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THE TRUE STORY BEHIND GLORY ROAD
In 1965, on the heels of the landmark Civil Rights Act passed
by Congress, American sports were on the cusp of change –
but they needed a bold catalyst. Basketball in particular
was quickly gaining in popularity, speeding up and shifting
in style, especially as new celebrity players such as Wilt
Chamberlain were changing the face of the NBA. Yet there remained
the question of finding the new talent that would fuel the
game’s future. The truth was that college basketball,
like other collegiate activities, was still mired in unjust
policies of segregation and racial inequality – and
opportunities were still being denied to some of the country’s
most thrilling and undiscovered athletic talents.
Don Haskins, who was just another tough-talking, hard-driving
high-school basketball coach, seized the opportunity to fulfill
his personal quest to become a champion when Texas Western
hired as their coach. To create a team with the greatest chance
at victory, Haskins believed he should recruit the best raw
talent he could – no matter what their race, background
or life story.
As early as the late 1950s Texas Western University (now renamed
University of Texas El Paso) began to offer athletic scholarships
to a limited number of African American players. In the 1960s,
that policy was kicked into high gear by Haskins, who despite
being a complete unknown, came to Texas Western ready to prove
himself as a coach of unique vision.
Searching for authentic talent and the hunger to win, Haskins
aggressively recruited in a color-blind fashion, heading into
the inner cities of Detroit and New York, where basketball
was still a hotly contested, up-tempo street game. Ultimately,
Haskins forged an integrated team that was, in a rare change
for a Southern university, predominantly black. Once he had
assembled his explosively talented but inexperienced team,
Haskins drove his athletes with his notoriously tough but
heartfelt coaching methods to give every game -- and every
challenging situation in their lives -- their all.
In 1966, Haskin’s and the team’s brutally hard
work began to pay off big-time. In an incredible season of
victories, the Miners won 27 games and lost just one, the
same record as their equally fierce rivals in the NCAA championships:
the all-white University of Kentucky Wildcats. As the championship
game got under way, in front of packed stands and a national
television audience, Haskins made a decision that would alter
everything: he chose to play an all-black starting lineup.
Though the Miners were considered a long shot, their tenacious
rebounds, precision shooting and unflagging spirit spurred
them to a victory so stirring that no one who saw it would
ever forget it.
The amazing triumph did more than excite the fans. It helped
shift the national perception of African American athletes
and bring about the widespread desegregation of college sports.
In turn, the desegregation of sports helped to spread greater
equality throughout American society. Haskins, who continued
to be an inspirational and winning coach, became a hero. Admired
by his peers for his courage and his larger-than-life personality
he was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1997.
Yet few people today know the story of Don Haskins and the
dream-come-true NCAA victory – a story that producer
Jerry Bruckheimer felt was one of the great classics of American
history when he first heard about it years ago from NBA star
Pat Riley. When Bruckheimer had the opportunity to obtain
the rights to Haskins’ story, he was thrilled to bring
this largely unknown tale of courage and grit to the screen.
“What’s so interesting about Don Haskins is
that he wasn’t looking to make any kind of statement.
He simply was driven to win,” says Bruckheimer. “Yet
in making winning his priority, he changed history. Prior
to Haskins’ heartfelt decision to have an all African
American starting line-up at the championship game, there
were many opportunities missed by gifted athletes. Haskins’
actions inspired a lot of players to go on and have illustrious
NBA careers. He was an amazing person who had an indelible
impact on a lot of lives.”
Bruckheimer continues: “I think this is an especially
important story to tell today because a lot of kids no longer
realize how hard the players and coaches in the 60s had to
fight to bring them the incredible opportunities that exist
now.”
In developing the story of the 1966 NCAA championship into
a feature film, Bruckheimer always saw it as much being much
broader than simply a “sports drama.” He saw it
as being about the human drive to excel.
“Don Haskins is a fascinating character: a hard-charger
and a tough personality who demanded a lot from the people
around him,” observes Bruckheimer. “He understood
something very key – which is that to become a champion
it takes a lot of character and a lot of hard work. That is
what lies at the heart of this story,” says Bruckheimer.
Bruckheimer’s production team was equally excited
by the material. “We felt that any story that was so
inspirational, surprising and true would resonate deeply with
audiences,” says executive producer Mike Stenson. Adds
executive producer Chad Oman, “There are a few iconic
moments in sports that made a difference in history –
and this is one of them. But it’s also a very human
story about a young coach who came out of nowhere and discovered
he had something great to give.”
Executive producer Andy Given, who grew up in El Paso and
knew Don Haskins and his family, saw the film as a dream come
true. “I have wanted to see this movie made since I
was a kid,” he says. “I always knew it would make
a great movie – it was a moment that became almost a
kind of emancipation proclamation for sports -- but it took
someone of Jerry Bruckheimer to get it made.”
When director James Gartner came on board, he too began to
see Haskins story in a larger light. “The real story
of GLORY ROAD is what happens off the basketball court,”
notes Gartner. “One of the original players from the
team once said ‘We didn’t break down all the doors,
but we opened some’ and that is why this story is so
important to tell.”
Bruckheimer had been chasing after Gartner to make a feature
film for years, having been highly impressed with Gartner’s
directorial work in advertising. The veteran producer believed
Gartner had the right sensibilities for GLORY ROAD’s
mix of 60s innocence, hard-charging sports action and moments
of human inspiration. “James has been directing touching,
wonderful commercials for years, and he has a real moral vision
matched the story. He also has very unique visual style, that
is really important to this picture because it combines authenticity,
heart and humor,” says Bruckheimer.
When Bruckheimer approached him, Gartner had never even
heard of Don Haskins, but he soon was completely taken with
his story. “For me it wasn’t just another script,
but a true story about an important time in America’s
history,” he says.
For Gartner, tackling a real page out of recent U.S. history
in his first outing as a film director was a thrilling challenge.
“The journey of making GLORY ROAD has been incredibly
rewarding,” he says. “Obviously we took some artistic
license as this isn’t intended to be a biopic, but nevertheless
I felt a tremendous responsibility to capture the true essence
of Haskins’ story. This story is beloved by so many
from the streets of El Paso where it took place, to parents
telling their children the tale as a bedtime story. Just as
Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in baseball, in many
ways Don Haskins and his team did the same for basketball.”
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