- Joined
- Nov 3, 2008
- Messages
- 5,175
- Reaction score
- 1,390
- Points
- 113
Lou was my favorite player as a kid! Saw him play with the cast on his hand several games. Loved that team. My brother scrimmaged with those guys daily as he played on the freshman team. Went to several practices and watched my brother scrimmage with those guys! Didn't Don Yates have grade problems that year?I was a kid on the prairie listening to gopher basketball games on Scratchy radio that faded in and out depending on weather conditions. I thought I remembered him breaking his shooting hand so checked out his bio. His senior season year he broke his right hand, missed seven games, and came back shooting left-handed and still averaged 19 points per game. His bio also said he and Archie Clark were the first black players for the U. All amazing stuff in hindsight.
Criminal he wasn’t already in. The time to get in is not 50 plus years too late. I am pleased he finally is in but sucks he’s not alive to see it.Honestly, I thought he was already in many years ago.
Yates was interviewed back in 2011 when he was elected into the Fayette County Sports hall of fame. He followed former to Uniontown High School students Sandy Stephens and Bill Munsey to Minnesota.A great player when so many universities would not recruit black players, especially from the south. Hudson, Archie Clark, and Don Yates we’re trail blazers and put UMN on the basketball map. Clark played at a high level in the NBA for the LA Lakers. Not sure what happened to Yates.
Minnesota was building a pretty strong team and the trio of Clark, Hudson and Yates helped the Gophers to a third place Big Ten finish in 1963-64 and a second place finish in 1964-65.
"I think we were ranked number two in the country for awhile my junior season," Yates recalled. "I had several complications with my grades and I was young and stupid and I didn't get my honor points during the summer and I couldn't play my senior year. I was so immature with respect to what I really wanted to do and being away from home I didn't have a mentor to guide me through - I truly, truly regret it."
Ken Yackel lettered in three sports, Hockey (3 times), baseball (3 times), and football (twice) during the mid-fifties. I remember seeing him play semi-Pro hockey for the Minneapolis Millers. He was one tough dude.A favorite of mine growing up - I was lucky enough to be at the game when either Lou was inducted into the Minnesota Hall of Fame in 1991 or when his jersey was retired in 1994 (can't remember which one). Ray Christensen provided the introduction (and, as expected, did a wonderful job).
Lou is one of the few basketball Gophers to letter in an additional sport (track). I can think of two others - Bud Grant and Dave Winfield - but sure there must be more.
A favorite of mine growing up - I was lucky enough to be at the game when either Lou was inducted into the Minnesota Hall of Fame in 1991 or when his jersey was retired in 1994 (can't remember which one). Ray Christensen provided the introduction (and, as expected, did a wonderful job).
Lou is one of the few basketball Gophers to letter in an additional sport (track). I can think of two others - Bud Grant and Dave Winfield - but sure there must be more.
Was looking something up and stumbled upon it. Bryant Allen.A few more off the top of my head that lettered in basketball and at least one other sport:
Tony Dungy
Charlie Sanders
Archie Clark (baseball)
There was a PG in the Monson (or early Tubby era) that also played football. I think this lasted a year, he wasn't that good at either.
Barry Wohler
Go Gophers!!