I f* ? I it -i : i.. * I ll'fu i JP t P J 1 1 ^ ' M |ill Monday • March 2, 1998 kgies [hatnp! 1966 y«>| aUI 1970 1974 Air conditioning was added to G. Rollie in 1967. i A women’s locker room was added to G. Rollie in 1973. A lecture hall, storage room and lockers in the varsity locker room completed the additions for 1973. Aggies won the SWC championship in 1969. paches, students remember Holler House By Jeff Schmidt Staff writer ■ Iter 44 years of service, G. Rollie White liddeiik Coliseum will no longer be home to bas- (iien's jLdctball. Beginning next season, the new roc U-fena will house basketball and will be the ij&fte future of Aggie Basketball. In G. Rollie, |s co ms basketball team has compiled a 338-140 attc record and the women have a 179-97 (.647) |locke» prior to this season. The coliseum will still tur, ne to women’s volleyball and kinesiology stu- llo will still attend class there. Bit lollie opened its doors in 1954, when leg- liu T college football coach Paul “Bear” Bryant [hence athletic director. When it first opened, G. .ico was considered “high-tech.” Originally, in a |ese / of true Aggie essence, the coliseum was i cot: to hold both basketball and rodeo. The coli- [r C also had windows and no air conditioning. ba ’ponent’s locker room was also substandard, [stlake the flaws, G. Rollie was an intimidating iviskphere. [e th “It was the greatest place to play basketball in the history of the world,” former coach Shelby Metcalf said. “I don’t know if the other coaches had the same feeling about the place.” Metcalf began as the head coach in 1963 and led the Aggies to the Southwest Conference champi onship and to the NCAA Tournament. Metcalf ) | coached until halfway I through the 1989-90 sea- I son. Metcalf is the win- ■ ningest coach in SWC history with an overall record of 438-306. Metcalf also owns SWC records for total victories, league victo ries (239), total games coached (744) and most sea sons coached (27). It was Metcalf’s competitive teams that brought the fans in and coined the nickname “Holler House on the Brazos.” ied'^f 6 won enough games there to be Most coaches felt like it was a tough place to 11 n and play,” Metcalf said. “We were noisy, was under control. It was a wholesome there.” calf is in part referring to incidents that hap- while playing in Austin. University of Texas ikin' ns! players used to grab Aggie basketball players and hold them in the stands to keep them from return ing to the court. New gyms at Texas and Baylor gave the schools a leg-up on recruiting. The new arena was long overdue. Metcalf said he feels Reed Arena will help improve Aggie basketball, which appears to be in a state of apathy. “It’s going to help you recruit. However, it still takes a good team, yell leaders, students (to revive interest in the basketball program). The new arena is probably past time. Texas has got the jump on us (with the Frank Erwin Center),” Metcalf said. Metcalf’s most memorable moment in G. Rollie came in 1975 when Aggie guard Mike Floyd hit “the shot heard ‘round the conference.” The Aggies were tied at 60 with Arkansas. The winner would be con ference champion. Floyd drained a jumper at the top of the key as the buzzer went off to give the Aggies a 62-60 victory. “It was a great play. We had the picture of the shot framed and gave it to Mike,” Metcalf said. In Metcalf’s 27 seasons, he only had three losing seasons. After he got forced out during the 1989-90 season, A&M had their first losing season since 1977-78. A&M has only had one winning season— 1993-94—since Metcalf’s ousting. Billy Pickard was a student at A&M when G. Rollie opened in 1954 and will be here when it closes, only as the associate athletic director for facilities. “The day we moved in was my most memorable moment,” Pickard said. “DeWare (Fieldhouse) was an abomination. You had humidity in the basket ball locker room. At the time we moved into G. Rollie it was one of the best in the country.” However, you will not seen any tears in Pickard's eyes when the basketball teams move into Reed Arena. “I’m never sad of progress. I had an old Ford and I couldn’t wait to get an automatic,” Pickard said. “We have a gigantic advantage over our friends in Austin.” Current Oklahoma State Head Coach Eddie Sutton remembers when G. Rollie was in its prime. "The place was always full. It was one of the toughest places a visiting team can play in,” Sutton said. “The program deserves better than this. Hopefully, students will get behind the new coach. I think it (Reed Arena) will help recruiting. I’m not saying they’d have a better homecourt advantage than G. Rollie, but this year they had no homecourt advantage,” Sutton said. Assistant Athletic Director for Student Services John Thornton was a team captain for Metcalf dur ing the 1974-75 season and even coached 12 games in 1990. That team won the SWC title and but lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Thornton also serves as the radio color commenta tor for Aggie basketball games. The times that stand out in his mind were the times he stepped out onto the court before a game. “My most memorable moment was coming out onto the court with the team to a standing ova tion to a packed house,” Thornton said. “That made everything you endured worth it.” Thornton played in the most highly attended men’s basketball in A&M histo ry: a 1974-75 game against Arkansas. The game drew 8,608 people and 1,700 watched the game on closed circuit at Rudder Auditorium. This season, men’s games average only 3,387 fans a game. The women average significantly less. The largest crowd this season was against Kansas, over Christmas break, when 6,548 people showed up. Only one other game this season was over 6,000— Texas. Aside from those games only one other home game had more than 3,000 fans. “That kind of atmos phere was phenome nal,” Thornton said. “Having Reed Arena has already helped recruiting, but if you had the opportunity to have recruits come to a game (in G. Rollie) when people were enthusiastic, they’d love it. “It’s (no more bas ketball at G. Rollie) a mixed feeling. It’d be sad for anybody that had the experiences we had as a player and a coach. At the same time, being close to the situa tion, I’m really excited about the future,” Thornton said. Please see Coaches on Page 10. ' - ■ . ' • ' -v- '' ih ; . A. ' Illlllll lofG \dm iliseum home to more than basketball Mean n tlii By April Towery Staff writer have^ Rollie White Coliseum has hosted many L-JLspecial events from basketball games to J graduations. However, there is another |ts '“Jolly Rollie” that often gets overlooked. G. [fort sho» has played host to several memorable linment events as well. nerous musical performers and entertainment 0 f icluding R.E.M., Three Dog Night, Clay Walker, (I,; Buffett and the Harlem Globetrotters, have tted crowds in G. Rollie. cate 1( j|.980, Bob Hope gathered a group of Aggies coliseum to promote his television special “Bob Hope for President.” Hope, impressed by the Texas A&M traditions, later attended a midnight yell practice at Kyle Field in support of the University. Dan Quayle spoke to Aggies in 1992, in what would be the largest rally of his political career. The coliseum was designed to hold even more events than it will ever see. The floor of the building is removable, in order to accommodate rodeos, but now it is too late. A rodeo has never been scheduled there. Some students will always have memories of pitching their tents and camping outside G. Rollie in anticipation of football tickets. Others remem ber sitting in the coliseum throughout the solemn traditional ceremony of Aggie Muster. Former stu dents hold fond memories of sit ting in G. Rollie during one of the most important moves of their future — college graduation. And plenty of students have enjoyed a “jolly” time just seeing one of their favorite musical performers or entertainment acts. Almost every Aggie has a special memory inside the four walls that hold G. Rollie White Coliseum. Some memories bring a tear to the eye, but almost all bring a smile to the face. For 44 years, G. Rollie White has seen hugs and heartache, laughter and tears. As the lights go out on the last game, Aggies will miss G. Rollie White Coliseum. Gig ’em. Research by Jeff Webb Design by Tiffany Inbody 1988 1992 1996 Tony Barone became A&M’s head basketball coach in 1991. mmmm SiF' George Strait entertained Aggies in 1988. | i* | The Ross Volunteers perform in the last Muster ceremony in G. Rollie in 1997.