Phi Slama Jama

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Phi Slama Jama was the nickname of the University of Houston Cougars men's basketball teams from 1982 to 1984. Coined by former Houston Post sportswriter Thomas Bonk in a January 3,1983 article, the nickname was quickly adopted by the players and even appeared on team warmup suits by the middle of the 1982-83 season. Phi Slama Jama was coached by the legendary Guy V. Lewis and featured future Hall of Fame and NBA Top 50 players Hakeem Abdul Olajuwon and Clyde Drexler. "Texas' Tallest Fraternity" was especially known for its slam dunking and explosive, fast-breaking style of play.

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[edit] Philosophy

Phi Slama Jama played a frenetic, playground-influenced style of basketball that was in near diametric opposition to the fundamentally polished and methodical style espoused by basketball traditionalists like John Wooden. Wooden maligned dunking as flamboyant and unsportsmanlike and even forbade his players from performing the shot for several years. Guy Lewis not only condoned his players dunking, he “insisted on it,” dunks being what he called "high-percentage shots." The young players who made up Phi Slama Jama had been influenced by the freewheeling style of play pioneered during the 1970s by the defunct ABA and its most famous player, Julius Erving. In this paradigm, athleticism took precedence over fundamental skills, fast breaks were preferred to set plays, and dunking trumped the jump shot. In an interview with Thomas Bonk, Clyde Drexler espoused the Phi Slama Jama philosophy, saying, “Sure, 15-footers are fine, but I like to dunk." The Phi Slama Jama teams were notably poor at free throw shooting, with some critics attributing their 1983 NCAA Final loss to this deficiency.

[edit] On the court

The Phi Slama Jama Cougars advanced to the NCAA Final Four each year from 1982 to 1984. As underclassmen in 1981-82, a young Cougar team lost to the eventual champion North Carolina Tarheels in the national semifinals. The 1982-83 season marked the high point of Phi Slama Jama. The Cougars posted an Associated Press #1 ranking, a 31-2 record and a 26 game winning streak before losing in the NCAA Final. Considered one of the most unlikely upsets in NCAA tournament history, Phi Slama Jama lost a closely contested championship game against the North Carolina State Wolfpack by a score of 54-52. The final margin was decided on a last-second dunk by Wolfpack forward Lorenzo Charles.

Despite the early departure of star forward Clyde Drexler after the 82-83 season, Phi Slama Jama continued their success in 1984. Hakeem Olajuwon became the focal point of the team and was selected as a consensus first team All-American. Guard Michael Young was also selected to the All-America team and led the Cougars in scoring for the second consecutive year. The Cougars returned to the Final Four once more, this time losing to the Patrick Ewing-led Georgetown Hoyas in the final. Hakeem Olajuwon, with one year of eligibility remaining, declared for the NBA draft shortly after the loss in the title game. He was selected first overall by the Houston Rockets in a draft class that included Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley and John Stockton. Michael Young was also selected in the first round, chosen 24th by the Boston Celtics. The departures of Olajuwon, Young, and Benny Anders after the 1984 NCAA Final—in addition to the loss of Drexler and Micheaux the previous year—brought the Phi Slama Jama era at UH to a close.

[edit] Fraternity brothers

The team members during the Phi Slama Jama era are listed below, along with a few nicknames for which they came to be known. Many of these nicknames were penned by then public address announcer and UH graduate Jim Nantz, who was a member of the Cougar golf team and roommate of Fred Couples.


The team included:

[edit] Impact on the game

Though it was pioneered largely in the ABA, Phi Slama Jama is widely credited with popularizing the frenetic, “above the rim” style of play that pervades college basketball to the present day. Additionally, Olajuwon’s international origin foreshadowed the worldwide explosion in the popularity of basketball in the 1980s and ‘90s. In light of his unprecedented success, college basketball recruiters fanned out across the globe in search of the next undiscovered superstar, bringing back dozens of players from around the world. The long and distinguished professional careers of Drexler and Olajuwon helped the legacy of Phi Slama Jama to resonate into the 21st Century.

Having already helped to popularize college basketball with "The Game of the Century" in 1968, the Cougars' captivating 1983 postseason run again helped college basketball in its drive to join the first rank of major sports. The #1 vs. #2 clash of titans between Phi Slama Jama and Louisville's "Doctors of Dunk" in the Final Four served as an enthralling preamble to the dramatic title game. Ironically, Phi Slama Jama's title game loss to North Carolina State is widely considered their most immediate contribution towards putting NCAA basketball on a par with college football in terms of television viewership and revenue. The Cougars' last-second loss in the final was an iconic moment in the history of “March Madness” that helped to establish the NCAA Basketball Tournament as a major television event. The CBS broadcast of the 1983 Final between Houston and NC State drew 18.6 million households and the Houston-Louisville national semifinal attracted 14.8 million, both records at the time for national final and semifinal games.

[edit] Miscellany

  • Hakeem Olajuwon was named the Southwest Conference Player of the Decade for the 1980s.
  • Clyde Drexler was named the Southwest Conference Player of the Year in 1983 and first-team All-American.
  • Michael Young led both the 1982-83 and 1983-84 teams in scoring, with 17.3 and 19.8 points per game, respectively.
  • Upon retiring from professional basketball, Clyde Drexler returned to UH as head coach of the men's basketball team in 1998. He resigned after two years on the job, posting a 19-39 record.
  • In 1995, Olajuwon & Drexler reunited as teammates on the NBA Houston Rockets when Drexler was traded from the Portland Trail Blazers. The Rockets went on to win the second of their back-to-back NBA championships.
  • Michael Young was inducted into the French Sports Hall of Fame in 2003 for his role in leading the Limoges Club to the 1993 European Club Championship. It was the first time a French athletic club won a European title in any sport.
  • Michael Young and Ricky Winslow both attended historic Jack Yates High School less than a mile from the University of Houston campus.
  • Both Akeem Olajuwon and Larry Micheaux have daughters who are currently scholarship basketball players for Big 12 Conference universities: Abi Olajuwon plays for Oklahoma, and La Toya Micheaux for Texas A&M. Both are 6'3" centers.
  • David Rose is now head coach of Brigham Young University.

[edit] External links