Jumpshot: The Kenny Sailors Story (2016) - full transcript

- Come on, you guys!

You know I can't bend over.

Basketball was just
about my whole life

when I was growin' up.

I wanted people to like me,

and like any kid
when they're young,

and get a lot of
attention, I suppose.

I've been asked
over and over again,

"Did you start the jump shot?"

I've had sports writers
get pretty upset with me

'cause that's what
they want me to say.



What else could they talk about?

There's nobody today hardlyalive that saw me play.

I've experienced
much in my lifetime.

I've had to let go of things

that were really
important to me.

And I like I say, it'snice to know who you are,

and where you're goin'when you leave this world.

- The shot
is the jump shot.

- It's up to Jenkins

for the championship!

Look at those little champions!

- The jump shot'sin every part of the game.

- Puts it up.

Yes!



- Nothing has ever
changed a sport

like the jump shot
changed basketball.

- Smart takes the shot!

- When you'retalking about the jump shot,

you're talking about the
very fabric of the game.

- You don't realizethat there was a time

that there was no jump shot.

- When it was sideshot game, you needed space.

- You had to be wide open,

or you couldn't
get your shot off.

- It's almost like
they were playing

in slow motion defensively.

How you allowed that guyto even get that shot off.

- Basketball is a
game of innovation.

Before you know it,
you've made up something

that nobody has seen before.

- In Kenny Sailors'
case, like Edison,

who would have known what thislittle light bulb could do?

- There's no question,

it was--
- The uniqueness

was they jumped.
- We're talkin'

probably 65 years later,

that's the shot people
are still taking.

- This shot lasted throughgenerations and generations,

and has made it to theWarriors, to Steph Curry,

the greatest shooter
you'll ever play.

- Curry switched defense

behind the back!

Fires a three!
- If I can't play

above the rim, so the jumpshot is my only weapon.

- Oh, he puts it in!

- You can go
anywhere in the world,

and they're shooting
Kenny's shot.

- Where is--
- Kenny Sailors.

- Kenny--- Sailors has few equals.

- He's an
American original.

- People just
forgot who he was.

- He disappeared for so long.- Sometimes history gets lost,

and that's what happenedwith Kenny Sailors' story.

History lost his story.

- Yeah, we're talkin'about the jump shot, right?

- Yeah--
- Or the guy

who found the jump
shot, or somethin'?

- Do you
know who that guy is?

- No.

- I don't know, 'cause, I mean.

- What do you mean

invented the jump shot?

No one invented the jump shot.

- Wait, there wasn't a
jump shot at one point?

- First of all,
there's skepticism.

Nah, I did.

- How do you know he was
the first jump shooter?

I mean, that's everybody'sfirst question.

How you gonna call thisguy the first jump shooter?

- Let me see how dumb
or how smart you are.

- I'd never really put
a lot of thought into

who was the first guy
that ever shot one.

- Okay, here's the deal.

Who is the guy that
invented the jump shot?

- About eight
years ago, I guess,

I started looking at, well, who could've done this?

- When I took over theFeatures Department at CBS,

the editor that leftleft me a pile of stories

that he thought would
be worth pursuing,

and I was goin'
through, and I saw

"Kenny Sailors, inventor
of the jump shot".

The first time I
ever heard the name.

- Are you sittin' down?

People think better on theirass than they do on their feet.

- There was a lot of tales andfables about this and that,

but I kept coming to thisstory of Kenny Sailors,

and it just led to Laramie, Wyoming of all places.

- You'll have enough wildstories to talk about

when you get back.

- Well, now you're next.

That one guy had to go.

- No, is that right?

- Yeah, he had to go to class.

- Okay, well.

- He's 90 goin' on 70.

He just keep on goin'.

- Right.

Yeah, I'll be up there too much

probably for too long.
- See, well, yeah.

Well, you don't know how long.

- Well, how long could it be

when you--
- Well, you've probably

gone longer than
you thought already.

- Oh, well,.

Don't ask me why.

I don't know.

Probably just to harass
barbers like you.

- Every time he comesin here somebody knows him.

- He's pretty popular.

- I'm not popular, that
jump shot's popular.

- That's what people are
really intrigued with,

basketball and the jump shot.

The jump shot, the jump
shot, the jump shot.

His whole life changed
that day he decided

to jump in the air, and
shoot over his brother.

- I grew up about seven oreight miles south of Hillsdale,

and Hillsdale, I don't imagine,

had 50 people in the whole town.

But anyway, basketball
was their sport,

because they couldn't
afford football,

or these other sports,

and, certainly,
durin' the Depression.

My brother was a good ballplayer, and a good athlete,

and the coach liked
him there in Hillsdale.

He told him he had a kid brother

who's just learned
to play the game,

and that they'd surelike to have a basketball

he could take out,
and give to him.

And, of course, we didn'thave any place to play,

but he fixed a backboard,

and we fastened it to the oldwooden windmill that we had.

We'd play one-on-one,

and I never could
get a shot off,

and he really enjoyed that,

because he was 6'5
and I was just about,

I don't know, 5'7 probably.

He use to tell me that, "Youbetter find another game".

"This isn't your game."

"It's for big men, tall men."

- But when you
think about the way

the game was played back then,

you kinda think of that
old news reel footage.

It was the kind that
happen, you know,

that paint drying paste.

- No shot clock.

No sense of urgency.

Obviously, it's antiquated, because it's where we started.

- It's athletic, because there'smovement and coordination,

but it feels slower.

It certainly is grounded.

- The standard rule was

you never leave your
feet on defense,

and especially on offense.

It's a whole
different game today.

- They hardly dribbled theball, passed it around.

The guys shootin' set shots.

- They all shot a
two-handed shot.

Push out here from the chest.

- You know, if you were gonnashoot a two-hand set shot

you had to be wide open.

- I don't know if
set shot off today.

Have to be 50 feet
away from the guy.

- You couldn'thave anybody close to you

who would just put a handup, and block your shot.

- If a shot has
to be constructed

over a period of one,
two, three seconds,

the game is slowed
by definition.

- If you look at some
of these guys now,

like a Westbrook, or somethin',

they way they fly down thecourt, and jump on the gym.

Looks almost like a differentsport than back then.

- It'll tell you, man, if Iwas born like 60 years earlier

I would've been in
the NBA, no doubt.

- I think I'd be a monster.

- Oh, I would've gotten somebuckets, that's for sure.

- Yeah, I feel like
a little step back,

or a between the legs crossover,

we'd throw somebody
into the first row.

- High on the board, Sailors.

I just made up my mindthat I was gonna find a way

to shoot the ball over the guy.

My brother, he made up his mind,

"I'm gonna frustrate
that little squirt,

and not even let
him get a shot off".

Somehow, the idea come to me is,

well, if I jump up, and
I knew I could jump,

if I jump up high enough outof my dribble, like this,

I dribbled up,

and from here, right on thedribble, I jumped straight up,

and bring the ball up
right over my head,

and I let it go, and
the thing went in,

and I was just as surprised, or more than he was,

and the ball went in the basket.

His feet was on the ground.

He hadn't even left the floor.

Boy, that spooked him.

He said, "That's a
good shot, Kenny".

"You have to get
better at that."

