Title | Division I Men's Basketball Championship First & Second Rounds |
Creator (LCNAF) |
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Publisher | National Collegiate Athletic Association |
Date | March 15, 1990 - March 17, 1990 |
Subject.Topical (LCSH) |
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Subject.Name (LCNAF) |
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Subject.Geographic (TGN) |
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Genre (AAT) |
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Language | English |
Type (DCMI) |
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Original Item Location | ID 2009-006, Box 7, Folder 7 |
Original Collection | Athletics Department Records |
Digital Collection | University of Houston Sports Championship Publications |
Digital Collection URL | http://digital.lib.uh.edu/collection/champ |
Repository | Special Collections, University of Houston Libraries |
Repository URL | http://info.lib.uh.edu/about/campus-libraries-collections/special-collections |
Use and Reproduction | Educational use only, no other permissions given. Copyright to this resource is held by the content creator, author, artist or other entity, and is provided here for educational purposes only. It may not be reproduced or distributed in any format without written permission of the copyright owner. For more information please see UH Digital Library Fair Use policy on the UH Digital Library About page. |
File Name | index.cpd |
Title | Half-page insert |
Format (IMT) |
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File Name | champ_201306_035_095.jpg |
Transcript | For The Three-Point Shot? Hot Wings/Hot Value; 6 Hot Wings & Fries $1.99 •6 Hot Wings® • Regular fries Offer good at participating KFC® restaurants. Not good with any other otter. Customer pays all applicable safes tax. OFFER EXPIRES 4/7/90 ©KKIWO N19 10 Pieces Chicken $6.99 • 10 pieces of Kentucky Fried Chicken®. Offer good at participating KFC* restaurants. Not good with any other offer. Additional charge for all-white meat orders. Customer pays all applicable sales tax. ^^ OFFER EXPIRES 4/7/90 *-*t>^^ "KFCIWO 18 Hot Wings $3.99 18-piece Hot Wings® bucket. Offer good at participating KFC® restaurants. Not good with any other offer. Customer pays all applicable sales tax. OFFER EXPIRES 4/7/90 ©KKIWO 10 Piece Meal $9.99 • 10 pieces of chicken • Large mashed potatoes • Large gravy • Large cole slaw • 4 buttermilk biscuits Offer good at participating KFC® restaurants. Not good with any other oner. Additional charge for all-white meat orders. Customer pays all applicable sales tax. OFFER EXPIRES 4/7/90 inter) up" and "kids cond year a call-in the screen. In 1988, voted for showing all games on televi- lers responded to the i be the distance for ketball three-point 861 callers in favor re it is; 6,307 who [ternational distance, ike to see it shoved 23-9 NBA distance. :h Bill Foster agrees j status quo. >o darn exciting," he never over. It think to the international ime kids will be so » it won't be a hard Basketball Rules Committee is polling coaches on the three- pointer with a questionnaire. The results will be discussed during the annual coaches' meeting at the Final Four in Denver. The three-point field goal was introduced at the start of the 1986-87 season after being used by 11 conferences the year before. The goal of the new field goal was to bring the outside shooter back into a game that was being dominated by big, physical post players. Houston's Phi Slamma Jamma style of play has given way to the run-and- shoot style of Oklahoma, Loyola Marymount and Kentucky. Partly because of the three-pointer, scoring in last year's NCAA championship jumped 15 points, from an average of 143 points per game (two teams) in 1988, to 158. During last season, scoring per game averaged 151.4 points, the highest total since 1975. Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs set out to smash halftime and game scoring records this season. "The fans eat it up and the players want to play for a team that scores," Tlibbs said. The three-point field goal was not adopted without first undergoing a test. During the tryout period, about 38 percent of the attempts were made. During its inaugural NCAA season, an average of 18.3 three-point shots were taken per game and seven were made for a shooting percentage of 38.4. In 1987-88, an average of 20.8 shots were taken and eight were made for a shooting percentage of 38.2. Last season, attempts were up to 23.6, with 8.9 made for a shooting percentage of 37.6. "I think the number of attempts is up because the first year you had one or two specialists per team who took the shot," said Gary Johnson, assistant statistics coordinator for the NCAA. "Now if anyone is open in three-point land, he takes the shot. "I like it where it is. Put it at a distance where nobody can make it and that wouldn't be any fun." Harrick said the statistics are somewhat misleading because so many teams take desperation shots toward the end of a game they are losing. "The stats include prayers at the end of a 97 |