Home Local Sports Ace Up Their Sleeves: A Look Back At Evansville’s Iconic Basketball Jerseys

Ace Up Their Sleeves: A Look Back At Evansville’s Iconic Basketball Jerseys

0

Ace Up Their Sleeves: A Look Back At Evansville’s Iconic Basketball Jerseys

  • Harry Lyles Jr.ESPN Staff Writer

    DECEMBER 11, 2020

Paying homage to the sleeved Evansville uniforms of decades earlier, the team brought them out again in 2018. Evansville

When Jim Crews became the head coach at West Point in 2002, he met George W. Bush at the commencement, where Bush was the speaker. Crews introduced himself, mentioning he had just arrived from Evansville, Indiana. Bush turned to the first lady and said, “Hey Laura, this guy used to coach the team that wore the sleeves.”

Scott Shreffler recalls this story, having played for Crews at Evansville from 1988 through 1993. Evansville is credited with being the first to introduce sleeved jerseys in 1947 under legendary head coach Arad McCutchan, who suggested his team wear sleeves upon his arrival.

“I feel that is what most players wear in practice and, therefore, what they are most comfortable in,” he said. “It’s also more flattering to the thin ballplayer.”

Evansville wore them until his retirement in 1977.

When Crews was hired in 1986, he brought them back to honor the man they called “Mac,” and the team wore them until Crews’ tenure ended in 2002. The sleeves were something by which people nationally could identify the program and city.

At Evansville, the sleeves are more than just extra fabric on the jersey. The Aces were a small college basketball powerhouse, winning five national championships between 1959 and 1971 under McCutchan.

Back in their heyday, the Aces weren’t known just for their sleeved uniforms — white and purple at home, orange on the road — they also wore colorful robes on the bench instead of pants to keep warm, and then there were McCutchan’s red socks. The fans also wore red because of McCutchan.

Larry Humes, one of the best players in program history — alongside Jerry Sloan, who played from 1963 to 1965 — said, “When we got way ahead, he’d cross his legs and pull up his pants to show off his red socks.”

The undefeated national champion 1965 Aces are one of the best college basketball teams of that era at any level, and Humes isn’t shy about it. “We could have beat anybody in the country that year,” he says. “We played Iowa, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Purdue, LSU, Southern Illinois with Walt Frazier, Kentucky Wesleyan, North Dakota with Phil Jackson, before we played in our regular conference games.”

The sleeves represent the best times — times that people in Evansville have been trying to recapture for decades now. And even though Evansville hasn’t been able to do that since McCutchan’s retirement and the devastating plane crash of 1977, there’s still an immense pride in what was accomplished.
Shreffler returned to UE after his playing days as an administrative assistant under Crews in 1997. One day, Crews arrived at the Carson Center on UE’s campus and told Shreffler, “I want you to do something about the sleeves.” Shreffler asked him what he meant. Crews told him, “We gotta honor them some way. Write a poem, do something. Just come up with something and let me know.”