Step about the Wayback Machine, folks. We're taking a trip back to a time when basketball at all levels was a bit different.
OK, a lot different.
Remember basketball in the late 1960s and early '70s? No three-point line. No shot clock. Hand-checks and physical defense was allowed. College freshmen weren't eligible for varsity play.
With the high school champions crowned and the Final Four set, my mind drifted back to a name that, I hope, has survived the years. A kid named Mickey Crowe, a 6-5ish guard in a time when those were rare. Rarer still was a Wisconsin kid (playing for his dad Marty at St. Nazianz JFK Prep from 1971-1975) who averaged over 40 points a game and brought in national media attention.
He torched Cedar Grove for 72 and hit 56 against both Two Rivers and Sevastopol. When JFK Prep rolled into town, it a visit from the circus. As a sophomore he averaged 36 points a game and put up back-to-back games of 60-plus. Crowe upped that to 39 as a junior and then 41.7 as a senior, scoring 1,001 points.
It's a shame that, with all that talent, his own demons brought him down. Addicted to drugs and alcohol, diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic in 1984, he now keeps his psychological issues in check with daily doses of medication. Mickey Crowe lives in Eau Claire these days. His story is well-told in Over And Back: Mickey Crowe: The Strange And Troubled Life Of A Wisconsin High School Basketball Legend by Brett Christopherson.
Crowe scored 2,724 points in his career, which now ranks second among state preps. In the 1974-75 season he scored 1,001 points in 24 games, averaging 41.71 points per game. I had the chance to see him play four times in his career -- two regular season games against Oshkosh Lourdes Academy and two WISAA tournament games at Kolf Sports Center on the UW-Oshkosh campus.
When Mickey Crowe crossed the half-court line, he was in range, folks. Gotta wonder how many points he would have averaged, and scored, had he benefited from a three-point line. He was Wisconsin's answer to "Pistol" Pete Maravich, who starred at LSU for his father, Peter "Press" Maravich.
Maravich couldn't play as a freshman due to NCAA rules, but in 81 varsity games he averaged 44.2 points a game. From the 1967-68 season to 1969-70, the Pistol averaged 43.8, 44.2 and 44.5 respectively. He's first all-time on the NCAA D-1 men's career scoring with 3,667 points; he's first, fourth and fifth on the list for points in a season (1,381; 1,148; 1,138) and first, second and third for scoring average by season.
Again, keep in mind this is well BEFORE the three-point line. The Pistol was a show, and a big influence on Mickey Crowe -- down to the floppy socks and long hair.
The Lourdes Academy Knights of Oshkosh had Mickey Crowe's number, tho. In a handful of games in his career, he was held to less than 30 points in a game. Lourdes did it twice. In the first, his junior year, JFK Prep won 70-68 in overtime as Crowe had 27 points on 12 of 27 field goals.
Jim Baerwald of Lourdes put up 28 points, and was one of the reasons for Crowe's struggles
"(Crowe) was a crazy guy," recalls Ken Korsch, at that time a 6-3 senior forward on the Lourdes team who went on to earn All-Winnebagoland honors from the Oshkosh Daily Northwestern. "He (Crowe) guarded me, but we had (6-5 forward) Jim Baerwald guard him.
"Jim could time his dribbling so he would be right up on Crowe, which he didn’t adapt to very well," remembers Korsch, who owns Lake Rest Resort on Spider Lake in Arbor Vitae, WI. "I got a letter from Marty Crowe after that game telling me how well we played them."
The Oshkosh Lourdes starting five included forwards Korsch and Baerwald, center Jim Angle, off-guard Mike Muza and point guard Pat McKenzie, currently the team physician for the Green Bay Packers.
The second meeting for Lourdes and JFK saw Crowe finish with 21 points on 9 of 32 field goals and 3 of 14 free throws in a 78-67 win.
In the tournament games at Kolf, Crowe and JFK beat Marinette Catholic Central 52-50 on Crowe's 15-foot jumper. He had 31 points that game on 15 of 37 shots. The next night, De Pere Abbot Pennings through a stiff defense that frustrated Crowe, as he only got 14 of his 26 shots in the second half, finishing with 27 points in a 49-44 Pennings win.
The next season, as a senior, Crowe got JFK Prep to Milwaukee and the WISAA state tournament championship game, only to come up short against Racine Lutheran