As the readers on this blog know, I recently relocated to Kansas City to take on a new job challenge.
I originally lived in the area as a child and since returning I’ve really started studying and getting to know the area. Part of that is also studying the history of Kansas. And being a huge sports nut, I’ve particularly become more interested in the history of college basketball in the state.
It’s common knowledge, and accepted lore thanks to amazing movies like “Hoosiers“, that Indiana is basketball country. After all, lots of great players have come from the state and they’ve done a good job of marketing it that way.
One of the first things I noticed when we came in for house-hunting trips was the number of hoops in driveways and on garages. Literally, it was the first thing my wife noticed. Out of 10 houses, 7 have a basketball poll in their driveway. It’s sort of sports religion in Kansas.
It’s not hard to see why. When you look at the number of great players and coaches who have come from Kansas, it’s astonishing. It’s no wonder the College Basketball Experience and Hall of Fame call Kansas City home. Despite the fact the Hall of Fame continues to snub one of the game’s greatest coaching legends - UNLV’s Jerry Tarkanian, it’s nice to have it in the area. Even though the game was invented in Massachusett’s, and no doubt it’s also big basketball country, it just doesn’t stack up to Kansas.
Consider this: Although Naismith first introduced the game while in Massachusetts, it wasn’t until eight years later when he joined the faculty at the University of Kansas that the game started to take off. Naismith spent the rest of his life in Lawrence, Kansas dying there in 1939.
If you look at the who’s-who of college basketball in particular, the list of college greats with Kansas roots reads like an all-star cast:
- Gene Keady, long-time Purdue basketball coach
- Lon Kruger, Kansas State All-American and current UNLV head coach
- Adolph Rupp, Hall of Fame coach of Kentucky Wildcats
- Dean Smith, legendary North Carolina Tar Heels coach
- Eddie Sutton, Oklahoma State coach and Hall of Fame member
- Mark Turgeon, current coach at Texas A&M
- Wilt Chamberlain
- Danny Manning
- Kendra Wecker, WNBA start and former K-State standout
…and many more.

K-State All-American, and current Runnin' Rebels coach Lon Kruger with me and my kids a few years ago
What’s impressive about that list is not just the number of people, but the impact the top five of them have had on the game. When you talk about Naismith, Rupp, Smith and Roy Williams, its tough to argue the basketball prowess of the Sunflower state.
There is no doubt that Indiana, North Carolina and even California loom large when it comes to the production of basketball talent – be it coaches or players. But there is something more majestic about basketball and Kansas. There is no doubt it’s a hoops state through and through.
And for a college hoops junkie like me, I am loving every minute of it.










