Mel Hutchins, B.Y.U. All-American and N.B.A. All-Star, Dies at 90
He was not on the list.
Mel Hutchins, the All-American center who helped elevate
Brigham Young University to the top ranks of college basketball in 1951 and
became an N.B.A. All-Star and a senior member of a remarkable sports family,
died on Wednesday in Encinitas, Calif. He was 90.
His son, Matthew, who confirmed the death, said he had been
treated for Alzheimer’s disease.
At 6 feet 5 inches, Hutchins was hardly a big man, but he
was an outstanding rebounder, both at Brigham Young and as a professional. He
also gained acclaim for his defensive skills, and he had a nifty jump shot when
that was first becoming an offensive weapon.
Hutchins joined with the six-foot forward Roland Minson in
taking Brigham Young to the championship of the 1951 National Invitation
Tournament at Madison Square Garden, at a time when it rivaled the N.C.A.A.
championship tournament in prestige. A few days later, the Cougars reached the
second round of the West regionals in the N.C.A.A. tournament before they were
eliminated.
The N.I.T. crown was the first national championship in any
sport for Brigham Young, which is best known for its affiliation with the Mormons,
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Hutchins was selected by the Tri-Cities Blackhawks as the
No. 2 overall pick in the 1951 N.B.A. draft, shortly before they became the
Milwaukee Hawks. He shared rookie of the year honors for the 1951-52 season
with Bill Tosheff of the Indianapolis Olympians, and was the co-leader in
rebounds (13.3 per game) with the 6-foot-9 Larry Foust of the Fort Wayne
Pistons.
Hutchins was obtained by the Pistons after two seasons in
Milwaukee and was a key figure in their reaching the finals of the N.B.A.
playoffs in 1955 and 1956. He played in four All-Star Games during
his seven years in the N.B.A.
Hutchins’s sister, Colleen Kay Hutchins, who was Miss
America of 1952 and also a Brigham Young graduate, married the Knicks guard
Ernie Vandeweghe in 1953, when he was combining pro basketball with the
beginning of his career as physician.
They had two sons and two daughters, all of them elite
athletes.
Mel Hutchins was the uncle of Kiki Vandeweghe, the
high-scoring N.B.A. forward and later general manager and coach of the Nets;
Bruk (pronounced Brook) Vandeweghe, who won a bronze medal in beach volleyball
at the 1994 Goodwill Games in St. Petersburg, Russia; Heather Vandeweghe, a
captain of the national women’s water polo team; and Tauna Vandeweghe, who
competed in the women’s 100-meter backstroke at the 1976 Montreal Olympics.
Hutchins was also the great-uncle of Tauna’s daughter CoCo, a prominent tennis
pro.
Melvin Ray Hutchins was born on Nov. 22, 1928, in Sacramento
and grew up in Arcadia, Calif., outside Los Angeles. He was an outstanding high
school football and basketball player but competed only in basketball at B.Y.U.
Hutchins’s Cougars defeated Dayton, 62-43, for the 1951
N.I.T. championship behind his strong defensive effort against the Flyers’
high-scoring center, Don Meineke. Minson was the offensive star with 26 points.
Hutchins averaged 12.7 rebounds in his senior season, a
preview of his pro career, during which he was a dominant figure on the boards
with his spring, his long arms and his sense of timing.
He played in four All-Star Games during his seven years in
the N.B.A.
George Yardley, one of the league’s finest jump shooters of
the 1950s and Hutchins’s teammate with the Pistons, marveled at his play on
both ends of the court.
“I could move my body well to either side while in the air
and still control my shot,” Yardley was quoted by Charles Salzberg in the oral
history “From Set Shot to Slam Dunk” (1987). “Mel Hutchins could do it, too,
but we were oddities at the time.”
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Playing for the Fort Wayne Pistons, Mel Hutchins (9) battled
for a rebound with Earl Lloyd (11) of the Syracuse Nationals in Indianapolis in
1955. Hutchins led the Pistons to the N.B.A. playoff finals that
year.
I
“As an individual defensive player Hutchins was the best,”
Yardley said. “If you could score on Hutchins you could score on anybody.”
Johnny Payak, a guard who played with Hutchins on the Hawks,
told how he had often stymied George Mikan, the 6-foot-10 center for the
Minneapolis Lakers who became the N.B.A.’s first superstar.
“Mel Hutchins used to drive Mikan nuts,” Payak recalled to
Neil D. Isaacs for his oral history “Vintage NBA” (1996). “He would watch
Mikan, would wait, and time his jump. Mikan didn’t have that good of a hook
shot. He would kind of turn and shoot but not high in the air. Mel would time
it and just knock the ball away.”
Hutchins’s playing days ended after a knee injury limited
him to 18 games with the Knicks in the 1957-58 season. He averaged 11.1 points
and 9.6 rebounds for his two seasons with Milwaukee, four with Fort Wayne and a
final season with the Knicks.
He later worked in real estate.
In addition to his son, Hutchins’s immediate survivors
include his daughters Laura Green, Dana Dalton, Melanie Holmes and Shauna
Hutchins; 14 grandchildren; and 24 great-grandchildren. His wife, Lorene
(Hardy) Hutchins, died in 2011. Colleen Hutchins Vandeweghe died in 2010, and
Ernie Vandeweghe died in 2014.
Hutchins and Wilt Chamberlain are the only N.B.A. players to
have led the league in rebounding in their rookie seasons.
Hutchins, at 6 feet 5, was also among the smallest (or least
tall) players to be a single-season leader in rebounds. Harry Gallatin (with
the Knicks in 1954) and Charles Barkley (with the Philadelphia 76ers in 1987)
also led the N.B.A. in rebounding, and all three are listed by
basketball-reference.com as 6 feet 6 inches, although the N.B.A. website states
that Barkley was “probably actually closer to 6-4,” which would make him the
shortest rebounding champion.
In the late spring of 1987, Hutchins received an unexpected
phone call.
“The caller identified himself as Charles,” Hutchins
recalled in “Forgotten Champions” (2011), a remembrance of Brigham Young’s 1951
N.I.T. victors by Rocky Steele. “I told him that I knew a Charles that lived in
Sacramento, but it didn’t sound like him. He sounded a little frustrated, and
said, ‘This is Sir Charles.’ I told him I’d never heard of that. He raised his
voice and said, ‘This is Sir Charles Barkley, and I just broke your record.’ ”
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