Events
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Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:30 pm
An exploration of the racial politics of American sports, from
the Jim Crow era to the present day, witnessed through the life of
legendary African-American basketball coach and NCAA title winner Nolan
Richardson
Born in El Paso's Segundo Barrio, or Second Ward,
pioneering basketball coach Nolan Richardson grew up in the only black
family in a Mexican neighborhood and attended desegregated Bowie High
School in 1955. Richardson went on to play at Texas Western College,
now the University of Texas at El Paso, as the first black star player
for legendary coach Don Haskins. Richardson eventually rose to national
prominence as a coach in his own right. He became the first black coach
at a predominately white school in the Old South to win the NCAA
Championship in 1994 at the University of Arkansas. With Richardson's
Razorbacks playing at a high-pressure, electrifying pace—a style he
called "Forty Minutes of Hell," which became a nationally known
trademark—Arkansas made three appearances in the Final Four, and
Richardson was named NABC Coach of the Year in 1994.
Richardson's gradual political awakening, and his subsequent refusal to
keep quiet about overt or subtle racial injustices, marked his rise.
Regardless of his staggering win totals, tensions in Arkansas
culminated in an infamous 2002 press conference in which he accused the
University of Arkansas of discriminating against him, bringing about an
abrupt end to his college coaching career. The only coach in history to
win a Junior College National Championship, the NIT, and the NCAA
tournament, Richardson went on to coach internationally and in the
WNBA.
Rus Bradburd, a former college basketball coach who
also worked with Don Haskins, highlights Richardson's trailblazing
career with empathy and intimacy, revealing a man whose hard-won
successes were matched by deeply felt losses. An intensive inside look
at elite collegiate athletics and a chronicle of the transition away
from the segregated era of American sport, Forty Minutes of Hell
is the first full-length biography of Nolan Richardson, setting his
complicated story against the backdrop of a decisive time in American
history.
"Nolan Richardson's extraordinary life and
success as the University of Arkansas' coach are an important chapter
in the history of our country's struggle for racial equality, with all
the excitement of the Final Four. What an incredible journey! I am
grateful that I got to see a lot of it first hand and to know such an
able and remarkable man."
- President Bill Clinton
"This
is a great story about America and its hidden histories. Nolan
Richardson understands the struggle because he did the heavy lifting.
Every black college coach with a good job today owes Nolan Richardson a
measure of respect for the fearless way he kicked down doors. Every
American should thank him for showing us it was possible.
- Charles Barkley
"I've
never read a sports book I would describe as operatic until now. Nolan
Richardson's story, both unique and universal, would challenge the most
seasoned biographer, but Bradburd's libretto is heartbreaking and
inspiring. This is the finest sports biography I've read in years,
hands down."
- Dave Zirin, author, A People's History of Sports in the Unites States
Establishes Richardson as one of college basketball’s most compelling figures, both because of and in spite of his race.
- Kirkus Reviews
Rus Bradburd teaches writing classes in New Mexico State
University’s MFA program. A Chicago native, he coached basketball at
UTEP and New Mexico State for fourteen seasons before resigning to
pursue a writing career in 2000.
Rus Bradburd coaching in Ireland, the subject of his memoir Paddy on the Hardwood.
At NMSU, he studied with Robert Boswell, Antonya Nelson, and Kevin McIlvoy. His fiction has appeared in The Southern Review, Colorado Review, Puerto del Sol, Freight Stories, and Aethlon.
Since retiring from college coaching, his essays have appeared in The Houston Chronicle, El Paso Times, Las Cruces Sun-News, Heartland Journal, SLAM Magazine, Bounce, and Los Angeles Times.
Rus went to Ireland in 2002 to coach Tralee's Frosties Tigers. Paddy on the Hardwood: A Journey in Irish Hoops was his first book, published in 2006.
Forty Minutes of Hell: The Extraordinary Life of Nolan Richardson was published by Amistad, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.
Read Rus Bradburd's piece on teaching his dribbling drills to Portland Trailblazer Jerryd Bayless here.
Read Sports Illustrated's piece on Nolan Richardson and Bert Williams and their role in desegregating
El Paso here.
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