99% Invisible - 523- Six-on-Six Basketball
Episode Date: February 1, 2023In the 20th century, Iowa high school girls basketball was HUGE but it was not the game we know today. In 6-on-6 basketball, the three forwards only play offense. And the three guards only play defens...e. No one is allowed to leave their assigned half of the court. 6-on-6 still uses the full length of a basketball court, but in a different way than 5-on-5. In 6-player, three forwards from one team and three guards from the opposing team play at one end of the court. Meanwhile their teammates wait at the half court line. This basketball variant made for high scores, quick action, and the girls who played it were local superstars. Six-on-Six Basketball
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This is 99% invisible.
I'm Roman Mars.
When producer Ellie Gordon Marshall was growing up, she played baseball, tennis, soccer, ice hockey,
field hockey, flag football, volleyball, field lacrosse, box lacrosse, I don't even know
what that one is.
Basically I played whatever I could find.
If there's a team, a moving object, and points to be had, I'm probably pretty good at it.
Ellie is an only child, and she didn't really think of her parents as sports people.
To be fair, my dad sometimes went out for runs, but in short shorts I found very embarrassing,
so I blocked it out.
You have to take care of yourself in this world.
Still, for years, I thought I was the only one in my family that truly understood the appeal of the sweat, blood, and tears of sport.
That is until I came across my mom's high school yearbooks.
So you guys were called the rockets. Yes. And the boys were called the rockets.
I wouldn't say the rocks, but yeah.
This is me talking to my mom a few years ago.
We were pouring over memories from her time on the high school basketball team back in
the 1960s.
Yeah, here you can see.
The team ended the season with a 9-16 record.
In one photo, all the girls are sitting straight
laid on the gym floor.
They're in sort of a semi-circle around a basketball
showing off their straight socks.
There's also photos of the team goofing around,
which I love, but my favorite picture of my mom
is her practice leaping up to defend a player
she still remembers.
This is Donna Kraus, who was like the star on the team.
She's shooting a basket, and you can tell there's no way I'm gonna block her shot.
In the practice photos, everyone looks so cool and athletic
with their white sneakers and socks.
But in the game photos, some things looked off.
The uniforms, for example.
The tops, they were kind of crop tops
so that when you, you know, shot a basket
or moved your arms up,
you could actually see your stomach.
Yeah, I heard an entire mid-drip is exposed.
And I remember looking at these when I was a teenager
and such a tomboy, I was like horrified.
Yeah, horrified because when I saw the uniforms, I could not imagine playing any sport at that age in a satin-y shirt that barely covered my stomach.
And that wasn't the only thing my mom told me that sounded weird about her days playing basketball.
There were also the rules.
Ellie's mom played basketball, but not the five on five basketball we know today.
She played six on six Iowa girls basketball. There were three forwards and three guards.
So as the three guards, you guarded the other team's three forwards.
In six on six basketball, the three forwards only play offense.
And the three guards only play defense.
No one is allowed to leave their assigned half of the court.
I was a guard.
So I never shot any baskets.
All I did was try to prevent people from shooting baskets.
Six on six still uses the full length of a basketball court,
but in a different way than five on five.
In six player, three forwards from one team,
and three guards from the opposing team
play at one end of the court.
Meanwhile, their teammates wait at the half court line.
So as a guard, one of my big role was to get the ball
and get it down to the other half court, so it would be in the hands of our forwards.
If the team playing offense makes a basket, the ref throws the ball back to the opposing
teams forwards, and now they have a chance to score at the other end of the court.
Another way to think about it, it's like two games of three on three with the same ball
being tossed back and forth. And then the other thing that was kind of peculiar is you could only dribble the ball twice,
and then you had to do something with it. At the same time Ellie's mom was playing six on six,
the boys in her high school were playing five on five. Just what was your perception of the rules when you started playing or did you have any?
My perception was there were rules for the girls and there were rules for the boys and they were different.
And I don't have the memory of feeling like, oh, I wish we could play the boys' rules.
It was just kind of like those were our rules.
