCAA Tournament who helped lead the United
States to an Olympic gold medal the same year, died Wednesday night in North
Manchester, Ind., after battling cancer. He was 86.
Lovellette, a two-time All-America selection, scored 33
points with 17 rebounds in the 1952 national championship game, lifting KU to
an 80-63 victory over St. John’s for its first NCAA title. The center was
elected to the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., in 1988
and the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in Kansas City in 2012.
“Clyde’s passing is a big loss for anyone who has ever
supported Kansas athletics,” KU coach Bill Self said in a release. “He was a
great player, a national champion and Olympic gold medalist. He was a beloved
teammate and a great ambassador for his alma mater.”
Originally from Terre Haute, Ind., Lovellette’s No. 16 KU
jersey was retired in 1992. He ranks as the fourth-leading scorer at KU with
1,979 points, behind only Danny Manning, Nick Collison and Raef LaFrentz. His
813 rebounds also rank 10th on KU’s career list.
Lovellette was a frequent visitor to Kansas over the years,
returning for reunions and games. He had planned to attend a game this season
but didn’t make it to Lawrence.
He was the centerpiece of Phog Allen’s recruiting class that
arrived for the 1948-49 season. Allen went to Terre Haute, Ind., to land a
6-foot-10 center who developed a deadly hook shot.
Allen’s pitch to Lovellette went like this: Come to Kansas
and win an NCAA title and Olympic gold medal. Then, NCAA champions supplied
half of the Olympic team roster and Allen believed a Lovellette-led Kansas team
could represent the United States.
He was right. The Jayhawks rolled to the Big Seven
championship, became NCAA regional champions — Lovellette scored a then-record
44 points against Saint Louis in the regional final — and continued the pace at
the Final Four in Seattle.
Lovellette scored 33 against Santa Clara in the semifinals
before matching that point total with a double-double against St. John’s in the
championship game. He then joined six Kansas teammates on the gold-medal
winning Olympic team that summer in Helsinki.
That season, Lovellette became the first — and he remains
the only — player to lead the nation in scoring (28.6 points) while playing for
an NCAA title team.
Lovellette went on to an 11-year NBA career and won one
championship with the Minneapolis Lakers and two with the Boston Celtics.
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