The real Hoosiers Crispus Attucks High School, Oscar Robertson, and the hidden history of hoops

Jack McCallum, 1949-

Book - 2024

"For far too long the storyline of Indiana basketball has been dominated by Hoosiers. Framed as the ultimate underdog, feel good story, there has also long been a cultural debate surrounding the film, and The Real Hoosiers sets out to illuminate the narrative absent from the film. This is the story of the real life team that inspired the team that most have long assumed was Hickory High's championship opponent. They were Crispus Attucks, an all Black team playing in the 1950s in a racially divided Indiana. Veteran sportswriter and the bestselling author of Dream Team, Jack McCallum, excavates the history of the Crispus Attucks Tigers. After a crushing loss to Milan High School (the real Indiana team Hickory High is based on) in th...e 1954 semi-final (not the final), Attucks went on to win back to back Indiana state championships led by a young Oscar Robertson and an African American coach who recognized the seemingly insurmountable challenges of playing basketball in a state that was a bastion not only for the game but also for the Ku Klux Klan. This is much more than a sports story. The history of Attucks is rich, far beyond the basketball court, and filled with cultural influence and importance. The Real Hoosiers replaces a lacuna in the history of Indiana while dissecting the myths and lore of basketball; placing the game in the context of migration, segregation, and integration; and enhancing our understanding of this country's struggle for Civil Rights"--

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796.32362/McCallum
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 796.32362/McCallum (NEW SHELF) Due Dec 23, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : Hachette Books 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Jack McCallum, 1949- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 325 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 307-310) and index.
ISBN
9780306830754
  • Prologue
  • Chapter 1. The Robertsons Move North … and Find a "Quiet" Racism
  • Chapter 2. Attacks Has a Zebra Problem
  • Chapter 3. Threats Mar the Outset of Oscar's Sophomore Season
  • Chapter 4. The Magic of the Dust Bowl
  • Chapter 5. Hoops: The Hoosier State's Most Glorious Import
  • Chapter 6. Separating Fact from Fiction in Hoosiers
  • Chapter 7. The Secret Spread of Black Basketball
  • Chapter 8. White Robes
  • Chapter 9. 1927: A School Built by Hate but Also with Hope
  • Chapter 10. The Lone Blemish and Ray Crowe Is Not Amused
  • Chapter 11. Basketball and Blood in the Same Town Square
  • Chapter 12. Attucks-Muncie: A Game for the Ages
  • Chapter 13. A Triumph of Firsts
  • Chapter 14. Legit Celebration or Veiled Insult?
  • Chapter 15. The Cape-Wearing DuSable Panthers and the Angry Brilliance of Russ
  • Chapter 16. Perfection
  • Chapter 17. Knocking King Kelly off His Throne
  • Chapter 18. Did Attucks Unite a City?
  • Chapter 19. A Tiger in Winter
  • Acknowledgments
  • Sources Consulted
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this rousing history, sportswriter McCallum (Dream Team) chronicles how future NBA Hall of Famer Oscar Robertson led Crispus Attucks High School's basketball team to Indiana state championship titles in 1955 and 1956, making the Attucks Tigers the first all-Black team in the nation to win a state title. McCallum emphasizes how the story reflects the social currents of the era, noting that the Tigers were unable to play home games for lack of a suitable gym at the segregated and underfunded Attucks, and that they received threats warning them not to participate in games against all-white teams. Despite these obstacles, McCallum shows, the Tigers developed a pioneering approach to the game, applying intense "defensive pressure" and an animated offense that contrasted with the leisurely pace that had previously defined the sport. The historical research on how housing discrimination, school segregation, and anti-Black violence shaped mid-century Indianapolis makes the Tigers' achievements all the more noteworthy, and the accounts of key games excite ("Oscar hurled the ball toward the ceiling just as time expired. By the time it came down, Attucks had triumphed in one of the great Indiana schoolboy basketball games of all time"). This stirring success story hits nothing but net. Agent: Susan Canavan, Waxman Literary. (Mar.)

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