Posts Tagged ‘Miners’

UTEP’s Artis: Another Hill, Nate or Tim?

by Ray Sanchez 11.22.15

After the Texas Western College Miners beat University of Kentucky for the artis.jpgNCAA basketball championship in 1966, Kentucky coach Adolph Rupp was asked what he thought of Miners guard Bobby Joe Hill, who had stolen the ball twice from Kentucky guards on consecutive plays and gone in for easy layups.

Rupp replied, “He’s a good little guard, but everybody has a good little guard.”

Really? Rupp must have been awfully frustrated. Everybody has a good little guard, but not everybody has an exceptional guard. Bobby Joe’s consecutive steals still stand as one of the greatest feats in the history of NCAA championship games.

We El Paso fans know the difference. The Miners have been lucky to have seen other exceptional guards besides Bobby Joe. Like Nate Archibald and Tim Hardaway. Both went on to excel in the National Basketball Association.

 

AND NOW, it looks like this season’s Miners may have another of that caliber, an exceptional guard who can dominate a game with incredible quickness, ability to drive through the tiniest of holes for layups and put the ball through the basket from anywhere on the floor. Oh, yes, and play great defense, too.

I’m talking about Dominic Artis, a 6-foot-3 transfer from University of Oregon. He came highly touted but I expected nothing like what I saw in his debut with the Miners last week. He has greatness written all over him.

Folks, you’re in for quite a show at the Don Haskins Center this season.

 

TRIVIA QUESTION: Nate Archibald and Tim Hardaway both had their numbers retired by UTEP. Can you tell me what the numbers were? Answer at end of column.

 

YOU PROBABLY know that Don Haskins resigned as UTEP basketball coach after the Miners won the 1966 NCAA championship. He was offered $60,000, which was three times what he was making at then-Texas Western College, by Detroit University in 1969. He visited the Detroit school and it was a shock. The media kept referring to his 1966 players as “outlaws” and asking what the “outlaws” were doing now. They also wanted to know what it was like living in the desert, if there were any snakes and how about all those Mexicans. He was so disgusted he asked for his job with the Miners back.

His “resignation” lasted exactly one day.

But did you know that he seriously planned to resign at UTEP another time? It’s true, and it was because of Norm Ellenberger.

 

ELLENBERGER, who passed away Nov. 15 at the age of 83, was fired by University of New Mexico in 1979 over a recruiting scandal involving forged academic transcripts.

After his firing, Ellenberger went into business but he always wanted to return to what he loved most, coaching.

He and Haskins had become friends and Haskins was not one to turn his back on a friend.

He hired Ellenberger as his assistant in 1986. The administration didn’t like it, and let Haskins know it. Haskins became extremely unhappy. Or should I say furious? I was sports editor of the El Paso Herald-Post at the time. He told me frankly that he was so disgusted he was seriously thinking of quitting.

Luckily, the administration relented, Haskins stayed and Ellenberger helped Haskins coach the Miners the next four years.

 

AFTER LEAVING the Miners, Ellenberger, a friendly and loquacious man and a heck of a coach despite his troubles, found other coaching positions. He even became an assistant to Bobby Knight at Indiana and an assistant to Tim Floyd with the Chicago Bulls.

And I’m sure he was forever grateful to Don Haskins, who stood up for him in the worst of times.

 

ANSWER to trivia question: Archibald wore No. 14 and Hardaway No. 10.

It’s a Great Time For El Paso Sports Fans

by Ray Sanchez 12.14.14

KEVIN LOVELL, general manager of KVIA-TV, commenting on last week’s column wherehappyminers I told how much I love El Paso, said I should also have pointed out what a great time it is to be an El Paso sports fan right now. He’s right, what with:

  • UTEP going to play Utah State in the Gildan New Mexico Bowl on Dec. 20,
  • Our Sun Bowl coming up with two fine teams with sparkling 9-3 records, Duke and Arizona State, on Dec. 27,
  • Canutillo High School becoming the first El Paso County high school to make it to the semi-finals of the state football playoffs,
  • Sunland Park Racetrack and Casino which started live horse racing last week expecting a grand season
  • And, heavens to betsy, El Paso now having a Triple A baseball team and stadium.

 

Our cup runeth over.

 

TRIVIA QUESTION: Can you name an athlete who played both in the National Basketball Association and Major League baseball in the 1980s? Answer at end of column.

 

CHARLES HILL, El Paso historian who works as a football and basketball statistician at UTEP, also commented on last week’s column: “The best reason for living in El Paso is the people of El Paso. Visitors to our city always comment on how warm and welcoming the people of El Paso are. It’s true. We may not have the best economy, or beaches or other great tourist attractions but we do have the best people in the country.”

 

ERIC ALWAN, publicity director at Sunland Park Racetrack and Casino, has become quite an orator. He is so excited about the 2014-15 live horse racing season which opened last week that he went into mythology at a pre-season press conference last week. He said Sunland horse racing has grown so much in stature throughout the industry that it is “like a rising Phoenix.” And he added that the Grade III $800,000 Sunland Derby on March 22 has become so popular that he expects not one, but two, airplanes full of horses to come from out of town for the big race. Now that’s what I call colorful talk.

 

DID YOU KNOW? Department: Bob Stull, UTEP athletic director, has had a hand either as a coach or in his present position in the last six bowls the Miners have participated in. He coached the Miners to the Independence Bowl in 1988 then hired Gary Nord who took the Miners to the 2000 Humanitarian Bowl, Mike Price who took the Miners to three bowls (Houston in 2004, GMAC in 2005 and New Mexico in 2010) and now Sean Kugler who is taking the Miners to the Gildan New Mexico Bowl Dec. 20.

 

FRED ALBERS, sports director at KTSM-TV, came up with a great idea while covering PGA tournaments for NBC Radio. He picked up a flag at each of the four Majors (the Masters, British Open, U.S. Open and PGA) and had each one signed by the winner of each tournament. Then he had the flags auctioned off at the banquet preceding the Western Refining College All-America Golf Classic in November. They brought in a nifty $20,000 for the First Tee of El Paso program run by his wife, Kristi.

 

.AND YES, VIRGINIA, there is a Santa Claus. If you want to watch UTEP play University of Arizona in basketball next Friday night then go watch UTEP play Utah State in the Gildan New Mexico Bowl the next day there’s a charter bus that’ll fit your needs for a mere $100. The price includes bus ride, a bowl game ticket and a tailgate party. The bus will leave El Paso at 6 a.m. on Saturday and return after the bowl game. Interested? Call the UTEP Alumni Association at 915-747-8600.

 

ANSWER to trivia question: Danny Ainge, who played basketball for the Boston Celtics and Sacramento Kings and baseball for the Toronto Blue Jays

College Football This Year A Feast Of Goodies

By Ray Sanchez 11.23.14

Has 2014 been a great college football season or what? It’s been a delicious smorgasbord of close games, upsets and improbable utep logocomebacks. Former major powerhouses like Alabama, Texas, Notre Dame, Oklahoma and Florida State have had to share the spotlight with lesser lights like TCU, Mississippi State, Baylor and even Arizona State

Florida State has remained undefeated but it’s been frightened so often it’s a miracle its fans haven’t suffered heart attacks.

All season any number of teams could claim they’re No. 1. All of which will make for one of the most exciting finishes to the season ever.

 

AND THEN there are the UTEP Miners. Many people, including me, scoffed when my crystal ball predicted they would win six games this year, but there they are today with six wins and bowl eligible.

That makes the 2014 season even more thrilling. Now, people are asking which bowl will pick the Miners. The best bet is the New Mexico Bowl in Albuquerque. That would be neat what with a nifty payoff of $456,250 and close enough for El Pasoans to drive to.

But wait a minute. If the Miners can win their final two regular season games against Rice and Middle Tennessee they could go to an even bigger, richer bowl.

Either way, things are rosy.

 

TRIVIA QUESTION: Which professional team was the first to put emblems on the helmets? Answer at end of column.

 

SPEAKING OF trivia questions, ours have become quite popular among some readers. A pretty young lady came up to me the other day and said she looks forward to the trivia question in my column every week. However, she confessed that she cheats. “I look at the answer at the end of the column right away after I read the question,” she said with a big smile, “I can’t wait.”

 

PICKING AN all-star team in any sport is a tricky thing. There’s no way you can please everyone. I know. I’ve been picking such teams for more than 50 years.

So it was no surprise to me that there were a few complaints that some players were left off UTEP’s Centennial All-Star teams. The most complaints I heard in football concerned Harvey “Pug” Gabrel, who would have set a national single game rushing record in 1949 but for a great act of sportsmanship. When coach Jack Curtice offered to give him the ball often in the second half against New Mexico State so he could set the record he turned it down, saying he didn’t want to pile up the score on the hapless Aggies. It cost him the title.

 

BUT OVERALL, the folks that picked the Centennial all-stars, and they did it without the help of the media, did a fine job. The all-stars were embraced and highly applauded when they were introduced at last week’s football and basketball games.

Personally, the selection that warmed my heart most was that of Ernest Keily. He was the pulling guard on the Miners’ great teams of the late 1940s. He’s the one who cleared the way for Fred Wendt’s national rushing title in 1948 and would have paved the way for Gabrel the next year. Pulling guards so seldom get attention. What’s more, Keily and I were schoolmates at El Paso High School in the early 1940s.

 

THE RESPONSE to the offer by Mesa Publishing to hand deliver my latest book, “The Good, the Bad and the Funny of El Paso Sports History,” to anyone within the El Paso city limits was surprisingly good. Most of those who ordered by calling me at 915-584-0626 or emailing me at rayf358@yahoo.com got autographed books within 24 hours. The offer still stands, Mesa Publishing says.

 

ANSWER to trivia question: The Los Angeles Rams in 1948.