Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 1965–66 Texas Western Miners basketball team represented Texas Western College, now the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP), led by Hall of Fame head coach Don Haskins. The team won the national championship in 1966 , becoming the first team with an all-black starting lineup to do so. [ 1 ]
The 1966 NCAA University Division basketball tournament involved 22 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national men's basketball champion of the NCAA University Division, now Division I. It began on March 7 and ended with the championship game on March 19 in College Park, Maryland. A total of 26 games were played ...
The Miners repeated twice in 1986 against Auburn, 87-83. This happened in the Sun Bowl Basketball Tournament. UTEP did this for the third straight year with a win over #5 Wyoming in 1988. "The Don" is the home of the UTEP Miners, who were the first Division I Men's National Basketball Champions in the state of Texas (1966).
The Miners were defeated by Pacific in their second NCAA tournament game and finished at 22–6. [23] That year, the school was renamed to the University of Texas at El Paso, its current name. [9] It took three seasons for UTEP to return to the NCAA Tournament; Haskins coached the Miners through the 1998–99 season. [18]
For about 40 years, Joe Gomez assembled an impressive collection of memorabilia tied to the historic Texas Western College, now UTEP, 1966 NCAA men’s championship basketball team.
The WestStar Don Haskins Sun Bowl Invitational is an annual men's NCAA Division I college basketball tournament held in ... 1966: SMU 1967: UTEP 1968: UTEP 1969: UTEP ...
A lot of people don't know what coach Haskins did for basketball, what he did for so many people." "It's fantastic, he'd be proud," said Togo Railey, one of several members of the 1966 national ...
In 1966 his team won the NCAA tournament over the Wildcats of the University of Kentucky, coached by Adolph Rupp. The watershed game highlighted the end of racial segregation in college basketball. In his time at Texas Western/UTEP, he compiled a 719–353 record, suffering only five losing seasons.