This is the 50th anniversary of some large events in Marshall, MN. The city was chosen as the site for the new state college in southwest Minnesota in 1963. Southwest Minnesota State would open a few years later.
And it was also the year when the Marshall Tigers won the state basketball title, then the No. 1 high school sporting event in Minnesota by a landslide.
There was no need to attach "boys" to the title, since Title IX and competition for girls was still a decade in the future. There was no need to offer a "class" addendum to the title, since the basketball tournament was competed in one class for the roughly 500 public high schools in the state.
It was a one class tournament from the inception in 1913 through 1970. The last decade was a bonanza for my home area in the southwest corner of the state. Edgerton was the tiny-burgh champion in 1960, Marshall in 1963 and Luverne in 1964. We also staked a claim to Sherburn as the last one-class champion in 1970, even though that small town was more south central than southwest.
On Friday night, the Marshall champions will be honored at halftime of the Tigers' game against Windom, a long-time rival in the Southwest Conference.
What Marshall will be celebrating more than anything is what many state tourney fans _ me included _ consider to be the best-played, most-exciting final ever. The Tigers upset Cloquet 75-74 in what came down to a shootout among Terry Porter and Loren (Whitey) Johnson for Marshall, and Mike Forrest and Dave (Mouse) Meisner for Cloquet.
The foursome combined for 36 baskets ... mostly jump shots. There was no 3-point line, or both teams would've been in the '80s.
Ten years ago, I did a column on the 40th anniversary of that game and reprinted Ted Peterson's lead from the next day's Minneapolis Sunday Tribune: