Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Duke, who drove expansion of NCAA Tournament, dies at 88

- By Jim O’Connell

PHOENIX >> Wayne Duke, who was a driving force behind the expansion of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament during his 18 years as commission­er of the Big Ten, has died. He was 88.

The Big Ten announced Duke’s death after his family notified the conference on Wednesday. He had been living in Barrington, Illinois, and had been in declining health, his widow, Martha, told The Associated Press.

After serving for 11 years as assistant to Walter Byers, the first executive director of the NCAA, Duke became commission­er of the Big Eight conference in 1963 at the age of 34. He took over as Big Ten commission­er in 1971 and retired in 1989.

Duke guided the Big Ten and college sports through the first stages of great growth in revenue from television coverage of football and basketball.

“Wayne was a giant in the world of college athletics administra­tion during times of great change,” said Big Ten Commission­er Jim Delany, who replaced Duke at the conference. “He was a champion of the student, and was responsibl­e for many of the academic, athletic and social initiative­s that our students today benefit from. His mantra was ‘performanc­e commands respect,’ and his performanc­e and dedication throughout his college athletics career earned him the respect of countless administra­tors, coaches, media and fans across the country.”

Duke served on the NCAA men’s basketball committee from 1975-81. He oversaw the expansion of the tournament from 32 to 48 teams and was in charge when the at-large berths were establishe­d and seeding began. Previously, only conference champions played in the NCAA Tournament.

Duke was on the NCAA’s basketball television negotiatin­g committee when the associatio­n struck its first big deal with NBC to nationally televise much of the tournament. Duke also had a role in the NCAA’s first football TV contract.

In 1981, Duke was overseeing his last NCAA basketball tournament as the selection committee chairman. President Reagan was shot in Washington on the same day of the national championsh­ip game in Philadelph­ia. After hours of agonizing, and assurance the injuries were not lifethreat­ening, the game was played.

“I thought we had done right,” Duke told the AP in 2003. “Somehow, during the game, it came to us that Reagan had spoken from his hospital bed and said, ‘All in all, I’d rather be in Philadelph­ia.”’

In 1963, Duke faced a similar situation as commission­er of the Big Eight.

The Oklahoma-Nebraska football game was supposed to be played the day after President Kennedy was assassinat­ed in 1963.

“It was going to be Bud Wilkinson’s last game at Oklahoma,” Duke said in 2003. “We were making the decision on postponing the game when Bud, who was the chairman of President Kennedy’s Council on Physical Fitness, got hold of Bobby Kennedy, and he told us to play the game because there was such a state of turmoil in the country people needed a pickup.”

Duke was the first full-time employee of the NCAA, hired by Byers in 1952. Handbooks Duke wrote for the basketball tournament and College World Series set foundation­s for those events that have stood for decades.

He was considered a groundbrea­ker on affirmativ­e action and the growth of women’s sports in the 1970s.

 ??  ?? Duke
Duke

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States