I was 13 when I first found my mom's ear book.
And to my teenage ears, the sports sounded confusing
and so boring.
When the ball is not in your end of the court,
do you what, just stand there?
What's fun about being a guard if you can never shoot?
Not to mention the rules wreaked of sexism.
As if Iowans felt they needed to invent
a less rigorous version of basketball
made just for the girls. But even so, Ellie's mom insisted that girls' six-on-six basketball
was extremely popular, not just at her high school, but all over Iowa.
My memories, the stance being filled, like my mother, she was always there. And I think most times she brought her knitting
because she would get nervous and then she would be knitting away.
At the girls' games, the gyms in Iowa would be packed, and not just with knitting mothers,
entire towns would come out to cheer for their team. In fact, it wasn't until my mom left Iowa that she realized this kind of enthusiasm for
a girl's sport was rare.
That it was regarded as important as boys basketball.
I didn't think was unusual.
I thought that that was just the way the world worked.
My whole life, women and girls' sports have been on the defensive.
Always put in a position to prove its worth.
So I truly could not comprehend what my mom was describing.
A girl's sport with weird sexist rules having just as much, if not more success than
the boys?
So for years, I wrote the sport off.
Until, well, now, because the more I looked into it,
the more I realized that my mom wasn't just some six on six fanatic.
The game and its rules were popular in Iowa for nearly a century,
but the sport would ultimately be abandoned by a federal law
designed to end gender discrimination.
The story of the rise and fall of Iowa girls' six-on-six starts with the establishment of
Women's Basketball in 1892.
Women's Basketball is the most fascinating sport because women started playing it almost
at exactly the same time men started playing it. And they started playing it at a time when the rules were shifting very quickly.
This is basketball historian Pamela Grundy.
She says even back when James Naysmith invented basketball, the rules were still in flux.
Dribbling didn't exist at first.
That had to get invented.
Free throws didn't exist at first. Those had to get invented. Free throws didn't exist at first.
Those had to get invented.
And what happened with women,
the fact that the game was very unshaped
at the beginning meant that they could shape it
in a way that was acceptable for women to play.
A visit teacher from Smith College
named Senda Berenson is credited with
being the mother of women's basketball.
She learned of Nacemus' new game and met it just miles down the road and thought it would
be a good fit for her all-women's gym class, even though team sports for women were practically
unheard of in the late 1800s.
Basketball was something that allowed women to plan a team to run around, to really be
vigorous in a way that traditional women's physical
activity didn't allow one to do.
So it was something, it was a revelation.
They just loved it.
You look at the pictures and you listen to what women said about playing basketball back
in those early days, and it was just the most amazing thing.
Women's colleges promoted exercise for their students, but they also stressed that physical education
should not interfere with Christian ideals of womanhood,
such as purity, obedience, and domesticity.
Even Barenson, a true evangelist for women's physical movement,
was deeply concerned that women's basketball never
veer outside friendly play.
She wanted her rules to favor a civility over competition.
Initially, Cindy Baronson made rules that made the women's game a little bit different.
Made rules that made the game seem a little more sedate. Have a little less physical contact.
In this early iteration of women's basketball, the court was divided into three zones,
nine players on each team passing the ball from zone to zone attempting to score a basket. In this early iteration of women's basketball, the court was divided into three zones, nine
players on each team passing the ball from zone to zone attempting to score a basket.
There was no grabbing at the ball, no more than three dribbles, and the winning team had
to host a dinner for the defeated team.
Barenson continued to refine the rules at the turn of the century, but by then women's
basketball had already spread throughout the country.
And one of the places it found a foothold was rural Iowa.
Basketball was a good fit for rural Iowa.
It needed limited equipment and could be played indoors in the winter.
It was an easy activity for these tiny towns to rally around.
Little towns of 200, 300 people, they played basketball.
Not so in the cities, see cities in Iowa
did not play any kind of sports until after mid-century.
This is Max McElwain, an academic former sports reporter
and native Iowan.
Max told me that while people in the city
were debating whether sports were appropriate for girls,
that just wasn't a concern in small town Iowa.
They were likely farm girls, they were likely
having to do all sorts of physical chores on their farms,
and there wasn't that sort of bifurcation between
being an athlete and being feminine.
In the first few decades of Iowa Girls Basketball,
the rules could differ from county to county.
Some were six players, some eight were nine.
All the iterations were inspired by
sendabarinsons to date rules, but with one big exception.
Iowans wanted their teams to win.
They wanted the girls to compete just like the boys.
In 1920, the Des Moines Register, the largest newspaper in the state, sponsored the first Iowa Girls High School basketball tournament. And despite the event being hosted in the big city,
only teams from tiny rural towns were invited. Other states also launched similar tournaments around this time.
College educated PE teachers in the mold of Senda Berencine saw this increase in girls'
competition, and they were alarmed.
To them, girls basketball was supposed to be fun and active, but never motivated by
winning and certainly not played in front of audiences.
They looked around at the competition in men's sports and saw these intense rivalries and
violence and wanted something different for women.
So as a result, at the same time basketball was gaining popularity around the country,
there was a major backlash.
Accounter movement of people like Berencine that lobbied school administrators
and athletic organizers to keep competition out of girls' sports.
There start to be conflict between these physical educators and these sort of local communities who
started these tournaments and physical educators really push to eliminate girls' tournaments and to tamp down
competition for girls. And so you'll have these statewide battles over this.
And in many cases the people pushing to end competition for girls, they win.
So there are states where the girls' state tournaments and girls' competition
general just gets eliminated.
Physical educators influence the legislatures to say, no, we will not have this.
We'll have a voice tournament.
We're not going to have a girls tournament.
And so in 1925, there was this big meeting in Iowa with the high school administrators
about ending girls basketball.
Cities like Des Moines were easily persuaded to shut down their programs.
But farm country was not happening.
I was small towns were fiercely protective of girls basketball. They
resented this kind of outside interference. So in that big meeting that
decided the fate of the sport, a group of educators and coaches
descended. It's hard to do much research on this without coming across a famous quote from the meeting.
Gentlemen, if you attempt to do away with girls basketball in Iowa,
you'll be standing in the center of the track when the train runs you over.
So you have this group of rebels who really support girls basketball
and they say, you know, we're just not going to stand that. We will leave, and we're gonna start our own association,
and we're gonna have our own tournament.
That's what happens, and that's the beginning
of the real, you know, flowering of Iowa High School Girls Basketball,
is when they win a battle that supporters of Girls Basketball
in many, many, many states across the country lose.
The rebels who supported Girls Basketball in many, many, many states across the country lose. The rebels who supported Girls Basketball started the first Girls Athletic Union in the
country.
It was run by a group of men who relaunched the state tournament.
And by 1934, the union codified a set of rules for the girls' game.
The six-on-six rules Ellie's mom grew up with.
Only forwards shoot.
Guards only play defense,
and everyone has to stay on their assigned half of the court.
There were also no tie-ups outside the key, which basically means no wrestling for the
ball except under the basket.
And this all might make the game sound stilted, but when I finally watched some of the archives,
I was like, damn, this is fun. If you see the game, I mean, it's very fast.
It's very rhythmic. It's quite impressive. It does have a nice flow. Bounce bounce pass,
bounce bounce shoot. The restrictions actually have a strange way of encouraging movement
and opening up space. Man, the good high school players could learn how to get from half court to the basket in two dribbles.
This is Lisa Bluder.
Today, she's head coach of the women's basketball team at the University of Iowa,
a top 25 program in the whole country,
and she got her start playing high school six on six.
Lisa says the rules helped generate a lot of offense.
The floor was so spread out, you know, with only six players instead of 10 players being around the basket.
In a regular five on five game, as many as 10 players can be in one half the court at the same time.
That makes it harder to find space to get off a clean shot or a lab.
But in six on six, there are fewer defenders and fewer shooters playing against each other.
That gives offensive minded players more chances to score, more points under more favorable
conditions.
I think I scored 105 in a game.
This is Jan Jensen, Lisa's associate coach at the University of Iowa who also played 6
on 6 back in her high school.
She was one of the great offensive stars of her era.
I averaged I think 66 points a game.
And all my friends were like, how did you score that many points?
And you weren't a ball hog.
And I said, I can't explain it to you.
It's just kind of how the 6 on 6 was.
That was my role.
These high scoring affairs were the stuff of legend.
Even Jans Jensen's grandmother, who also played back in the 1920s,
earned herself an all-time nickname.
She was Dorcas Anderson, Dorcas' a biblical name,
but they nicknamed her Loddy because she scored a lot of points.
When I visited Jan, I got to see the 100-year-old leather basketball her grandmother used.
When I touched the ball, it just makes me feel a little bit closer.
It's just this kind of a history that we shared. One of the reasons this form of girls basketball
worked so well for these small towns is that the game supported more opportunities for specialization.
If you were sturdy, you could play guard. If you were a natural shooter, you could play forward.
You didn't have to be talented in all the different parts of the game. You could simply play offense or defense.
I have a real soft spot for the guards.
They didn't get the glory of setting points records, but mostly I'm fond of them because
I totally would have been a guard.
This was really solidified for me when I talked to Angie Looney who played in the 1970s.
I was a forward until my sister came up
and she was a freshman and she took my spot.
And so I went to the guard and it's like,
well, why didn't I do this earlier?
Because it was way more fun because it was way more physical,
took the pressure off, I didn't have to score,
and could just really go out and just be tough and rough
and anticipate.
Anticipation is such an important skill in sports,
and it has nothing to do with your body type.
It's all about how you strategize for a game.
And by the way, in case you haven't already noticed,
in the process of reporting this story, six on six totally won me over. I'm convinced that in
another life, I would have been in these small town gyms right alongside the women I spoke to.
I remember playing at Deep River Millersburg, a little town.
This is Emily Hoppy.
She's actually from my mom's town, Amanda Iowa.
I asked Emily to describe the most memorable,
crammed gym she played in.
That gym was so small that the baseline was actually the wall.
And then the whole other side was where the fan sat.
And it was possible on an inbound throw to stand there and have
people touch you.
And there might be 300 people because people really came to those games.
Oh my gosh.
That was the social thing to do.
For many schools, the girls team wasn't just some warm up act before the boys game.
They were the show.
Here's Max McEwan.
It just went without saying that the basketball ball that you were going to see in the most exciting
was the girls. That's just, and it was no joke that people sometimes left after girls
games.
And just a quick footnote here, but I feel like it's worth mentioning that Iowa wasn't
the only place with this hidden history of playing girls basketball.
Working women played in the Southern textile mill league, a bunch of Catholic schools
fielded teams, so did many black high schools and colleges.
Even Texas and Oklahoma had a history of playing 6 on 6.
But nowhere had a rich, unbroken tradition of competitive girls basketball like Iowa.
All of the games in these small town gyms mattered because everyone wanted to qualify for
the state tournament.
A tournament which has drawn a total of close to 75,000 fans for its five day run.
Small wonder that Iowa has earned for itself the title of Queen State of Girl's High School
Basketball.
We made it one game from state,
but it still bothers me that I never made it
to the state tournament.
I mean, that was just like a dream.
If you made it to the state tournament,
it was like, wow, you hit the pinnacle.
At the state tournament,
stars of the game were born and legends were honored.
Everyone I spoke to had extremely fond memories
of this big event in Des Moines,
and they all attended games in the era of E. Wayne Cooley.
Cooley was, as I described,
and was sort of the wringling brother's sort of character.
He was a great showman,
and he realized that using television and other public relations
tools, he could make the state basketball tournament into something unparalleled, which he did.
Cooley was hired by the Iowa girls athletic union in 1954 and played a huge role expanding
the television broadcast of the tournament. By the late 1960s, the state finals were drawing
five million viewers from nine states. He aimed to transform the tournament. By the late 1960s, the state finals were drawing five million
viewers from nine states. He aimed to transform the tournament into a spectacle not only for
viewers, but for attendees. There would be almost 200,000 people there over the course
of a week, just incredible and heard of. It was the old Vets Auditorium. Vets Auditorium
was the hottest ticket. I mean, I would see the same people at the state tournament always.
They had the same state tournament tickets for 40, 50 years.
There were fancy programs, merging bands, and Koolie even started a tradition.
Everybody remembers.
Now, ladies and gentlemen, the cleanest show in town.
There'd be a whole group of boys,
and they would sweep the floor with these broad,
janitorial bruises in sync.
And they all dressed alike.
One year, I remember they were all wearing tuxedos.
And the boys, I was told, volunteered
and kind of I'd to do this.
What a concept.
They're sweeping the floor and making it pristine for women.
I mean, isn't that a big shift?
Koolie didn't only pay attention to the sport during the big tournament. He was committed to the sports
maintenance and integrity year-round. That sort of stewardship helped usher in a golden era for
girls basketball in Iowa. But here's the thing about Kool-E.
He was a showman, and so he was obsessed with image.
And he held some regressive ideas about what kind of girls
get to represent the sport.
When Kool-E was first elected to lead the union,
he instituted a rule that prohibited girls who were married
or had children from playing high school basketball.
For him, quote, husbands and homes were the first obligation of wives.
In other words, no teen moms.
It actually took a lawsuit in 1971 to persuade Coulee and the Union to repeal the sexist
rule.
And one short year later, a landmark piece of legislation would change Kool-E's grip
over the sport and the very existence of sex on sex.
Title IX comes in which says that educational institutions must provide equal opportunity
for women and everything.
Title IX is a federal civil rights law passed in 1972.
It prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex
in any educational program or activity
that receives federal financial assistance.
It was motivated by explicit discrimination in colleges,
such as women being barred from certain programs and courses,
as well as the mistreatment of female faculty members.
People weren't even thinking of sports
when Title IX was passed
because the disparity was so taken for granted.
Regardless, it ended up being a big win
for women and girls sports across the country.
And initially, that was the case for Iowa too.
The law encouraged Iowa cities
to finally support competitive girls basketball
after giving it up in the 1920s.
That, I think, is part of the story that doesn't get very much attention, but is the last
chapter before 6 on 6 stopped being 6 on 6.
Deb Rettman attended high school in Cedar Rapids in the early 70s.
She grew up in Iowa watching the state tournament on TV, but her school didn't have a girls'
basketball program.
Fortunately for her, the momentum of Title IX and the women's movement finally brought
six on six to her city.
What she remembers most is driving out into farm country to play against some of the teams
she grew up admiring.
I will never forget riding the bus all the way up to North East Goose Lake.
And they just pounded us, of course.
Just pounded us in the people in the stands.
We're cheering them on.
And I'm what's taking gosh, how cool is this?
I mean, we're totally losing.
But what those small schools and those women did was teach us.
I love this, getting creamed, but still being excited to be a part of things.
But while Deb was enjoying her introduction to 6 on 6,
the standard basketball game in the rest of the country,
and particularly at the collegiate level, was heading in the other direction,
towards 5-on-5.
Suddenly, if you're a school administrator in Iowa with a girls basketball program, you
have to decide what rules to use.
Six on six, the legacy sport of the state, the sport that supported generations of girls
in Iowa, or 5-on-5, a sport that now represents a quality between men and women.
All over the country, high schools were choosing five on five because that's what the
colleges had chosen to play, and college sports means opportunities for college scholarships.
Here's Pamela Grundy.
That's when in Iowa, it just becomes more difficult because if you're a young woman and you would like
a basketball scholarship to college or you would like to play basketball in college or maybe
you'd like to go play basketball in the Olympics someday because of course in 1976 you get
the first women's Olympic basketball team but you've grown up playing a very different game.
You can't just switch easily from one to the other. And so you're at a tremendous disadvantage.
But the allure of playing college ball
didn't carry the same weight in rural Iowa,
in part because they already had a prestigious sport.
Six player had this huge infrastructure behind it.
And besides, if you were good enough,
some six on six girls
were getting recruited to play five on five for colleges anyway. Including Lisa Bluder,
the women's head coach at the University of Iowa.
I remember on the forum when they asked you what position you played, I was like, I'm
not sure. I didn't really know what the five on five game, I knew I was a forward in high school in the 6 on 6 game, so I wrote down forward.
I had been a good high school player and I got recruited.
I was sort of surprised by that because I played 6 on 6 and they would have no idea whether
I could really transition well.
This is Ruth Byerhelm.
She's from Minneapolis, a small town that qualified for the state tournament more times than any other.
Ruth was able to transition into five-player,
but there was one big problem.
I did not enjoy five-on-five basketball at all.
So tell me about that.
There's too many damn people in the way.
You know what I mean?
And five-on-five, there's just too many.
way. You know what I mean? And five on five, there's just too many. Title IX forced the birth of tons of women's basketball programs, but it didn't necessarily
mean that the women's game was treated with the same weight as the men's. Ruth, for her
part, was shocked at the drop in status.
The university was terrible. I mean, just as an example, the women's team
got one pair of shoes at the beginning of the year.
That's it.
The men's team, they could have unlimited numbers of shoes
they wanted.
And so a lot of them who thought they were big stars
would have these games and then they would take their shoes off
at the end of the game and give it to some kid of fan.
You know, it was like, dude, you squirt two points and had a rebound.
Nobody wants your shoes.
And for Jan Jensen, she noticed the drop in attendance.
It wasn't until I went to college that I understood the necessity of Title IX.
In high school, I mean, the crowds were standing room only for our girls' games.
Ruth Jan and Lisa were able to transition to five players,
but many top-level high school six-on-six players and their families
wanted to eliminate any roadblocks on the path to these new athletic scholarships.
So in 1983, a lawsuit was filed arguing that Iowa's six-on-six basketball
violated the equal protection clause of the U.S. Constitution.
Iowa girls basketball was under a ton of pressure to assimilate.
In a last-ditch effort to preserve 6-on-6,
the union allowed schools to choose whether they play five player or six player.
Iowa's small towns held onto their game for as long as they could before it
simply became too complicated. player. Iowa's small towns held onto their game for as long as they could before it simply
became too complicated. People saw the writing on the wall. Everybody knew that a sort of
way of life was over. The last six on six state tournament was held in 1993. It's the shot. It'll not know good.
Two seconds, one second.
And that will be the buzzer and the ball game.
I just think that 6 on 6 was so different
that anybody who got to play it has an incredible sense of pride.
You know, now that it's been over for a couple of decades or whatever, I think those of us that got to play it were so even more grateful.
Because it was unique and we look back on it and I just feel like it was a really special era.
For a long time, I didn't take 6 on 6 seriously. And what it really boils down to is that I didn't think it was real basketball.
Real basketball, real sports are what the boys play.
I knew this because when I was little, I played pickup baseball and football with the neighborhood
boys, but never in organized leagues because there were none for girls.
This early experience made it really easy for me to assume that feminism is just about
getting what the boys get.
Learning about 6 on 6 showed me how contrived these sports hierarchies really are.
Small town Iowa girls didn't yearn to play the boys rules because they already had a
culture where girls basketball was valued.
Places like where my mom grew up saw the potential in girls basketball and chose to care about it, chose to put money and maintenance into it.
They didn't expect it to erupt from the soil fully formed.
Our sports culture, how inclusive it is, how prestigious is a collective choice.
A choice that Iowa reminded me is ours to make.
After the break, the stars of 6 on 6 and the game of the century.
All right, we're back with Ellie Gordon Marshall, and I hear you have something more to tell us about Iowa 6 on 6.
Yes, I fear there will be an uprising if I don't at least highlight some of the superstars
of the game.
Well, I mean, we met one of them during the course, the story, Jan Jensen, who scored
it was like 105 points during a game. Yes, yes, she did. And Roman, I hope you don't mind if I take a moment to point out something
kind of frivolous, but a bunch of the six on six legends I'm about to go through have the coolest,
a literative name. Okay, tell me more. So we have our pal Jen Jensen, of course. But there's also Lynn Lorenzen.
She was the all-time leading scorer in the whole state. And there is Heather headings.
If you follow girls basketball at all, um, people can't in new my name.
Boxed through five feet six. Heather headings. She's the tournament queen.
So I actually got to speak with Heather who played in Mediapolis, that dynasty basketball town I mentioned in the piece, and Heather was a forward on the Mediapolis team that won
the state tournament in 1973.
I mean, while we're on the subject of names, Mediapolis is a top tier small town name.
I mean, that is fantastic.
I know, it's so good.
It sounds like it's from the Phantom toll booth, you know,
a digital top list, dictionopolis. Anyway, after her playing days, Heather went on to be a dentist,
and she told me this funny story about meeting a patient's daughter who actually named her child
after her. And her name was Heather Harris. I wanted a musical name like Heather Hedons and so we named her Heather Harris.
Oh my God.
You can hear how excited I am by this interview.
And now whenever I'm around someone who's looking
for a new name, for like a pet or like a car or something,
I always suggest a famous six on six player.
And very recently, I just convinced my friend in the
Yukon to name her porcupine puppet Deb Cotes.
Okay.
So who's Deb Cotes?
So Deb Cotes, she actually played with Heather head ins probably the most outstanding player
we'd ever had in my time was Deb Cotes.
For a straight field goals for amazing Debbie Cotes.
She's a tournament scoring leader, 173 points in three games so far. was Deb Cotes. So something we didn't get to talk about in the piece was how much of a
role newspapers like the Des Moines register played and supporting the game. Girls grew up
reading about Deb Cotes and that's just something former players told me a lot just how nice it was
for them to have role models that were girls from other small towns.
Yeah, it's a huge deal. And especially the attention from the media, that's amazing.
And as you know, the sport went on for generations. And so there's a ton of players we could talk
about, but the very last person I need you to know about is Denise Long, because she was
the first woman to ever be drafted to the NBA.
Whoa, like the NBA, not the WNBA, the NBA.
The NBA, NBA.
This was 1969.
She was selected in the 13th round by the then San Francisco Warriors.
It was mostly a publicity stunt and that the owner of the Warriors had no intention of
her playing
with the men. He just wanted to start a professional women's basketball league with Denise Long
as a star. So how did he know about a high schooler who played six on sex in Iowa? Yeah, I know.
Well, so here's the thing. National News outlets started covering the Iowa girls basketball
phenomenon actually as far back as the 40s, though I will say a lot of the coverage was kind of weird and sexist.
But Denise once scored 111 points, which means she shares the record for the most points scored ever in a six on six game.
And you know what? That like really stuck out to people.
Yeah, I would imagine so. I mean, it's such a notable part of the six on six history is that several people have scored 100 points or more
in a game, and at least in the NBA,
that would be just unheard of.
I mean, only will Chamberlain did it back in the early 1960s.
Yeah, and Denise even met him once.
She remembers him telling her,
aren't you the young lady who broke my record?
Let's hope that's so good.
It's nice of him to recognize that.
Yeah, so there are all kinds of stories about Denise, who even ended up being a guest on
Johnny Carson because of all of this, but the Denise story I want to end on is
the 1968 state tournament finals.
And I've seen it called the game of the century.
Now the big moment has arrived.
The championship game between Everly and Union Whitten. A meeting that's been brewing for four months of the regular
season and now has reached the boiling point in this tournament. Denise was on
Union Whitten, so was her cousin Cindy who was also a very impressive player.
It was their school's first time at state. Denise is only 16 years old at the
time but she's already won over the entire state of Iowa.
Denny's long is the girl who has electrified this tournament like no other player in its 42-year
history.
The media was also really excited about this face-off because Everly, the other team,
they also had a star player.
In the forward court, the veteran is Janette Olson, the great jump shot specialist who
led her team to the state title two years ago as a sophomore and now is back better than ever.
Jenette average 58 points.
So what happened in this game?
I'm glad you asked because I watched the entire game on YouTube.
And the first thing I want to reiterate is just how fun the sport is to watch.
And I realized that the pace actually reminds me of hockey because there's like this constant
movement of the ball from one end to the next. But it's funny though because of the six on six
rules, Denise and Jeanette didn't ever face off directly against each other. Oh right because
they're both forward. So they stay on their half of the court. So they never actually come into contact.
Yeah. And what that means is that when the ball wasn't on their side of the court,
they could just watch the other person play and they kind of built up this mutual
admiration. That's so amazing. So how did the game in the century shake out?
Well, it's a super tight game. And with 45 seconds to go, it's 101 to 95.
And it seems like Denise Long's team, Union Witten is going to be able to hold out for the win
But then Jeanette Olson nails two shots now there are only two points behind and then with three seconds to go
Olson gets fouled
So she has two free throws and if she makes them she can tie the gate.
Yeah, can you imagine that pressure?
I cannot.
Get an action with the weight of the world on her shoulders.
A pressure ball player goes to the line.
Right, watch her.
What do you think happens?
I mean, for it to be the game of the century, I think she has to make the shot.
Yeah, she's super confident and sinks them both.
What's up?
It's a good, the score is hard.
So she makes the shots, but there's still three seconds left.
And there's a turnover and she gets one more shot and she misses.
And I literally gasped at this moment, even though I knew what was happening
because the title, the score was on the title of the YouTube.
Anyways, it goes into overtime. Union Witten takes a four point lead
and they just hold on to it.
And so the very end of the game,
it's 113 to 107.
They got a left shot as well, crazy.
And you can't tell the winners for the loses
because the last five, the last five,
the greatest finish they've ever seen. Well, that's so great. It was a wild ride and I have one last thing to share with you.
There's this book about the history of the jump shot called Rise and Fire and there's
a whole chapter actually dedicated to this game.
The author visited both Denise and Jeanette in 2014. And Jeanette showed him a letter she got from Denise
just a few days after the 1968 title game.
And I just wanna read you a little excerpt from it.
Remember, she would've been 16 years old
when she wrote this.
Okay.
I think you're the best BB player I've ever seen
and I mean that.
There will never be a player like you, never.
Just because you didn't win the state
championship, it didn't take any points away from you being the greatest player because
you are. I just felt privileged to be able to stand beside you on the all tournament
team.
That is so sweet. That makes me so happy. Well, thank you for sharing it. I really appreciate
it.
Thank you.
99% invisible was produced this week by Ellie Gordon-Morchell, edited by Jason De Leon.
Original music by Swan Rial,
sound mix by Casey Holford,
fact checking by Graham Haysha.
Delaney Hall is our senior editor,
Kirk Colstad is our digital director.
The rest of the team includes Chris Barupay,
Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Leigh, Lashemadon, Jacob Maldonada Medina, Kelly Prime, Joe Rosenberg, Sophia Klatsker,
and me Roman Mars. The 99% invisible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence. Special thanks this week
to Max McAwayne, whose book, The Only Dance in Iowa, a history of six-player girls basketball,
was crucial to the research
for this story, as well as shattering the glass, the remarkable history of women's basketball
by Pamela Grundy and Susan Schackelford.
Additional thanks to the Iowa Women's Archives and a special shout-out for all the enthusiastic
support from the I-Plate 6 on 6 Basketball in Iowa Facebook Group.
Ellie also has a super fun podcast about the film,
Dirty Dancing, a scene by scene breakdown
of Dirty Dancing called, But Out Baby,
which you should definitely check out.
99% invisible is part of the Stitcher
and Serious XM podcast family.
Now headquartered six blocks north
in the Pandora building.
In beautiful, uptown, Oakland, California.
You can find the show and join discussions
about the show on Facebook. You can tweet at me at Roman Mars and the show at 99PI
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your shows I love as well as every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org.
you