In the 1967-68 season we played Texas Christian University in the old field house and I was there. Corley was the star of the team but the supporting cast wasn't too good as we finished 11-13. But TCU had done their scouting quite well and adopted an unusual defense. Five men in a zone around Corley. And it was a tight zone as those players were never too far from Bill. Even he could not overcome this strategy and we lost, 72-65. If any of you were there for this one, let's hear how you saw it!
Regarding an earlier comment about Burr Carlson being the least successful coach, that sure is the case. He coached for 2 years with records of 11-13 and 5-19. But I don't lay all the blame at his doorstep. I blame our president, Homer Babbage, for most of it.
Shabel arrived on campus for the 1963-64 season. His first recruiting class included Wes Bialosukinia who was on the freshman team in 1963-64. I think Babbage started at about the same time or a little earlier. Being a dyed in the wool Ivy Leaguer and Yalie to boot it is my feeling that he de-emphasized athletics at Uconn and hampered Shabel's recruiting efforts, and that's why Shabel left after only 4 years. Nevertheless, his coaching career at Uconn was not going to be a long one. He wasn't devoted to coaching like Calhoun is [he wanted to be in administration, perhaps athletic director] and the job didn't pay millions like it does today. Any else have an opinion on this?