JIM VALVANO


'James Thomas Anthony Valvano' (March 10 1946April 28 1993), nicknamed 'Jimmy V', was an American college basketball coach.
While the head coach at North Carolina State University, he won the 1983 NCAA National Championship. Valvano is remembered for running up and down the court after winning the 1983 NCAA championship, seemingly in disbelief and looking for someone to hug.

Contents
Personal
College playing career
Coaching career
Controversy
After coaching
ESPY speech and death
Legacy
V Foundation
References
External links

Personal


Valvano was the child of Rocco and Angelina Valvano, and was married for 25 years to his high school sweetheart, Pamela Levine. They have three daughters: Nicole, Jamie, and Lee Ann. Valvano attended Seaford High School on Long Island, New York.
Vince Lombardi was Valvano’s role model. Valvano told an ESPY audience, on March 4, 1993, that he took some of Lombardi’s inspirational speeches out of his book ''Commitment to Excellence'' and used them with his team. Valvano discussed how he planned to use Lombardi's speech to the Green Bay Packers in front of his Rutgers freshman basketball team prior to his first game as a coach. This led to Valvano accidentally telling his Rutgers basketball players this:
Finally I said, "Gentlemen, all eyes on me." These kids wanted to play, they're 19. "Let's go," I said. "Gentlemen, we'll be successful this year if you can focus on three things, and three things only: your family, your religion, and the Green Bay Packers."

College playing career


Valvano was a point guard at Rutgers University in 1967, where he partnered with first-team All American Bob Lloyd in the backcourt. Under the leadership of Valvano and Lloyd, Rutgers finished third in the 1967 NIT Tournament, which was the last basketball tournament held at the old Madison Square Garden. Jim was named Senior Athlete of the Year at Rutgers in 1967. He graduated with a degree in English in 1967.

Coaching career


Valvano's 19-year career as a head basketball coach included stops at Johns Hopkins, Bucknell, Iona, and NC State. His career record was 346-212. During his 10 year NC State career, Valvano's teams were the ACC Tournament Champions in 1983 and 1987 and the ACC regular season champions in 1985 and 1989. The Wolfpack won the NCAA Men's Basketball Championship in 1983, in addition to advancing to the NCAA Elite 8 in 1985 and 1986. He was twice voted ACC coach of the year. Valvano became NC State's athletic director in 1986.
Valvano's famous reaction after the Wolfpack victory came after the game-winning shot in the 1983 NCAA finals. Dereck Whittenburg heaved a last-second airball that was caught and dunked by Lorenzo Charles as time expired. NC State beat a heavily favored University of Houston squad which featured future NBA stars Hakeem Olajuwon and Clyde Drexler, 54-52. This was NC State’s second national championship in college basketball, the first one coming in 1974.

Controversy


In 1990, accusations of rules violations, surfaced in the book ''Personal Fouls'' by Peter Golenbock. Two local newspapers, and the NC State student paper called for his ouster. A 1989 NCAA investigation cleared Valvano, but found that players illegally sold shoes and game tickets (over 650 instances). As a result, the basketball program placed themselves on probation for two years (the maximum sentence) and was banned from participating in the 1990 NCAA tournament. The state-appointed Poole Commission issued a 32-page report that concluded that Valvano and his coaching staff circumvented rules so they could keep players eligible. After this report came out, Valvano was forced to resign as the school's athletic director in October 1989. In addition to Valvano's woes with the NCAA and his own university, ABC News reported that during the 1987-88 season as many as four NC State players, including forward Charles Shackleford, conspired to hold down the scores of four games in return for cash payments from a New Jersey contractor. ABC said that one of the games was against Wake Forest on March 6, 1988. NC State defeated Wake Forest by four points, after being favored by 16. According to Shackleford's lawyer and agent, Sal DiFazio, Shackleford never shaved points, although he admitted taking $65,000 from two men. One of these men was identified by ABC as the key figure in the point-shaving scheme (''Los Angeles Times'', 3/3/90)
During Valvano's ten-year tenure as head coach at NC State, he gained a reputation for having minuscule graduation rates among his players. Only three of his players graduated from the university. Current NC State coach Sidney Lowe is not one of Valvano's graduates. One of the players recruited by Valvano, Chris Washburn, scored 470 on his SAT before being permitted to enroll. Washburn was later expelled for stealing a fellow student's stereo.
Valvano's version of these events can be found in his 1991 autobiography, ''Valvano: They Gave Me a Lifetime Contract, and Then They Declared Me Dead''.
The following letter from Bob Valvano, offers his point of view on the firing of Valvano:
I appreciate the kind words about your wishes for the book, and very much appreciate your candor about my brother and his reputation. Your summation is in fact one of the main reasons I want to write the book. I agree that he has been 'sanctified' and it is for the wrong reasons. He got sick and died very young, and handled it with great dignity and courage. I am proud of that. But he really was no different in his illness than he was in health. It was simply the perception, publicly, that changed, and your comments are a reflection of that. Let me ask you a question. You say Jim ran one of the dirtiest programs in America. Did you know that after three investigations, the only thing he was ever accused of was that his players sold complimentary athletic shoes and tickets? Period. Did you know that? Did you know that the guy who ran the NCAA investigation, Dave Dideon, a hardened veteran of dealing with slick, underhanded coaches, said that he never investigated a more misunderstood coach than Jim, and that following the investigation, he wrote a letter to Jim saying that if he had a son, he would be proud to have him play for Jim? Probably not, and my guess is that if you did, you would rather not have it cloud your preconceived judgment that Jim was a bad guy. He made mistakes. He tried to do too many things at once. He assumed details were being tended to that weren't, that he should have seen to. But dirty program? Astoundingly inaccurate, but perpetuated, as is the misconception that he became a 'good guy' when he got sick. He was always a 'good guy,' an inspiring guy, and he made his share of mistakes. Both have been blown out of proportion, and it makes Jim a cartoon character. Please don't take my remarks personally . . . I am probably tilting at windmills to think I will change anyone's mind, but it is a noble fight. To fight it, I can't, and won't, make Jim out to be a saint, but the criticisms are as inaccurate as the accolades are simplistic.
It is worth trying.
-Bob Valvano

