Wayland Baptist Hutcherson Flying Queens

884 Views | 3 Replies | Last: 15 yr ago by CanyonAg77
CanyonAg77
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AG
New York Times



quote:
The 1950s were a predictably conservative era at tiny Wayland Baptist University, on the high plains of West Texas, where women could not wear shorts even to walk to the gym from their dormitories.

And yet, long before Connecticut became a dominant power in women’s basketball, the Flying Queens of Wayland Baptist thrived on innovation, talent and glamour, playing on athletic scholarships, traveling by private planes, warming up with ostentatious drills learned from the Harlem Globetrotters and winning every game for nearly five seasons.

Although UConn can match U.C.L.A.’s major-college record of 88 consecutive victories Sunday against Ohio State at Madison Square Garden, the Huskies remain far short of the 131 straight games that Wayland Baptist won from 1953 to ’58 — a streak that began early in the first term of the Eisenhower administration, remained aloft as McDonald’s golden arches first appeared along with Dear Abby and Frisbees, then fell from orbit two months after Sputnik.

Wayland’s unsurpassed but little-known streak began nearly two decades before the legislative decree known as Title IX prohibited sex discrimination in education in 1972, and nearly three decades before the N.C.A.A. began sponsoring women’s basketball in 1982.
Killer-K 89
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AG
My Friend, now you are in my part of the world.

I grew up around the Hutcherson Family. I knew Claude Hutcherson as a kid, he died when I was in Jr Hi.

I also got to meet Coach Harley Redin a number of times.

That is why I still enjoy women's basketball. It is a Panhandle thing in this state!!!!

Everybody is there before the Girls game. But they leave at halftime of the boys.

It is just typical basketball in the Panhandle.

Mr. Hutcherson took the girls all over the world in his planes over 30 years. He took them to China when we were not allowed to go there. He got in and they played basketball.

They played annually in a tournament in Hong Kong.

Those were great stories to hear from him back in the day. He died too early in life. Much like many of his descendants.

And they ruled the NAIA when that was the only league with women's BBall. How many Natl Championships???? Many, many.
CanyonAg77
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Funny, I knew the other side of the airport, Miller Aviation better. They were all good people. Flew a checkout with Mike H. once because they had a Cessna 172.

Both James and Marlin Miller are gone now, and a friend of ours bought out both Miller and Hutcherson. I don't really know if he still flies the Queens.

Lots of influence from that team all over Texas. One of the old time stars, Glenna Masten, is my dad's cousin.

First time I ever saw current Aggie coach Gary Blair was when he brought 4A Dallas South Oak Cliff to play my old home town of Hale Center (1A) in the Queens Classic over Christmas. I seem to recall that Hale Center won. Coach was Babs Lombard, whose husband Joe was coaching Nazareth (B) to one of their gazillion state titles at the same time Babs took HC to the state tournament. Of course Joe has his dynasty going at Canyon now.

[This message has been edited by CanyonAg77 (edited 12/22/2010 12:08a).]
Killer-K 89
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AG
I remember the sad days in Naz when Coach Lombard left for Canyon. Though Naz just kept on a winning!!

As a kid I also remember the battles between Oak Cliff and Naz during the Queen's Classic. Talk about two different cultures!!

There has been some fantastic basketball in that gym.


My former mother in law had a scholarship to Wayland. But her father forbid her from playing for the Queens because he would not let her wear shorts in public at her age.
CanyonAg77
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AG
My mom married after high school, and went back to college at age 34 in 1964, when my brother and I were 9 and 12. She got a teaching degree from Wayland.

Her freshman year, they sent her grades home to her parents. She had to get special dispensation to skip chapel services.

Even into the 70s, if a girl left the dorm overnight on the weekend, she had to send a postcard to her folks saying where she was going. A family friend who attended Wayland and was going home to Hale Center for the weekend sent a card to her mom "Gary and I are running off to be married". Of course the card didn't arrive until the Monday after she's spent the whole weekend at home.
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