Well, I started workin'
on it from that time on.

Mom wanted Bud to go to college.

She sold the farm, and we boughtthat home here in Laramie.

I graduated high school
in the spring of '39.

Entered the university
to play basketball.

- The University of
Wyoming hired Ev Shelton

to coach the
basketball at Wyoming.

- He was a remarkable guy.

Charming beyond belief.

On the floor he elicited
the greatest respect.

- He'd didn't curse me.

Come up to you, and say,

"Did you hear what I said?",

and leave little
knobs in your head.

- He didn't have to shout at ya.

He just had to look at ya.

- When he came, he said to us,

"Now, I've won nationalchampionships in AAU ball".

He said, "I wanna win acollege national championship".

He told us right off.

- Kenny and his fellow
teammates were freshmen,

and freshmen were not
eligible in those days.

- He didn't think too much of us

yellow punk Wyoming freshmen.

Nearly every one of us, LewRoney, Volker, and Shadow Ray,

and myself, and Collins,

and Weir, of course, he'sthe big man from Green River,

we were all all-state
players, you know?

So we did have a prettyhigh opinion of ourselves.

He says, "We're gonna geta team here at Wyoming".

"It's gonna win a
national championship."

"And I don't know
if you're the boys

that's gonna do that, or not."

- That year,
the varsity squad

was lead by junior
star, Willie Rothman,

and future sports
broadcaster, Curt Gowdy.

- The freshmen
scrimmaged the varsity,

but Kenny and Jim Weir,
they let it be known

that they thought
they were better.

- We thought
we didn't have

any trouble scorin' on 'em.

We got to braggin'
and teasin' 'em

until the point that Sheltongot kinda fed up with it.

So Shelton one day
come in, and announced,

he says, "I'm gonna arrange agame for you cocky freshmen".

- Shelton went and scheduleda game, and sold tickets,

and I think Shelton'sidea was he was gonna put

Jim Weir and Kenny
Sailors in their place.

- We played
'em, and we beat 'em.

- Kenny Sailors and hisfreshmen beat the varsity,

and beat 'em pretty well.

- They only had the 31.

Weir and I had a
combination between us,

the same number of pointsthat the varsity had.

- He was the governor out there.

He controlled the ballgame.

- Shelton didn'tsay much right at the time.

I think he was about
half embarrassed,

as was the varsity team.

He didn't expect to lose
that game, I'm sure,

or he'd a never played it.

- For all of us growing
up in the 1940s,

we all wanted to play ballat the University of Wyoming.

- Our dad would
take us to games.

- We would go into
the dressing room,

and meet all these guys, MiloKomenich, Weir, and Volker.

- They werewonderful guys, and Kenny,

that was the one youalways kind of focused on.

- When
people have asked me

why I didn't date thegirls, I said, "Well, I do".

"I have a steady, and she'sabout that big around."

"I go with her all the time."

I wanted to be a good
basketball player,

and girls just didn't
fit into that for me.

A friend of mine, Stan Hathaway,

he was workin' for his boardover in the Kappa house.

One time he came over at
the union, and he said,

"Kenny", he says, "You'rereally missin' it".

"We got the prettiest
girls on the campus

over there in the Kappa house,

especially one girl that wehave over there's from Casper."

Her name was Marilynne Corbin.

- She was a
cheerleader for the

football and the
basketball team,

and she was the drum majorette,

and threw the baton up in theair at the head of the band.

- Anyway,
he came in one day

with these four beautiful girls,

and I was sittin' theretalkin' with Stan mostly,

'cause I was too embarrassedto talk to the girls,

and right there in front
of 'em, all of 'em,

he said, "Kenny", he said,

"Do you know our Phi Deltdance is this weekend?"

I said, "I don't dance, Stan".

"You know that."

I'd forgot all about it, ordidn't even know about it.

Yeah, and he said,

"You know, that's somethin'you oughta take Marilynne to".

Right there in front of her.

She pipes up, he
coached her, no doubt,

she says, "Well, I don'tcare about dancin' anyway".

"We'll just go have somefun, if you wanna take me."

- Did you guysgo on dates in the outdoors?

- Yeah, we sure
did, didn't we, Bokie?

- Go on picnics.

- That sounds romantic.

- We started goin' together,

and went steady the
rest of the year,

and then that summer
we were married.

- She was funny.

She had a sense
of humor, she did.

She had a great Tarzan yell,

and I guess, and thoughtit would've been real fun

to know her when she was20, and I grew up with her,

'cause she was a lot of fun.

- She was a beautifulwoman, for one thing,

but her beauty was a lotdeeper than just on her skin.

- They had a really
loving relationship,

and he and she complimentedeach other really well.

Grandma was definitely
very independent,

and she was her own woman,

and I feel like that's whygrandpa loved her so much.

- She just had
a wonderful personality,

and, of course, her
values, and her thinking

was just what a
husband really wanted.

- In those days, the coachcould not talk with the team

during the game at all.

Nobody was allowed
to interfere with

a play of the game
even during timeouts.

So guess who told
the team what to do?

The captain on the
floor, that was Kenny.

- Everybody
became confident

in what they did through Kenny,

because they knew they had a guy

who could elevate
them as a team.

- A lot of people ask, "Didn'tyou play with Kenny Sailors?"

I said, "Yeah, I sure did".

"Describe him."

"A rattlesnake."

- As mild and as
gentle as he is,

when it comes to competition, he'd tear your throat out.

- That's what he was,

the quickest guy I
ever saw on the court

with his hand and his feet.

- Ken would
fake a drawing,

and step back, and be in the air

by the time the defensivemen would get to him.

- When I watched Kenny Sailors, it actually blew me away.

- If you saw Kenny Sailorsplay, you saw the jump shot.

- Ken Sailorsof Wyoming sinks this one.

- He was
ahead of his time.

- The first time I
ever saw a guy do that.

Kenny shot one in, and onhis way up, he was great.

- No one shot thatup until then like he did.

- I would pay money to seewhoever's defending Kenny

that first time he roseup, and shot a jump shot,

just to see like thesnapshot of that guy's face.

As he's like comin' down
in transition, rises up,

and the guy's like,
what is goin' on?

This has gotta be atravel or somethin', like.

- Ev Shelton had no idea
what to do with that.

There were no coaches that were

teaching that skillset,
or fundamental,

but he had enough sense
to let him shoot it.

- That speaks to the selflessness of the coach,
to me,

and it allowed Kenny to thrive,

and it was goin' against
the grain of the time,

but that's really

one of the hallmarks of anyoutstanding coach, in my mind.

- Shelton had
an advanced offense

for those days in basketball.

- It was called
the Shelton Weave,

which put him in the NationalBasketball Hall of Fame.

- The main
thing about it was

he knew how to set insideand outside screens.

- It would
pull the big men out,

and they weren't use to
playing on the outside.

- Finally,
somebody would be open.

- Once they startedplaying well and winning,

then nobody wanted to play 'em,

'cause what do you have towin if you beat Wyoming?

- Wyoming is not an
easy place to get to,

especially when thebasketballs start bouncing

from November to March.

- I think they
have always feared

coming up to play in Wyoming.

- The University of Wyomingis sitting at altitude

of whatever feet, and all youcan do is get winded and lose.

