A Very Personal Night
Jim Nantz hands Guy Lewis a Hall of Fame boost, brings Naismith brass to UHtribute dinner
If any doubt existed about the strength of Jim Nantz's commitment to getting former University of Houston coach Guy V. Lewis into the Basketball Hall of Fame, it's gone now.
For the voice of CBS Sports didn't just pay public tribute to Lewis in two different high-profile events Thursday night — the NCAA Salute inside the Wortham Theater Center and the Live at the Final Four dinner in a tent next door afterwards. He made sure that "the brass" of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame were on hand to see it.
Nantz had the Hall of Fame bigwigs — who are in town for the Final Four — at the dinner as his guests. And after showing a video that detailed the 89-year-old Lewis' astonishing legacy, he called them out on the need to get Guy V. into the Hall.
In a nice Nantz way of course. But still very directly — and clearly. In front of a crowd of more than 400.
The Hall of Fame leaders also saw the respect and love Lewis' former players have for him as members of all five of Lewis' UH Final Four teams took the stage with their coach. It was a sea of red jackets and a star-studded stand for the man with 592 wins.
Elvin Hayes — one of the best power forwards of all time — got emotional several times during the night as his old coach was honored. Current BYU coach Dave Rose, Larry "Mr Mean" Micheaux, Michael Young, former NBA coach Don Chaney and dozens of other men who played for Lewis at UH showed. About the only glaring absence was Hakeem Olajuwon's.
Nantz drew plenty of TV star power with him too as Clark Kellogg, Steve Kerr, Lesley Visser, Greg Anthony, Steve Smith, Seth Davis, Tracy Wolfson and Sam Ryan were scattered around the tented room. Nantz's on-air golf partner — three-time Masters winner Nick Faldo — received a special introduction as Nantz talked about having someone who'd been knighted in the crowd.
This was a very personal night for Nantz. The money raised from the dinner will go to the Nantz National Alzheimer Center at Methodist Hospital (which was first written about on CultureMap). Nantz started the center as a tribute to his late father, who suffered from Alzheimer's for years before passing.
The memories of his dad had Nantz singling out his mother Doris and his sister Nancy who took care of Nantz's father when he was suffering from Alzheimer's, which Nantz said "allowed me to travel all around", calling games.
This was Nantz's first public benefit event since the formation of the Alzheimer Center and he reiterated his commitment to being "the face" of the fight, even if his dad would in many ways still be "the voice." "I have my dad's voice on TV," Nantz said. "People have told me we sound alike all my life."
Bob Beauchamp — the chairman of the Houston Final Four Local Organizing Committee — and Robert Dale Morgan — the former chairman of the 2004 Houston Super Bowl Host Committee, a man who many credit with making people realize that the Bayou City was a natural for mega sports events — both sat amongst a heavy contingent of NCAA figures, including NCAA President Mark Emmert.
Nantz noted that this was the first time that the NCAA had allowed an official tie in with a benefit such as this. He lauded his assistant Melissa Miller for making the night happen.
But Nantz mostly kept the focus on Guy V. Lewis, including the coach's lead role in integrating basketball in the South and, of course, his glaring absence from the Hall of Fame.
"This is the legacy of a Hall of Fame coach," Nantz said more than once.
Surely, he only seemed to be looking directly at the Naismith leaders.