gvt11 wrote:As a UK fan who is familiar with Haywood's recruitment, I would love for you to provide any type of evidence for this claim. It doesn't pass the smell test. Either Haywood was eligible or not according to whatever NCAA/conference/university rules were in place at the time. How was the coach at Kentucky supposed to dictate who Tennessee could or could not admit ?
And Finally,
No. 1 - Rupp worked behind the scenes to make sure that Spencer Haywood was not accepted for admittance at Tennessee in 1968. Haywood would have been the best player in Tennessee history to that point and would have given Tennessee a critical edge in recruiting black athletes before anyone else in the SEC. I still maintain that was the single biggest setback to the program in its history, other than maybe the tenure of Wade Houston.
Again, it doesn't make any logical sense. Since you have this as your #1 reason, surely you have or know of some actual evidence ?
Thanks
Jon
PS, IF Haywood had been eligible and IF he had stayed long enough at Tennessee to play, he wouldn't have been the first black player in the SEC as you suggest. Perry Wallace was already at Vanderbilt at the time.