After coaching


After his coaching career, Valvano became a broadcaster for ESPN and ABC. In 1992, he won a Cable ACE Award for Commentator/Analyst for NCAA basketball broadcasts. From time to time he was paired with basketball analyst Dick Vitale. The two even made a cameo appearance, playing the role of professional movers, on an episode of ''The Cosby Show''.
Valvano created JTV enterprises to oversee many of his entrepreneurial endeavors. He gave hundreds of motivational speeches across the country and was a featured guest on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and Late Night with David Letterman.

ESPY speech and death


Shortly before his death, he spoke at the inaugural ESPY Awards, presented by ESPN, on March 4, 1993. While accepting the inaugural Arthur Ashe Courage and Humanitarian Award, he announced the creation of the "V Foundation", an organization dedicated to finding a cure for cancer. He announced that the foundation's motto would be "Don't give up. Don't ever give up." During his speech, the teleprompter stated that he had 30 seconds to which Valvano responded, "They got that screen up there flashing 30 seconds, like I care about that screen. I got tumors all over my body and I'm supposed to be worried about some screen flashing 30 seconds." His speech has become legendary, and he closed the speech by saying, "Cancer can take away all of my physical abilities. It cannot touch my mind, it cannot touch my heart, and it cannot touch my soul. And those three things are going to carry on forever. I thank you and God bless you all." One thing Valvano also said in the speech that many remember most are the following words:
To me, there are three things we all should do every day. We should do this every day of our lives. Number 1 is laugh. You should laugh every day. Number 2 is think. You should spend some time in thought. And Number 3 is, you should have your emotions moved to tears, could be happiness or joy. But think about it. If you laugh, you think, and you cry, that's a full day. That's a heck of a day. You do that seven days a week, you're going to have something special."

Valvano received a lengthy standing ovation. He died less than two months later. Valvano died at the age of 47 after a yearlong battle with cancer. He is interred at Oakwood Cemetery in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Legacy


A 1996 TV-movie titled '', starred Anthony LaPaglia as Valvano. In 1993, Valvano was inducted into the Rutgers' Basketball Hall of Fame. In 1999, Valvano was inducted into both the Hall of Distinguished Alumni at Rutgers University and the New York City Basketball Hall of Fame.
V Foundation

The V Foundation is a charitable organization dedicated to saving lives by helping to find a cure for cancer. The foundation seeks to make a difference by generating broad-based support for cancer research and by creating an urgent awareness among all Americans of the importance of the war against cancer. The V Foundation performs these dual roles through advocacy, education, fundraising, and philanthropy. Its motto is “Don’t give up. Don’t ever give up.”
The Jimmy V Celebrity Golf Classic has traditionally been held in August at Prestonwood Country Club in Cary, North Carolina, however in 2006 the Jimmy V Celebrity Golf Classic was moved to Pinehurst, NC so that it could attract higher profile players to the fundraiser. Each year, four men's college basketball teams compete in the "Jimmy V Basketball Classic". Recently, a women's game was added to the lineup. To date, the V Foundation has raised over $60 million for cancer research.
In addition, ESPN Radio hosts an annual online auction that gives 100% of its proceeds to the Foundation. [1]

References


1. http://sports.espn.go.com/espnradio/news/story?page=radio/vfoundation07

External links



V Foundation for Cancer Research

ESPY Award Speech by Jim Valvano

ESPY Award Address in Text, Audio, Video

Jim Valvano Timeline

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves