Fan Teaser: Week 163 Solution

For the win … who is it?

Thirty-nine years ago!

It’s nearly unfathomable to think that it’s now going on 40 years since the movie Hoosiers had its theatrical release on November 14, 1986. Not that you asked, but I saw it for the first time less-than-a-week later in Indiana at a Fort Wayne cinema with Chris, my former Editor-in-Chief at The Eastern Echo (Eastern Michigan University’s student newspaper).

Chris was a Detroit kid who knew next-to-nothing about Indiana high school basketball, but even he marveled at a nearly full theater over Thanksgiving Weekend and moviegoers who were alternately applauding, cheering, and, in some cases, wiping away tears during the movie.

Jimmy Chitwood from the movie, Hoosiers
With the score tied at 40 in the waning moments of the State Championship Game, the Hickory Huskers spread the floor for Jimmy Chitwood to work his magic. He delivered, draining the jumper as the clock strikes zero to give tiny Hickory High School the Indiana State Championship over mighty South Bend Central. (Photo from Orion Pictures)

Jimmy Chitwood (Maris Valainis) was the the unquestioned best shooter on the team – in fact, we only see him miss three shots the entire movie (one in the school gym early in the film, one outside when Coach Norman Dale (Gene Hackman) is speaking to him, and one early in the 1952 State Championship Game) – that he wasn’t the first choice to take the game-deciding shot against South Bend Central in that Championship Game is utterly ridiculous.

But then, Jimmy delivers one of his only four lines of dialogue all film long: “I’ll make it.”

And he did!

As an Indiana native Hoosiers holds a special place in my heart. That the film’s director, David Anspaugh, was high school buddy’s with my uncle Ken, makes it even more treasured. And, yes, if anyone out there can help get Anspaugh to join me on an episode of Conversations with Sports Fans your reward will be great.

Just like Jimmy nailing that final shot.

  • One Final Note: As I was doing a bit of research, I ran across this nugget if you’re interested in ringing in the 2026 slightly differently. Start Hoosiers at precisely 10:07.48 p.m. and the the New Year will begin with Jimmy splashing that winning shot.
The closing moment’s of the 1952 Indiana State Championship Game including Jimmy’s game-winning basket.

Just to review, The Fan Teaser was the creation of former Ann Arbor News Sports Editor Geoff Larcom. Longtime friend and fellow Ann Arbor News alum, Pat Schutte, took it to heights previously unknown. We aim to keep it alive here at The Sports Fan Project. The cropped photo and the accompanying clue give you an idea as to who or what the image is of. We invite you to use the Comment option to take a crack at solving the Teaser and, if you’re so inclined, participate in some good-spirited banter with your fellow sports fans. The Fan Teaser will appear each Friday morning with the reveal coming to you Sunday.

Visiting the “Hoosiers” Gym

The Hoosier Gym
The Hickory Huskers home gym as seen in the 1986 movie, “Hoosiers.”

As noted last week, my recent Spring Break trip took me south to visit my father in Indiana. We embarked on a day trip a bit further south and toured the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame in New Castle and the “Hoosiers” gym in Knightstown.

The film, released in 1986, is still one of those “won’t turn it off” movies if I run across it while reviewing the channel guide. I recall seeing it for the first time less-than two weeks after its November 14 opening. I was visiting family outside Fort Wayne and met my former college newspaper editor, Chris, for a Wednesday-before-Thanksgiving visit that included dinner and a movie.

I don’t believe Chris, who’d only recently relocated to Indiana for work, had any idea what he was in for. The theater was pretty well packed and very much aware of what high school basketball had long meant to Indiana natives. That is, quite a bit!

The film’s storyline, loosely based on the remarkable 1954 state championship run by Milan High School, was quite familiar to me as my parents and their siblings had long shared what it was like growing up in the state during the 1940s and 1950s. Chris, of course, had no idea.

To finally visit the gym checked an item off my must-do list.

It was, as one would imagine, quaint. With seating for only about 700 people, it’s actually smaller than it appears on the big screen. It was also free. Yep, there’s absolutely zero fee to enter (so long as there’s not a game scheduled) and you’re welcome to linger as long as you’d like. There are basketballs available for hoop shooting (I’m only 1-for-5 on the floor) or you can, as I did for a good long time, just sit in the bleachers and let your mind wander.

As the gym still hosts about 100 games a year, some modifications have been made: 3-point lines, glass backboards, breakaway rims, and an electronic scoreboard. Beyond that, it’s pretty much still the same as it was in 1986.

Clockwise from top, the iconic Hickory Huskers’ state championship team, the banner, and the lockerroom.

About those competitive games: Yes, if your team wants to play there all a coach needs to do it contact the gym and work out the logistics. Our docent told us its $100 per game, the gym makes the referee arrangements, and the gate is split between the gym and the host team.

The home team gets the iconic Hickory lockerroom while the visitors are housed across the gym.

Hoosier Gym Home Lockerrom
The home team lockerroom includes autographed jerseys of teams that have played there.

At some point, our docent wasn’t sure when, a team decided to leave behind an autographed jersey. These are now displayed in lockerrooms and/or storage. Older jerseys are rotated in and out throughout each season, especially if a team that had played there previously returns.

Clockwise from upper left, really the only thing that distinguishes this standalone structure near an old high school is this faded sign, part of Whit Butcher (actor Brad Boyle) uniform sits under glass, a remembrance of Merle Webb (actor Kent Lee Poole who completed suicide in 2003) is featured prominently under the display of home and away jerseys seen at left. Finally the team and key film figures attended a 30th anniversary celebration in 2016.