HoosierPal wrote:Great quote by Coach McGuire on Dean Meminger: "Meminger was “quicker than 11:15 mass at a seaside resort.”
Also, he NCAA site that McGuire rejected was Ft. Worth. He thought his team should go to the Dayton OH site. I'm not pulling a map out, but travel distance would not have been the issue.
Distance from Milwaukee to Forth Worth = 1,068 miles
Distance from Milwaukee to Dayton, OH = 388 miles
Having some feel for the way that Al viewed things, I think that he didn't like being treated like a pawn. In those days, conferences were locked into certain regions. the only flexibility that the tournament committee had was with independents and even in their case, it was expected that they would be placed within the geographic region in which they were located. Marquette was in Big Ten territory, so it was expected that they would play in the Mideast region.
The Midwest was notoriously the weakest of the 4 regions annually. There were only 3 conferences in that region (at least as I recall) - Big 8, Southwest, and Missouri Valley. There were also a limited number of independents. Because the Missouri Valley Conference had expanded east of the Mississippi, I think that the NCAA felt that it had the flexibility to move an independent like Marquette into the Midwest. In there thinking, if a school like Cincinnati from Ohio could play in a region west of the Mississippi, why not a school like Marquette from Wisconsin. I think that Al got his back up and said in effect that you're not going to move me from a site less than 400 miles from home to one over 1000 miles away. I think that for him it was a matter of respect. He wanted #8 Marquette to be treated just like the big powers from the Big Ten and the SEC. Wily old Al may also have felt that strategically it was better for the up and coming Marquette program to walk away with an NIT championship than to be an also-ran in the NCAA tournament. That gave them something to build on. His strategy paid off as they went to the Final Four just 4 years later - from the Mideast region.
Frankly, the NCAA was doing Marquette a favor. Had they been placed in the Mideast that year, their competition would have included:
#1 Kentucky
#4 Jacksonville
#7 Iowa
#9 Notre Dame
#19 Western Kentucky
Had they accepted the invitation to play in the Midwest, their competition would have included these ranked teams:
#5 New Mexico State
#12 Houston
#14 Drake
Eventually Jacksonville won the Mideast by upsetting Kentucky in the regional finals while New Mexico State won theMidwest by beating Drake. That Marquette team could have beaten either of those two. Stangely enough the team that replaced Marquette was Dayton, moved from its home town for the regionals to Fort Worth! The NCAA made their point. In those days teams were allowed to play on their home court in the tournament and often did - something which helped the big powers pf the day like UCLA.