NMSooner'80
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Only three of the seven finished up at OU, and only five of them had any sort of impact. But at the time, the '76 recruiting class added some size and skill to a rebuilt OU roster.
The seven were: Al Beal, 6-9, Deerfield Beach, Fla.; Terry Stotts, 6-8, Bloomington, Ind.; Aaron Curry, 6-4, Buffalo, N.Y.; Clifford Johnson, 6-8, also from Florida, Drew Head, 6-10, Wheat Ridge, Colo.; Scott Finet, 6-9 out of Illinois and Wayne Nelson, 6-3, from the memorably named town of Dry Prong, La.
Curry was thought to be the big prize in the class. He was good - and served as the sixth man on the '77 team that shocked many by contending for the Big 8 title until the final game of the regular season. Beal set many rebounding and shot blocking records and scored the game-winning bucket in the epic OU-Missouri game that rocked the LNC and the campus. Stotts is more famous for being the coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, but he was a first-team all-league player as a senior.
Johnson, a ferocious dunker (in the first year that the dunk was being allowed again), started off the season great in '77 but was eventually replaced in the starting lineup by Stotts, a better overall shooter. Head started at center but lost confidence and wound up being replaced by Beal. Both guys transferred out after their sophomore years, and Head wound up being a college teammate of Tony Gwynn at San Diego State.
The previous year's team went only 6-7, 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 and 5-10. So that added size from the freshmen, along with the maturity of sophs John McCullough and Cary Carrabine, helped spark an eventual run at the league title in '79. Who knows what we'd think of basketball at OU without some of that late 70's success?
The seven were: Al Beal, 6-9, Deerfield Beach, Fla.; Terry Stotts, 6-8, Bloomington, Ind.; Aaron Curry, 6-4, Buffalo, N.Y.; Clifford Johnson, 6-8, also from Florida, Drew Head, 6-10, Wheat Ridge, Colo.; Scott Finet, 6-9 out of Illinois and Wayne Nelson, 6-3, from the memorably named town of Dry Prong, La.
Curry was thought to be the big prize in the class. He was good - and served as the sixth man on the '77 team that shocked many by contending for the Big 8 title until the final game of the regular season. Beal set many rebounding and shot blocking records and scored the game-winning bucket in the epic OU-Missouri game that rocked the LNC and the campus. Stotts is more famous for being the coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, but he was a first-team all-league player as a senior.
Johnson, a ferocious dunker (in the first year that the dunk was being allowed again), started off the season great in '77 but was eventually replaced in the starting lineup by Stotts, a better overall shooter. Head started at center but lost confidence and wound up being replaced by Beal. Both guys transferred out after their sophomore years, and Head wound up being a college teammate of Tony Gwynn at San Diego State.
The previous year's team went only 6-7, 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 and 5-10. So that added size from the freshmen, along with the maturity of sophs John McCullough and Cary Carrabine, helped spark an eventual run at the league title in '79. Who knows what we'd think of basketball at OU without some of that late 70's success?