Reply Posted at: Monday, June 7, 2010 From NSSA member Buddy Davis:
BUDDY DAVIS, "MR. LOUISIANA BASKETBALL" -- WRITES RIGHT, PLAYS
BIG
By: Teddy Allen
Louisiana Tech University
Written for the LABC
RUSTON, LA -- "Mr. Louisiana
Basketball 2010" Buddy Davis is 6-4 - if he stands on his
typewriter.
O.K. "Buddy" Davis, sports editor of
the Daily Leader in Ruston since Pete Maravich was a senior at LSU,
has built his game more around grammar and heart than height. He's
5-9, but in basketball lingo, "he plays like he's 7-3," said
Northwestern State men's basketball coach Mike McConathy.
Covered by Davis both as a player at
Louisiana Tech and as a coach, McConathy said the game has remained
just as important to Davis now as it was when the Ruston native
first started writing.
"He wants to be in the gym just like
we want to be there," McConathy said. "The most successful people
are the ones most passionate about what they do. Buddy's
passionate. He loves basketball. He's one guy who can make you feel
like you're special because he believes the game is special. He
honors the game."
Given annually by the Louisiana
Association of Basketball Coaches
(LABC) to someone who has made a significant, long-term
contribution to the game in the state and at any level, the Mr.
Louisiana Basketball was presented to Davis during the LABC's 36th
Annual Awards Banquet on May 1 at the Embassy Suites Hotel in Baton
Rouge. The banquet was sponsored by SportsCare, the Baton Rouge
Orthopaedic Clinic and Chesapeake Energy Corporation.
"There is no one more deserving of
the award," said Sporting News Radio and CBS Sports journalist Tim
Brando, "than Louisiana hoops'
Little Big Man, Buddy Davis."
A graduate of Louisiana Tech and
Ruston High, Davis has played a major role for the past four
decades in telling the story of sports in Louisiana. He's served as
a voter for national basketball polls and awards, covered 13 women's
Final Fours, 26 NCAA women's tournaments, three men's NIT and two
women's NIT tournaments.
He's covered everything basketball
from NBA All-Star Games to preseason high school tournaments. His
estimated number of bylines?
Try 42,000, give or take. At least 10,000 of those have been
about basketball.
And while he's won more than 100
awards in statewide and national writing contests, one of his
biggest awards was received last June when the Louisiana Sports
Writers Association recognized him with its Distinguished Service
Award in Sports Journalism during the LSWA's annual Hall of Fame
Banquet in Natchitoches.
Now, he adds Mr. Louisiana
Basketball to his resume.
"I'm appreciative that there's no
height limit involved with this award," deadpanned Davis. "Really,
it's surreal getting this because of having written about so many
winners through the years. The tables have been reversed. It's a
strange - but nice - feeling."
"Buddy is finally getting the
recognition he richly deserves," said Hall of Fame coach Leon
Barmore. Like Davis, Barmore was on the ground floor of the
explosion that would come in the women's game, in large part
through Tech's Lady Techsters. Davis was there to chronicle it
all.
"Buddy has made so many players and
teams well-known because of his stories about them," Barmore said. "
He made us look better than what maybe we sometimes were. He took
the high road. As a player and especially as a coach, I appreciate
that and respect him dearly for it. 'Legend' may be a word that's
overused, but he really is a legend to so many people, and he's
really made a lot of people legends. He's made us all look good."<
/p>
Besides the Techsters dynasty, Davis
counts as extra special the 1985 Tech men's team of Karl Malone,
Wayne Smith and others, "the best Bulldogs squad I ever covered."
And for pure fun and excitement, there were the Mike Green-led Tech
teams of the early 1970s coached by Scotty Robertson, a former Mr.
Louisiana Basketball who introduced Davis on Saturday.
"Buddy started out as a little fish
in a little pond, and he grew and he grew to the point in his
profession that he was winning all sorts of awards, and with that
came his chances to leave," Robertson said.
"But he decided he wanted to stay in Ruston and spend his time
writing about Tech and Grambling and all the local high schools and
North Louisiana athletes, and I've always appreciated him for that.
He's a 'stayer,' and we need 'stayers.'
"I found out in the pros quickly
that a lot of young sportswriters wanted to rip you up, but Buddy
wanted the people he knew to do well,"
Robertson said. "If you got beat by 30, he was going to write
that you got beat by 30. But he wasn't going to write that you
couldn't coach a lick. Buddy is a good guy who understands the game
and the people who play and coach it."
Besides McConathy, Green, Malone,
Barmore and Robertson, Davis' list of personal favorite and best
players and coaches is an all-star roll call. "Kim Mulkey, Sonja
Hogg, Teresa Weatherspoon, Janice Lawrence, Angela Turner, Venus
Lacy, Pam Kelly, Fred Hobdy, Aaron James, Willis Reed, Pat
Cage-Bibbs…I could go on and on," Davis said. "See what I mean
about the privilege I've had to cover so many good folks?"
"One of the things I've always found
particularly pleasing with having covered basketball in Louisiana
is the incredible number of great players," he said. "Willis Reed,
Pistol Pete, Karl Malone, Robert Parish, Bob Pettit…Unbelievable
that so many legendary players have come from one state and I've
been blessed to have written about a lot of them."
Other players not as familiar to
fans but just as passionate about basketball as its marquee names
have also appeared under his byline, a distinction treasured by
Buddy's loyal readership.
"Buddy has that ability to deal with
the biggest stars in the game - like a Karl Malone - down to the
Choudrant girls junior varsity - with equal enthusiasm," said New
Orleans Times-Picayune sportswriter Ted Lewis. "That's why he has
the most appropriate name in the world - Buddy."
|