All-College Basketball Classic
Current season, competition or edition: 2013 All-College Basketball Classic | |
Sport | Basketball |
---|---|
Founded | 1935 |
Founder | Oklahoma Publishing Company; now run by Oklahoma City All Sports Association |
No. of teams | 4 |
Country | United States |
TV partner(s) | ESPN2 |
The All-College Basketball Classic is a college basketball event that has been played during the winter holidays in Oklahoma City since 1935. It is now held at the Chesapeake Energy Arena. It is the world’s oldest basketball tournament still played (although it has not followed a true tournament format since 2000), outdating even the NCAA, NIT, NAIA, and NBA tournaments.
The All College Tournament was originally conceived by Henry P. Iba, the coach at Oklahoma A&M, and Bus Ham, sports editor of The Oklahoman. The original purpose of the tournament was to increase interest in high school basketball in Oklahoma, and thereby to improve the quality of the college teams in the state. The first tournament included 16 teams from Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas, and was played at Classen High School; Oklahoma A&M won the first title game over Tulsa, 40–17. Two years later the tournament had grown to 32 teams.[1] When the publisher of The Oklahoman made known its intention to end its sponsorship, the Oklahoma City All Sports Association was formed in 1957 to take over the tournament.[2]
The size, sponsorship, and success of the tournament varied over the years, shrinking to four teams in 1981.[3] In 1999 it had what one report called "one of its worst fields ever" with three small college programs along with Oklahoma.[4] The last traditionally-formatted tournament was played in 2000, with Oklahoma beating SMU 79–78 in the title game. Beginning in 2001, the event switched to a "classic" format, with a pre-determined schedule and no title game.[5] In 2013 the event included women's basketball for the first time, presenting a doubleheader featuring the Oklahoma State men's and women's teams each playing a game against an out-of-state foe.[6]
Hall of Fame of All College Basketball Classic
- Henry P. Iba
- Ray Meyer
- Ralph Miller
- Jay Simon
- Arnold Short
- Jim Roederer
- Bob Kurland
- Abe Lemons
- Paul Hansen
- John "Taps" Gallagher
- Glenn Boyer
- Bruce Drake
- Cornell Green
- Pete Maravich
- Stan Watts
- Wayman Tisdale
- Bill Russell
- Thurman Medley
- Stanley Draper Jr.
- John Philbin
- Billy Tubbs
- Eddie Sutton
References
- ↑ Volney Meece, "Iba, Ham Saw Good for Preps in All College", The Oklahoman, December 24, 1985.
- ↑ Jim Stafford, "Made in Oklahoma: The Oklahoma City All Sports Association", The Oklahoman, May 31, 2005.
- ↑ Darrell Morrow, "Basketball Tourney Aids OKC Economy", The Journal Record, December 18, 1992 – via Questia Online Library (subscription required) . ("Originally, it was a 32-team affair and it was played in high schools throughout Oklahoma City, then it was reduced to 16 teams and then it was reduced to eight. It was eight teams when we took over in 1957. In 1981, it became a four-team tournament because of the difficulty with the schools being restricted to playing a limited number of games.")
- ↑ Berry Tramel, "City hoops tournament to change All-College organizers want to lure big teams", The Oklahoman, September 8, 2000.
- ↑ Berry Tramel, "All-College Tournament enters new dimension", The Oklahoman, December 31, 2000.
- ↑ John Helsley, "Oklahoma State basketball: All-College Classic to feature OSU-Louisiana Tech men, OSU-South Florida women", The Oklahoman, August 4, 2013.