On January 24, 1903, then Keystone State Normal School faced
off against Reading High School. Although the Maroon & Gold was
defeated, 24-8, the game began a century of men’s basketball that
produced numerous outstanding players and several conference
championships.
The first
faculty coach was also a standout player. KU Athletics Hall of Fame
member George B. Ely came to Kutztown in 1905. A standout athlete
and coach, he led the basketball team to successful records from
1905-08.
The men’s
basketball program reached a high level of success in the late
1910s, winning two Pennsylvania State Normal School championships.
The program’s first title, and the first championship in any sport
at the school, came in 1917. Coach Bert Bohler and player Raymond
Loose led the team to a perfect 18-0 record that season. In 1919,
Bohler led an almost completely new cast of players to a second
championship.
Arlan Baver
was one of the best players in the first half of the century at
Kutztown. He scored 711 points from 1926-30, a scoring record that
stood for 25 years. He also held records for points in a season
(249) and a single game (32).
In 1936, a group of future Hall of Famers brought
another title to Kutztown. Hall of Fame coach James MacGovern, and
Hall of Fame players Russ Stoudt (captain), Joseph “Gino” Musso,
John Polischak and George Kovich were key factors in the title run.
The team finished the year 11-2, defeating West Chester, a team it
had lost to earlier in the year, for the Pennsylvania State Teachers
College championship.
The program, discontinued during World War II, was
reinstated in 1945-46 by Hall of Fame coach Walt Risley. Risley
coached the cagers until 1963. Roger Cocivera (1952-56) became the
first 1,000-career point scorer, finishing with 1,231 points.
The 1960s and
1970s produced seven 1,000-point scorers, including John Cresswell,
the first to eclipse 1,400 career points in 1969, and George Krell,
who passed Cresswell with 1,467 points in 1970. Hall of Famer Eddie
McTague set the school records for assists and his steals mark still
stand today.
In the
mid-1980s, head coach Rick Binder produced several standout players
and a three-year span of 53 wins. Hall of Famer Butch Hills set the
school’s scoring record with 1,525 career points. He teamed with
fellow Hall of Famer Marty Eggleston, who set the career rebounds
and blocks records, to lead the 1987-88 team to a school-record 21
wins. That team also won the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference
East title and qualified for the NCAA playoffs.
The 1990s
produced the school’s current scoring leader, Lock Jennings, who
scored 1,682 points from 1989-93, and 1,000-point scorer, Keith
Mackrey.
In KU’s second
century, current head coach Bernie Driscoll has posted seven straight
winning seasons and led Kutztown to an appearance in the PSAC title
game twice. He has led the Golden Bears to back-to-back PSAC East
titles in 2008 and 2009. In 2008, the Golden Bears shared the title
with Cheyney, and in 2009, KU won it outright with a school-record
13 PSAC East wins. In 2009, Driscoll advanced the Golden Bears to
its first NCAA Division II regional final by winning the school's
first NCAA tournament games in the quarterfinals and semifinals of
the Atlantic Regional. Driscoll was named the 2009 PSAC East Coach
of the Year, while the school's all-time leading scorer Dave Ben,
who finished with 2,017 points in his career was named the 2009 PSAC
East Player of the Year.
The decade has also
produced six 1,000-point scorers, Bilal Salaam, Jeff Brickus,
Bobby Eberhart, Dave Ben, Stephen Dennis and Andre Woodlin, and the school’s current all-time
leaders in rebounds (Salaam), assists (Brickus) and blocks (Salaam).
PSAC EAST
HONORS
Player of
the Year
2004-05 -
Bilal Salaam
2005-06
- Bruce Hall
2008-09 - Dave Ben
Coach of the
Year
1987-88
- Rick Binder
1998-99 -
Jeff Jones
2002-03 -
Bernie Driscoll
2008-09 - Bernie Driscoll
East Rookie
of the Year
1988-89
- Matt Flannery
1989-90
- Lock Jennings
2005-06
- Dave Ben
2006-07
- Stephen Dennis
2007-08 - Ryan Washington
First Team
1964-65 -
Denny McKernan (additional honorees, if any, unknown)
1965-66 -
Denny McKernan
No information
- 1966-67 to 1968-69
1969-70
- George Krell
1970-71
- Greg Rich
No information
- 1974-75 to 1975-76
1977-78 -
Eddie McTague, Derrick Redd
1979-80
- Eddie McTague
1984-85
- Rick Hall
1987-88
- Marty Eggleston
1988-89
- Butch Hills
1989-90
- Curtis Jones
1990-91
- Lock Jennings
1995-96
- Claude Beaden
1997-98
- Nehemiah Brazil
1998-99
- Nehemiah Brazil
2002-03
- Jeff Brickus
2003-04
- Jeff Brickus
2004-05
- Bilal Salaam
2005-06
- Bruce Hall
2006-07
- Dave Ben, Sean McKeon
2007-08 - Dave Ben, Stephen Dennis
2008-09 - Dave Ben, Stephen Dennis
Second Team
1981-82 -
Tom York, Mitch Schmidt
1986-87 -
Butch Hills, Maurice Williams, Marty Eggleston
1987-88
- Butch Hills, Maurice Williams, Rodney Shorter
1988-89
- Matt Flannery
1993-94
- Keith Mackrey
1994-95
- Claude Beaden, Mark Dudley
1995-96
- Keith Mackrey
1996-97
- Jerome Bridgeman
1998-99
- DaVonn Harp
1999-00
- Darnell Scott
2000-01
- Kevin Handy
2001-02
- Bilal Salaam
2002-03
- Bilal Salaam
2003-04
- Bilal Salaam
2004-05
- Bobby Eberhart
2005-06
- Ben Arnold
2006-07
- Stephen Dennis
2007-08 - Andre Woodlin
2008-09 - Andre Woodlin, Ryan Washington
DIVISION II
NABC
All-America Third Team
1987-88
- Marty Eggleston
All-District
1987-88
- Marty Eggleston
Basketball
Digest All-Freshman Team
2006-07
- Stephen Dennis
Daktronics All-Atlantic Region First Team
2008-09 - Dave Ben
Daktronics All-Atlantic Region Second Team
2008-09 - Stephen Dennis