Pistol Pete
Chip Towers - Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Monday, March 8, 2004
Much has been made about Georgia's students rushing the floor after basketball games this season. But 35 years ago today, they swarmed the court at Stegeman Coliseum for an opposing team.
Or more specifically, an opposing player.
On March 8, 1969, LSU's Pete Maravich gave what many believe was the greatest individual performance in SEC history. He scored 58 points in a 90-80 double-overtime win over Georgia. But that's only the half of it.
It was when Maravich scored, how he scored and how the game ended that made this night special. Georgia's students certainly seemed to think so. They mobbed Maravich and, some say, carried him off the court.
That image still burns brightly in the mind of Herb White, a player on the '69 Georgia team.
"The way our fans and cheerleaders were dancing around, you would have thought we were LSU," said White, now a sales executive for Georgia Public Broadcasting. "We [the players] were all pretty disgusted."
So was coach Ken Rosemond, who not only didn't like the way his Bulldogs defended "Pistol Pete," but also how the late superstar toyed with them down the stretch. But it was the latter that so amazed Georgia's fans.
A standing-room-only crowd of 10,600 filled the Coliseum in anticipation of seeing Maravich, the "LSU Moppet" with the shaggy hair and sagging socks who was as close to a rock star as a basketball player could be in those days. They weren't disappointed.
Georgia played a great game. It "held" Maravich, who came in averaging 43 points, to 16 in the first half and raced out to a 15-point, second-half lead. Then Maravich took over.
He scored 17 points in a row, pouring in long-range jumpers from all over the court to give LSU a two-point lead. The Bulldogs were able to extend the game only because of Jerry Epling's long-range jumper with four seconds left. Then, after playing to a 78-all tie in the first overtime --- Maravich's bucket tied it, of course --- he gave the crowd what it came for.
Maravich scored 11 of the Tigers' 12 points in the second overtime, and he did it with the style and flair that made him famous. Holding an eight-point lead with about a minute to play, Maravich put on a show.
"LSU had the ball and the lead and Pete decided he was going to go into his Marques Haynes/Globetrotter routine," said White. "We were trying to steal the ball or foul him. He was dribbling all around, between his legs, behind his back, and the place was just going nuts."
Moments later, Maravich's legend was authenticated.
"Like with five seconds to go, he just turned around and started dribbling toward halfcourt, toward their bench," White recalled. "He gets almost to the timeline, with his back to the basket, and he lets go of a hook shot. It goes way up in the air and just as the clock runs out --- boom --- he knocks the bottom out."
"Best I can recall, he used up about the last two minutes of the clock," said John Musemeche, then a sportswriter for the Baton Rouge Advocate, who went on to write the book "Maravich." "What a lot of people don't remember about that is, everybody thought Pete was all about points. But he passed up at least three layups there at the end. Georgia wouldn't foul him because he was such a good shooter. So Pete just kept dribbling down the lane and right back out."
His final stats were staggering --- 21 of 48 from the field, 16 of 25 from the foul line. He even had four assists. "If they had the 3-point shot then, he probably would have had 75, so I guess we were lucky," White quipped.
Maravich had scored 66 points against Tulane earlier that season and went over 60 points three times the next year, including an SEC-record 69 against Alabama. But many consider the Georgia game his greatest.
You'll have to take White's word for it, though.
"Coach Rosemond destroyed the film because he never wanted us see it again," White said with a laugh.
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