- And we made a big
sign up, you know,

"How you breathin'
with 7,000 feet?"

- You playin' one team,
they had an oxygen tank,

and masks on the sideline.

I said "Are you kiddin' me?"

- Shelton said, "They won'tcome here to 7,000 feet".

"We've tried to get teamsall over the nation."

"They won't come up
here to place us."

"They're scared of us."

So he said, "We're
gonna go to them".

- All aboard!

- Everett Sheltondid something in those days

teams wouldn't do anymore.

He took his team on the road.

- Coaches who are coaching for

their livelihood are gonna say,

"I'd rather go 18 and three

against the guys
around the block",

but he was coaching to wina national championship.

- I'd never been on a
train before in my life.

Never been out of
the state of Wyoming.

None of us kids had.

We were just a bunch ofcountry kids, most of us.

- Ev Shelton
wanted to go where

they could get the
best competition.

- They did a
whistle stop tour,

and they'd stop the
train along the way,

and play games againstanyone that would play 'em.

- That's what we did.

We'd go all up and
down that East Coast.

We played all over thecountry anybody we could play.

- The 1942/43season, it really ranks with

one of the great
seasons of all time.

- They not only
took the challenge,

they went out and beat teamafter team away from home,

gaining even more
respect nationally.

- Their road
record was unbelievable.

- They played 33 games.

They won 31.

And their only two
losses were on the road.

- They were dominant,

and they were
dominant with a flair.

- Shelton, he finally
got to the point

where he'd say to us, "Now, boys, you're good enough,

you can beat anybody".

"There isn't anybody
can beat you."

- Going undefeatedin conference play

put them into the
NCA Tournament.

- Wyoming playedOklahoma first, and then Texas,

in order to advance to thefinals in Madison Square Garden.

- You didn't getto Madison Square Garden,

you didn't get filmed, andyou didn't get photographed.

- It's the mecca of sports.

Everything has happened there.

- If you played at the Garden,

can't get any higher than that.

- For a team like Wyomingto come into New York City

in the spotlight on the
biggest basketball stage

in the country is reallya remarkable achievement.

- When they traveled
to New York,

they may as well have beengoing to another planet.

- They turn all the lights off,

and we come runnin'
out one at a time

with the spotlight on us,

and they'd announce
our names, you know?

Whoo, that was a big dealfor a country boy like me.

- Thisgame developed into a thriller

from the very first play.

The best planned has playedin New York this season.

- Georgetown was tough.

I mean, they were
a good ball club.

We didn't beat 'em by that much.

- Kenny, he got onthat big stage, and performed.

- Kenny Sailors was the
most outstanding player

of the NCAA Tournament.

That's a resume that
not very many people

across basketball historycan really speak to.

- They really
captured the attention

of New York and
the New York media,

which at that time, meantcapturing the attention

of the college basketball world.

- The NCA in 1943wasn't the biggest tournament.

- The NCAA didn't havethat appeal, like the NIT.

The NIT was big, the biggestnational tournament there was.

- TheNational Invitation Tournament

brings the nation's top fiveto Madison Square Garden.

Teams meet in knock-down, drag-out fights to the finish.

- After we won the NCAA,

the New York papers were still

making a big issue
over the fact that

we were just a small, countryschool, and been lucky.

- The night before theNCA Championship was played,

St. John's won the NationalInvitational Tournament.

- St. John's
didn't just win the NIT,

they steamrolled teams.

This was a great team.

- I can still
remember the team.

Boykoff, Gotkin, "Fuzzy" Levane, Baxster, and Al Moschetti.

- You had the NCA championand the NIT champion

in town at the same time.

Ned Irish, I am
sure, was thinking,

"How do I get these
teams together?"

- They'd never done that before.

They'd never had the NCAAand the NIT play off.

- Even then,
with the imagination

that Wyoming had captured,

there was still
this notion there,

"Well, that's nice", butnobody gave them a real chance.

- The basketball
season's grand finale,

given greater significance tonight at Madison Square Garden,

and a killer-diller game it is.

What hangs on this ballgame

amounts to a national
basketball crown.

- It was the Superbowl
of college basketball.

That's what the
Red Cross game was.

- They called it "the world'samateur championship".

- Both teams,

the kingpins of their
respected moves.

St. John's rapid fire scoringhere in the past few minutes

has tied up the game.

From tip off to wind
up, it's touch and go.

Wyoming scores.

Seconds later, St.John's Redmen retaliated.

Boykoff gave us a field goal.

- With a few seconds leftto go in regulation time,

St. John's tied the game,

and Kenny took anin-bounds pass, laid it in

for what appeared to be

the winning basket
in regulation time.

But that became controversial,

because the referee said, "St.John's had called a timeout".

- I don't think theyhad a right to call a timeout.

How could you?

When you make a basket,

the ball actually belongsto the other team.

- Madison Square
Garden was going crazy.

They said it was
bedlam in there.

- The crowd was thinkin'just like I was thinkin',

"They can't do that".

- The
game now in deadlock,

goes into five minutes overtime.

Slick, smart, and speedythese shifty sharpshooters.

A looping pass down court.

Moschetti, St. John's, takes a shot at the board,

and the Redmen score.

Never once tonight
are these two quintets

more than four points apart.

A nip and tuck back
from start to finish.

Five minutes overtime
almost run out.

Three seconds left to play.

- This is the trophy

that they didn't expect
to come to Wyoming.

It was supposed to stayin Madison Square Garden.

They had to ship it to us.

We couldn't bring it home.

- The
final count 52 to 47,

and Wyoming's Cowboys are theundisputed kings of the court.

- It's pretty
powerful, isn't it?

For a bunch of country
kids from Wyoming.

None of us had been
out of the state

before we went back to play.

- In 1943, a group of Cowboys

went into Madison Square Garden,

and won a national championship.

- They had carried
our Cowboy banner,

and showed 'em who
ate the cabbage,

as the old man use to say.

- It fueled a sense
of Wyoming's identity.

It was in the blood and
bone of Wyomingites.

Yeah, we too can
compete with anybody.

- Little old Wyoming was

the best team in the country,

and nobody can
ever say otherwise,

and Kenny was the
head of the snake.

- I mean, that's
a monumental task.

When you think about what Wyoming did in beating St.
John's,

it would be like a DivisionII or Division III team

being able to navigate
March Madness,

and win the national
championship.

- There's no doubt, that for these guys to do that,

it was such a shining moment,

but this was a team
that had no tomorrow,

because they were
all goin' to war.

- We are mustering
all our resources,

manhood, and
industry, and wealth,

to make our nation
strong in defense.

For recent history
proves all too clearly,

I am sorry to say,
that only the strong

may continue to live in
freedom, and in peace.

- There was a war goin' on.

I knew they weren't gonnakeep me here in this country.

I was gonna be gone.

- His college career wasinterrupted by World War II.

- Two weeks later, thewhole team was on active duty.

- Kenny was one of the

best known basketball
players in America.

AU All-American, CollegeAll-American, national champion.

He had everything going for him,

in terms of basketball stardom.

- I'm sure all
those achievements

were exciting for him, butif you speak with Kenny

about his departure frombasketball, he'll tell you

he had more important
things on his mind.

- Looking back at it,

if a guy is named the MVPof the tournament in 1943,

such a big deal, is
it almost a shame

that you really
didn't get to revel

- Yeah.
- In excitement of that?

- Yeah, well, I
was gone, you know?

In the Marines.

And basketball was
important, and gosh,

we were proud of the
fact we did what we did,

but I was thinkin'
about leavin' my family,

and I was gonna be married,

and I was trying to convince her

we shouldn't get
married before I,

until I come back
from the Marine Corps,

'cause to be honest with ya, I didn't expect to come back.

Hell, that's the truth.

- Marilynne was pregnantwhen Kenny was shipped out.

In those days, widowsfrequently remained widows.

Out of loyalty to
their marriage vows

they would never marry again.

But it was Marilynne who said,

"Nope, we're gonna get
married", so they did.

She defied all the
best advice, and said,

"I wanna marry you".

So that showed also
how much she loved him.

Kenny was given command of 40Marines on this troop carrier.

- Our job
was ship security,

and we had to go into
the island sometimes,

and they'd have tent campsset up with the wounded,

and we'd have to go in andcarry 'em aboard this ship.

I had so many buddiesthat I'd lost in the war,

and in fact, if they didn'tget shot up or killed,

they had malaria.

- I think the
Marines recognized

leadership skills in him
from a very early time,

and when he was
ready to muster out,

he was a Captain at that point.

- You joined the MarineCorp, and two years later,

the war is over with,
and you're a Captain.

You've done a lot of
things to get there.

- Once you've been a Marine, you're always a Marine,

and you respect the Marines,

because you know what
it stands for, yeah.

- For Wyoming, at forward,

a 6'5 junior from
San Antonio, Texas,

number 34, Fennis Dembo.

- I know when I'm in the
presence of greatness.

They say that's Kenny Sailors.

I said, "Ah, I know who he is".

"I know what he represents."

What you're doin' as a kidthat's 18, 19-years-old,

you're readin' about allthese great people, right?

You were tryin' to
be better than 'em.

- Saved his best game

for the most importantgame thus far of the year.

- How many basketballplayers we can think about

actually did something toforever change the game?

Forever?

- While I was in the PacificI never saw a basketball.

We never could get
any news on it either.

We didn't get much of anything.

When I came back, why, theconference had a special ruling.

For us old boys who
had been in the war

could come back and
play, and we did.

- When Kenny
came back to the states

at the end of the war,

it gave him a chance toreally work on the jump shot,

and really concentrate on itsflaws and its opportunities.

- It took years.

It didn't happen overnightto get my jump shot.

That didn't happen right away.

- The biggest technical problem

was the idea of
jumping straight up.

- It took me longer todevelop that than anything,

'cause I'm dribblin'
fast sometimes,

and you have to plant, and jump.

- So a lot of times,
Ken would jump,

and he would drift
into the player,

and he would be
called for the foul.

- And they soon
learned, you know,

to get that offense foul tostay put, and let him hit ya.

Coaches had me pegged
all over the country,

so I had to develop a technique

where I actually stopped
my forward motion,

and went straight up.

- In January,
1946, Kenny came back to

Madison Square Garden
and played LIU,

and on that night, Kenny's jumpshot would become legendary.

- Oh God, almighty.

Wow!

He's up there.

- Well, first
of all, he's really

gettin' off the ground.
- Yeah.

- That's got some serious hops.

So not only was he jumping,

he was really getting
off the floor,

so he must have really
looked like a freak.

- Man, he up.

He was a white guy, man,
gettin' up that high

off the floor on the jump shot?

Give me a break.

- Now, that's a piece
of art right there.

It's beautiful.

- His off-hand
is lightly on the ball,

elbow looks pointed
straight at, you know,

that directs the shot.

- He's taken the
ball straight up.

His eyes are focused, not onthe ball, but on a bucket.

- That is a perfect
image of how I feel

every time I shoot a jump shot.

- I think there areeight guys in that picture,

and there are 14
feet on the ground,

and there are two
feet off the ground,

but it's not a gimmick.

- The other defenders, they're kind of looking at,

like they're watching a
different sport almost.

- The guy defendingKenny is in an athletic stance,

but it never occurred
to him to jump.

- That show you how groundedthe game was at that time,

and where he was takin' it.

To flight.

- Think of the defender, a guy jumps up in the air.

- That's pretty cool.

A visionary, man.

Way ahead of his time.

- I've never seen
this photo before,

but it's absolutely phenomenal.

Every kid should see this.

- I was expecting it to
be somewhat different.

Like, sure it was a jump shotof its time, but it's evolved.

It hasn't evolved.

Kenny nailed it in the '40s.

- I mean, it really looks likea Russel Westbrook photo now,

the way he elevates, andstops on a dime on the break.

I mean, that's amazing.

- That is as good a form

as I've ever seen
with the jump shot.

I mean, that is an
unbelievable picture.

I want a copy of it.

- I'm a Millennial,
so I just thought

the jump shot just appeared.

It was just a part of the game.

It's important, 'cause I knowthe work that goes into this.

It's hard to make it tothe top of your profession,

or to the top of anything.

Pioneers, they don'tusually get a lot of credit,

because not a lot of
people tend to go back,

and go through the journey ofbasketball when they should.

And I think stories like this

is gonna have people startin' to

just puttin' the
pieces together.

That shot is what the
game is centered around.

You know, it's
around the jump shot,

and I just want
people to know, man,

where this stuff comes from,

'cause it's not the guys yousee on the NBA court right now.

We didn't create this stuff.

If you love the game so much,

you will wanna see
where it comes from,

and where it's goin',
and Kenny is a guy

that stuck that
flag in the ground,

and let it be known that thisgame is gonna be here forever,

and I can't thank
him enough for that.

- My old shoulders,

boy, I couldn't shoot
a three-point shot for

love or money.

Mostly, it was my speed andmy quickness with the dribble

is what got me by
my man, I guess.

I dribbled up to him, like this,

and then I give
the ball this here.

I can't keep a balance even.

I give the ball this
kind of a motion.

He gets a rockin', and he'sdown here rockin' with me,

I jump, I jump and
shoot the ball.

It's evidently a
pretty good shot.

There's a lot of guys
shootin' it today.

I oughta sue the NBA

for usin' my shot without megettin' anything out of it.

Shouldn't they?

If I good lawyer, I'd do that.

Sue 'em all for 5,000.

I could make a little
money, could I?

Yeah.

Gosh, I was nearly 27-years-oldwhen I went into the NBA.

You know, these kids are goin'in today when they're 19.

You know, they make millions.

I didn't make nothing.

Man, they really paid me.

I made 75 hundred
dollars for the season.

That was big money
in those days.

The NBA started up in 1946.

- The NBA was in
its infancy then.

There were eight
teams in the NBA.

- This game has nothad that long of a history.

- Pro-basketball,
at the time,

was hardly in the public
conscience at all.

Baseball, football,
boxing dominated.

They were a lot bigger
than basketball.

- The pros didn't have
much oomph behind 'em,

because it was smallcities against big cities,

and there was littleemotional rooting interest.

- Honestly, I coached
a high school game

in Madison Square Garden,

and we had more people
than the the pros.

- These franchises
would go for a while,

and they'd fold
like a card table.

- There's
a handful of teams

with a handful of players,

and there's a
complete randomness

to whether you're in a goodsituation, or a bad situation.

In Kenny's case, he reallywas in several bad situations.

- Kenny was moved
around quite a bit,

and it wasn't because
he was a poor player.

It was because at least
three of those teams,

I can think of,
collapsed financially.

They went out of business.

They were disbanded.

Players were thrown
into a lottery,

and picked by other teams.

- Not knowin' where
you're gonna live,

not knowin' when thepaycheck was gonna come in,

just changin' scenery over, and over, and over again,

yeah, that'd be tough, man.

- It's hard to
imagine the barriers

these guys had to get through

just so people
could see them play.

- It's just crazy
to think about it.

I'm definitely blessed to beplayin' the game right now,

but you have a huge
amount of respect

for the people that
have propelled the game

to make it what it is.

- We get on planes,

and play on ESPN and
TNT like it's nothin',

but these guys, like theypaved the way for us.

- Every major bit of progress

in the history of most sports

is going to be looked
at as threatening.

If you look at George Mikan, Bob Pettit, Bill Russell,

Wilt Chamberlain,
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,

rules were made
to slow them down.

There was this fear
that they were gonna

take over the game, and skewthe competitive advantage,

and there's no doubt thatthe jump shot fits into that.

- Jimmy Breslin, the
famous, you know,

Pulitzer Prize
winning columnist,

he was just a sports
writer back then,

and he wrote this long column

on how the jump shot
had ruined basketball,

because you have one guywho can just take the ball,

either shoot right
away off the pass,

or take a couple dribbles,

and just take his
guy, and rise up.

- Old school coaches, firstof all, didn't believe in it,

and then once people
started to have success,

the idea that this
is not basketball.

- This first coach I had,"Dutch" Dehnert was his name,

he had the coaching
job there at Cleveland

my first year in the NBA.

A couple days before
the season got underway,

I was shootin' jump shotsoff of my buddy there.

Dutch came up.

He said to me,
"Sailors", he said,

"Where'd you get that
leap and one-hander?"

I said, "I don't know, Dutch".

I said, "I had that
quite a while".

I said, "That's what
keeps me in the game".

"You just never go in thisleague with a shot like that."

He meant it.

I didn't play much
to start with at all.

He says, "I'll show
you how to shoot

a good two-handed set shot", and he says, "That dribble",

he says, "We don't
dribble in this league".

He says, "We pass the
ball up the court".

And I said, "Well,
now that you take

my jump shot and
my dribble away,

you might as well sell
me, get rid of me".

"I aint gonna help you any."

- You know what
your strengths are.

You know what you do well.

You know who you are
as a basketball player,

and somebody's telling youyou can't do those things,

if I walked into practice, and my coach told me

I couldn't shoot a three,

or I couldn't shoot from
this spot on the floor,

I don't know if I
would be in the league,

that's for sure.

- This is the way they
did it in those days.

They sent Dutch on
the road scoutin'.

You know, I don't know whatold Dutch could scout for,

but when we started
to do much better,

the general manager, hestarted me right off the bat,

and I was the point guard.

I brought the ball up.

I dribbled it up.

I didn't pass it to anybody.

And he said the same thingmy old college coach said,

"Give the ball to Sailors, and get away from him".

"Get up court."

- People knew thatKenny was the ball player,

and I think he brought
in a lot of crowds too.

- If you look at hisstatistics, his points per game,

and the number of
times he ranked in

the top 10 in
various categories,

he had a verydistinguished pro career,

but he never played
for a winning team.

- What gets lost sometimes,

is when people are so brilliant

at something like a jump shot,

they're overshadowed
by their own greatness,

and I didn't know that Kenny was

such a brilliant ball handler.

- My dribble, I used it realeffectively in my scoring.

By just dribbling up to a man,

and just usin' a change
of pace, and then boo,

take off just like that.

- Okay, Kenny, break
'em down, then.

With a crossover.

Impressive.

Especially watching histeammates shoot afterwards,

and they're just standin' there.

- I don't know who
invented the floater,

but Kenny's got it down too.

- Big thing the jump
shot did for me,

is it give me that opportunityto drive to the basket.

- If everybody collapsed, he could pass it.

If everybody stayed, hecould just rise up and shoot.

- You go back and readsome of these old articles,

and you read about his
wizardry as a passer,

he was the most adroit dribblerin the basketball annals.

You hear all the, you know, the stately talk of the day.

- I'd shake the ball, like this.

I can't do it anymore.

But I'd do it real fastthis way, and then that way,

and he'd usually go thatway, and I'd go this way.

- That's a move that stillworks today, actually.

- A little Curry flurry.

- Yeah, I call
it the windshield wiper

with one hand, right there.

- But it's just a matter
of shakin' the ball.

- They didn't know
what to do with that.

- If you talk to Kenny,

he's more proud of
being a good defender

than he is about his jump shot.

- My trick in playingdefense was to get down low.

If you put your head,

you'd hit his bellybuttonright here on your forehead.

That's the way you play
defense, down in here.

The faster the man
is, and you know

the more room you
have to give him.

If he's not quick andfast, get right up in here.

- I bet he was movin',
and drivin' it,

shootin' off the dribble.

In some ways, he wasplayin' a different game.

- As soon as he
touched the ball,

your eyes gravitate tojust how different it looks

when he's dribblin' the ball,

and his creativity on the floor,

which I hope that
that's how people

see me when I'm out there.

- So he doesn'treally take credit for it.

He really doesn't it.

- Well, who would know
who's the first kid

- Well--- that jumped in the air,

and shot a basketball?

- Just take
it, and run with it.

- It's the only thing
I've done in my life

that people are interested in.

They don't know that that--- You're still doin' it,

and you're not even playin'.

You're still goin'.
- Most of 'em

don't even know that I'vebeen in the guidin' outfitin',

for over 50 years.
- Yeah.

- 50 years.
- Was it over 50?

- Right.
- I thought it was 30?

- 35 in Alaska.
- Wow.

- Or that I was a coach,
a high school coach.

A lot of thing I've done

that's probably more importantthan that stupid jump shot.

As I've gotten older,
the Lord has shown me

that there's far more
things more important

than just sports or basketball.

When I married my wife,
the doctors told me

that I'd be fortunate
if she lived to be 50.

She had to go to the
doctor pretty regular

with that asthma and emphysema.

And I said, "Doc, what kindof a lifestyle can we live

that will prolong her
life?", and he said,

"If you can stay out
into the country,

and stay out of the cities,

it would be really
beneficial to her".

That's why when I gotretirement, pfft, I'm gone.

- Kenny left basketball.

He could've gotten
into broadcasting,

maybe doing a
column in the paper,

but he wasn't looking
for honors in a sense.

It was his way of life.

He wanted to play pro-basketball

long enough to get a
pension, and then quit,

and go out in the sticks.

- Alaska was a place
that held a fascination

for my wife and I clearback before we were married.

Bigger mountains, biggerrivers, bigger everything.

Marilynne and I
loved that experience

of experimenting
with the unknown.

We lived 20 miles out
of just a small town,

15 hundred people, at the footof the Wrangell Mountains,

and we lived up there 35 years.

Up to the

- We didn't have

to buy anything, just
go out over the country,

wherever it looks
nice, and homestead.

Set your corners up, and
live on it for a year,

and it's yours.

- Kenny was an outdoors manwho like to hunt, and fish,

and be in the mountains,
and ride horses.

To this day, he has some
spurs and cowboy hats

that must be 100 years old.

- These chaps are a part ofthe business I grew up in.

Cowboy's hat.

This is not quite as oldas me, but it's pretty old.

Most cowboys are pretty
proud of their hats.

- I've told him this.

I said, "You know, Kenny, youcould've been born in 1821,

and been a man on
the Western Frontier,

leading wagon trains
on the Oregon Trail,

because you would never
have turned back".

- We got into

the big game hunting,

which ended up being one
of our major business.

- It was really great
workin' with Kenny.

We had a really goodrelationship from the start.

We did mostly sheep huntin', and then some moose hunts.

Moose, they're so darn big, the way Kenny operated,

he'd put 'em on
the horse's backs,

and he could pack 'em a
lot further than we can.

- We had to drive over 100miles to the end of a road

with the horses, and thenride into the mountains

to get to the hunting camp.

Being in the
mountains is amazing.

That's one of my
favorite things.

But riding horses for 12
hours in the mountains,

not so much when you're likeeight or nine-years-old.

- Word got
around pretty fast

that he'd been in the NBA.

I don't think he
bragged about it,

but it was somethin'
that came up.

- We were in awe,

because he had played
with the Boston Celtics.

- We just couldn't believe

that somebody thattalented and accomplished

could come to this
little, podunk place

in the middle of nowhere.

- Hunting season
started in August,

so by October, I'm all through,

and it worked out perfect for me

coachin' and teachin'
in the schools.

- Kenny was my basketballcoach, my track coach,

my football coach,
my wresting coach.

He pretty much filled
the coaching spot

for everything we had.

- Before Kenny
arrived, there was no

scholastic basketballparticipation for the girls.

It was just PE classes,

and possibly
intermural scrimmages.

- There was no girls basketball.

I didn't like that,
because I had a daughter

that was a good athlete, and I thought it was wrong

for it not to have
a girls program.

- At that
time, the girls couldn't

cross over the half line,

except for the rovingguards, and roaming forwards.

- And it was the old Iowagame they use to call it,

the half-court game.

They played six
people to a team,

and only three of them
could cross half-court.

- The reason
women played six on six

is because they didn'twant us to get exhausted.

- Girls wereconsidered to be so frail

they couldn't run up
and down the court.

- They thought if
we could just run

half-court here and
a half-court there

it wouldn't be too
physically taxing on us.

It's crazy.

- He grew up with a
really strong woman,

so in his mind, women are tough,

so why can't they run
up and down the court?

- So I worked to get
girls basketball goin',

and I use to travel aroundwith one of the gals,

and we'd go hold clinics
all over the state,

and try to convince 'em

that they needed a girlsprogram in their schools,

Just as important
as it is for boys.

- Up to that point, organized girls basketball

was played just in the
private school system,

and he was
instrumental in getting

that state tournament started.

And by 1970, there were
teams all over Alaska

playing in the girls
basketball tournament,

and his team was in
the thick of things.

- He put Glennallen on the map.

- He had somehellacious good girls teams.

- Anybody
who had a team,

and was willing to
play us, we would play.

- The other thing
that Kenny did,

he gave Native girls achance to play basketball.

- The first team I coachedthere in Glennallen,

I think they were all
Athabascans or Eskimos,

all the girls,
except two or three.

- They were generallydeemed too little to play.

They weren't as tall instature as the white girls,

the Anglo girls, if you will.

But that was okay with Kenny, because he could teach them.

- He taught us by demonstration.

We'd see how he did
it, and we'd copy,

and them, you know,
whoa, we can do things

we never dreamed
we'd be able to do.

- Believe it or not, Itaught 'em the same offense

that I played in college.

My old college coach says,

"You guys that are gonna coachin high school", he said,

"Don't try to teach this
to high school kids".

"It'll take 'em,
they'd be seniors

before they could ever
learn how to do it."

It didn't my girls that long.

They picked it up in a hurry.

- He was very proud of 'em,

because they did what
he taught 'em to do,

and that was, forget
about being ladies

when you're on the
basketball court.

Once they overcame that,
he had a winnin' team.

- That's huge for women.

That's huge, especially
when you were told

you're not supposed
to be aggressive,

or you're not supposed to sweat,

or you're not supposed to be

out there playin',
bein' physical.

- I'll brag a little here now.

My girls won three
state championships,

and we came in second oncein a seven year period.

- They won
68 straight games,

and became a powerhouse,
this little Glennallen.

- He organizedbasketball, and made it big

in the state of Alaska.

- He just constantly
used the sport

to influence people's lives.

- I don't think there's alife that he didn't touch

up in the Glennallen area.

- I was really a lousy
basketball player,

but he encouraged me to play.

- He gave us purpose, passion, personal confidence

to become a lot of
different things

that would never have
happened otherwise.

- I think he saw something in me

that he wanted to develop.

- That was a big part for him.

It's not necessarily
winning championships,

but developing kids who
would have the mentality

to take what they learned,

and apply it to other
areas of their life.

- In order for him to
go empower them to say,

"Look, this game right
here is amazing".

"It builds team work,
character, chemistry."

"It builds all that stuff thatyou need in the real world,

and empower women
at the same time."

I mean, that's all
you're really want man.

- He's the best thing

that could've happened
to Glennallen.

- For 35 years, Kenny
lived in Alaska,

and at least half of that time

was spent teaching and coachingat the high school level.

He retired at age 70.

And throughout all the, youknow, his exciting adventures,

Grandma stayed by his side.

- That's my girl.

60 years of my life I
spent with that girl.

My wife and I had a
wonderful marriage,

and it lasted a long time.

We've enjoyed livin'
with each other.

We enjoyed our family.

I don't know how itcould've been any better.

She contacted dementia,

and gradually you lose yourmemory of things way back.

One time at night, woke
up in the winter time,

and I looked over,
and she wasn't in bed.

So I went and looked
in the bathroom,

and out in the kitchenwhere sometimes she gets up,

and goes and gets
a cup of coffee,

and then, no sign of her.

So I went outside,

and I went around thecorner of our lodge there,

and there she stood.

The northern lights,
oh, they were beautiful,

right down around her, andme, and everybody else.

It was about 30
degrees below outside,

and she was just standin' therewith her night clothes on,

and she did have hercloak on, thank goodness.

When I told the doctors aboutit, that's when they said,

"Kenny, you better
begin thinkin' about

gettin' out of this climate,

because you'll walk
out one of these nights

when it's 40 or 50 below, andshe won't last very long".

- I think she realized

that she needed to
stay healthy for him

'cause they were a team.

A lot of decisions that
he made in his life

were because he wanted
to be there for her,

and, you know, as
she got sicker,

just being there as much ashe possibly could for Grandma

until she was gone, so.

- It's tough, but the
Lord gives you strength

that you don't even know
where it comes from.

He just gives you the strength

to go through most
anything, mm-hmm.

- He doesn't understand why

he's still gettin'
around, and stuff,

other than the Lord has
things for him to do.

- When you
think in terms of Kenny

essentially dropping out ofthe basketball world in 1951,

and coming back almost
in the 21st century,

it's almost like these peoplewho will wake out of a coma,

and have to learn how to usea computer, and a cellphone.

That one-hand modern day jumpshot has changed the game,

that which maybe a computerhas changed our generation.

- You could almostgo decade by decade,

and the game is
almost unrecognizable

to the previous decade.

That being said,

there are elements that
give it some continuity.

The jump shot certainly
contributed to that.

- It's a
whole different game

than Dr. Naismith originallyenvisioned in his mind.

- The interesting
thing about basketball

is it's always evolving.

All the greats of the
game can do thing today

that nobody ever thought
that players could do.

- With thethree-point lines moving to

a perimeter oriented game,

and whether people
know it or not,

you can anywhere in the world,

and watch people
play basketball,

and they're shooting
Kenny's shot.

- I'm gettinga little excited right now.

In Laramie they may be
dancing in the streets.

- In 1987,
our basketball team

beat a highly rated UCLA team

to advance to the Sweet 16.

- Wyoming delivered.

- A couple years ago, theuniversity put a team into the

Wyoming Sports Hall of Fame.

One morning I came
down for breakfast,

and I saw Kenny Sailors there,

so I sat down and ate
breakfast with him,

and to my shock, I find outthat he wasn't recognized

in the Naismith Hall of Fame.

I just thought he was in,

and then when I
found out he wasn't,

from that moment on, Ijust kinda made up my mind

that I'm going to put
every effort I can

into seein' if we can't getKenny put into the Hall of Fame,

because he belongs there.

I mean, this is a
righteous project.

- The Naismith MemorialBasketball Hall of Fame

is one of the more confusedinstitutions of its stature.

- They operate a
little differently.

They are not like the
standard Hall of Fame.

- When it comes timeto vote for Cooperstown

every media outlet
in the country

is discussing who
belongs in and why,

and everybody knows the rules.

75 % of the vote
from active members

of the Baseball Writers'
Association of America

gets you into Cooperstown,

and that vote is gonna bepublished in the morning,

and many guys reveal their vote.

- With the Naismith Hall of Fame

it's a secret process
with a secret committee.

- Nobody's quite surehow you do or don't get in

to the Naismith
Memorial Hall of Fame.

- There are people who say that,

"Kenny Sailors is the
best basketball player

they ever saw play".

If you ever need
a bigger testament

that this was one of thegreat basketball players ever,

at the 1990 Final
Four in Denver,

they recognized the
players of the decade

for the first 50 years
of NCAA Tournament.

For the 1980s, PatrickEwing, '70's, Magic Johnson,

'60s, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,'50s, Bill Russell.

Kenny got it for the 1940s.

Not bad company.

- I know it's a hard
job to induct people

into the Hall of Fame,
and the criteria,

you know, you've gotta lookat so many different things.

I understand that,

but if you really want
to do your job right,

you would do your homework,

you would do your research,

and you would realize
that he belongs.

- I am confident in saying,

"There is no largeromission from a major sport

Hall of Fame than
Kenny Sailors".

The only thing you can tell me

about why Kenny Sailorsshouldn't be in the Hall of Fame

is because Kenny
Sailors is not famous.

- Were you sayin',

talkin' about once you
had some endorsements,

but the club got the money?

- And what were you selling?

- Prune juice, huh?

That's supposed to
be for digestion?

- Oh, prune juice.

That was the Gatorade backin the day, prune juice?

Ew.

- "Nature's great
energy builder."

I gotta try that, actually.

- That's pretty good.

He's got a good smile.

He's repin' it, I like that.

- You know, I'm almost
40, at this point,

I'll try anything, so I
might have them give me

the Bennetts Prune Juice.

- I don't know if you cando that nowadays, but hey,

if it weren't for prune juice,

there probably wouldn't
have been a Gatorade.

- Yeah, we've talked
about this a lot,

and others have
contributed ideas

as to why Kenny's not
in the Hall of Fame.

It's a whole series
of events, I think,

but essentially, that he
disappeared for so long.

- It is as simple asout of sight, out of mind.

Kenny went away,
and all of a sudden,

his name became,"Remember Kenny Sailors?"

- The trail got lost

after he'd spent anotherlife time in another world.

- And, of course,
the question of

who invented the
modern jump shot

seemed to be almost irrelevant,

because everybody thoughtthat it's always existed,

so who cares?

- Every time we
did talk about it,

there were those that said,

"Well, he didn't invent it".

"These guys invented it."

- I mean, Luisetti.

- To a lot of people,

the jump shot wascredited to Hank Luisetti.

- I called Hank Luisetti.

He said, "I didn't
have a jump shot".

"I had a running one-hander."

- There's a debate over

the inventor of the jump shot,

because you have so
many definitions of it.

- When you start talking aboutthis, everybody's got a name.

- John Miller Cooper.

- John Miller Cooper.

- So the story with John Cooperwas that he was in the post,

and someone threw him a pass

that he kinda had
to jump up to get,

and he just turned at thesame time, and shot it.

- You know, you talk aboutguys like Belus Smawley.

- I've covered Belus, so I know.

He was a two-handed
shot off this way,

kinda off to the side.

- It's one of those things,

that it's like ingrainedin our basketball culture,

your jump shot is
like your hand print.

- Even Joe Fulks, whowas a teammate of Kenny's,

had an unusual shot.

- A real pro-veteran,

"Jumpin' Joe Fulks".
- It was over his head,

the ball was up here, bothhands, he'd get a little height.

And boy, oh boy, how he
could shoot that thing.

- There might be 100 guys outthere that shot a jump shot

if you wanna count
leavin' the floor,

and throwin' the ball towardthe bucket a jump shot.

- The Hall of Fame
recognized Glenn Roberts

as the founder of the jump shot,

and they found him on
very sparse evidence.

- Who knows for sure, buthe was a guy in the '30s,

you know, had the shot, and put up great numbers.

- Clearly, Glenn Roberts

had a shot that was different

that involved
leaving the ground.

- But again, is it definitive?

No.

- People can legitimatelycontest a jump shot,

but not "the jump shot".

- The real thing that separatesKenny from everyone else,

if you're talking
about a jump shot,

is Kenny gave it its
coming out party.

- Kids in their community

started tryin' to
imitate that shot

as soon as they saw
it in "Life Magazine".

I had people tell me,
even ballplayers tell me

that that's the first pictureI ever saw of a jump shot.

- We've talked about
what it meant to be

on the main stage of MadisonSquare Garden in 1943.

"Life Magazine" was every bitas impactful, if not more.

- So here's this "Life
Magazine" picture,

read by and looked
at by kids like me

all over the country, saying,"What is happening here?"

- "Life Magazine"
was such a dominant

publication at the
time that, you know,

millions of people
see this shot,

and they realize thatsomeone has done something

that they don't normally see.

- Today, guys aretrained to go straight up,

but there was nobodytelling him how to do it,

because nobody had done it.

- Kids saw it, and thenthey went and tried to do it.

- Well, I used myjump shot everywhere I went.

In fact, when I played
with Providence,

they required me to goaround to the high school,

and hold clinics on how toshoot the jump shot, yeah.

I kinda enjoyed that, so.

- You could use it as anargument to prove time travel.

I mean, it looks like thisguy from last night's NBA game

was plopped down into the era

of black leather shoes
and tight shorts.

This was the shot
that changed the game,

but nobody realized,
when he came down

the world was
gonna be different.

- Here, let
me clean you off here.

- I got it.

Keep it just like it
is in the front, Larry.

- It's just amazing to me

that with all the
evidence we've piled up

in the last 10 years, you know,

and he still denies culpability.

- And who knows,
back in the 1800s,

some kid out in PodunkHigh could jump in the air,

and throw the ball, couldn't he?

It's a jump shot if his
feet leaves the floor.

- He's not the
type of individual

who's going to speak against

the accomplishments
of other people.

When I spoke to Kenny, he was careful to confine

absolutes to what he knew.

- Kenny won't tellyou that he's the first.

You know, he's too
humble for that.

- But he's
happy to tell ya

that this is what otherplayers in my era thought.

- Ray Meyer from DePaul, hesaid it the best, I think.

"Sailors may not have
been the first player

to jump in the air,
and shoot the ball,

but he developed the shotthat's being used today."

- In case he hasn't seen it,

I'm gonna bring him a copyof the nomination packet

for the Naismith Hall ofFame, and he may have seen it.

I'm not sure, but I'm
just bringing one along.

The nomination packet we
have for Kenny Sailors

is a knock your
socks off package.

- Come in, Jim!

- Where's my buddy?

There he is.

- How you doin'?

- Kenny was fortunate
when he came back

that there were somepeople in his inner circle

who cared about his legacy.

- Have you seen the packetfor the Hall of Fame?

Have you seen one of those?- No,

I haven't seen it.

"Developer of the
modern jump shot."

Yeah, that's pretty accurate.

That looks like the--
- This is Utah State

in Hells Half Acre.

Now, there's your
"Life Magazine" shot.

- Yeah.

And that crazy jump shot,

it's really got me into trouble.

It's bigger than Ithought it would ever be.

I never give a thought backwhen I was first developin' it

that it would develop intosomethin' like it is today.

- The sport of basketball'sseen many names

shape its rich history,

but there's one name
that escapes memory.

- Not only is Kenny Sailors

one of the great
players of all time,

he's the guy who first
thought of the idea

of shooting a jump shot.

- As aplayer/pioneer/contributor, Sailors has few equals.

- For where would basketballbe without Kenny Sailors,

and what is known
today as the jump shot?

- We've had CBS comeout, and do a feature on him.

- The University ofWyoming has done a tremendous

service to unearth thisstory in the last 10 years.

- It's not
about Kenny, to him,

but he does it to raise the bar

for the University of Wyoming,

and raise the bar
for his teammates.

- The "New
York Daily News"

did a feature on him last year.

- Kenny Sailors is not
just a Wyoming treasure,

but he's a treasure
for the game.

- He led Wyoming to the
1943 NCAA Championships.

They did beat Georgetown.

Patrick did not
play in that game.

He's not quite that old.

- Sailors belongs in theNaismith Memorial Hall of Fame.

I mean, you've got the guy

who invented the 24-secondshot clock in the Hall of Fame.

You can't get the guy whoinvented the jump shot

in the Hall of Fame?

- He was involved
in an ESPN special,

narrating for the 75thanniversary of the Final Four.

- Who better a person
to narrate a story

about the history of
the NCA Tournament

than the man who
invented the jump shot?

- Please
give a round of applause

for Kenny Sailors.

- You know, since
I've been here,

I've been asked by
quite a few people,

you know, if I'm
happy to be here.

And, you know, at
92-years of age

you're happy to be anywhere.

- I always marveledat how he'd come up here,

he's 92-years-old, and
he'd walk the arena

as if he was a, I don'tknow, 60 or 70-year-old guy.

- Kenny's
always in the outdoors,

and he's always
playin' basketball,

and he always stayed in shape.

- And he could
go out and shoot

left-handed,
right-handed on a court,

put up layups,
little hook shots.

- He was dribblin' thebasketball between his legs.

For God sake, I can't
even find my leg.

- He can yo-yo up
and down crosswise,

and he could still do
all this stuff today.

You won't see many 90-plus-year-olds being able to do that.

- That was my jump shot.

- You take away all the
business, all the media,

all the hype around the game,

and you wanna see purelove, look at Kenny Sailors.

- Kenny is still around, andeverybody sees him at games.

People like to be around him.

Children, they wanna
get his autograph.

- Was goin' to Wyomingpractices at 80-years-old,

like, I know I probably,

if I've been playin'
the game for that long,

I'm not going to
a random practice

on a Tuesday and Wednesdayjust to check it out.

That's just love for the game.

- I practiced a littlebit,.

- Ready?
- Ready.

- You'd look at him and say,

"I think Kenny
Sailors could go on",

who's know how long hecould go on, in the 100s.

- I know I'm an old man,

and I know I can't dotoday what I did when I was

even in my 70s, even
come close to it.

Yeah, I was still guidin'some when I was in my 70s.

Yeah, and I could
climb that mountain

after that white
sheep, and stuff,

but that was still, you know,

I shouldn't have been, probably,

because it is dangerous.

And I can still talk withpeople pretty well, so.

And I can still do the thingsthat someone my age can do.

It's the physical things
that I can't do, yeah,

and I don't even wanna try.

I wanna stay as healthy as I can

up until the time
I get out of here.

I don't wanna have to
go into a nursing home,

or spend a long time
in the hospital,

or somethin', you know?

I don't want people
to have the trouble

of tryin' to take care
of me when I get older.

There's the whole thing.

Yeah.

Okay.

Okay, I got her.

- Well, Kenny'sslowed down a little bit,

and remarkably
so, will tell you.

He doesn't like getting
out quite as much

just 'cause it's harderfor him to stand and walk

for extended periods of time.

- What's amazing for a
man who's been so proud

of what he could do
for so long on his own,

he's accepted these thingswith a lot of grace,

and that's not easy.

- Well, hi, Betty.

- He focuses
on the positive,

and I think that's why
he's the person he is,

and the person he hasbeen for quite some time.

- Sat over here.

- He still feels like
he has a purpose,

that's what keeps him goin', and makes him most fulfilled.

- I tried to get him to

pay attention to me.
- There you go.

- You never did.

- She's lyin'.

You know, it was just
the other way around.

- Yeah, ha.- She wouldn't look at me.

- Ha ha ha.
- Yeah, she wouldn't

have anything to do with me.- Yeah.

- Here, I thought you were thegreatest girl in high school.

- Oh, baloney.

- Kenny's always had
a good sense of humor.

He is not too proud toaccept kidding about himself.

- Be careful with that hat.

I mean, I don't want
you to get it dirty.

- I don't wanna geta disease from this hat.

That's a stinky, smelly, old hat

- Oh, come on, Bill.
- That should be

probably buried
outside with a skunk.

- Ha, yeah, that hat's
got a lot of prestige,

and I'll tell ya,

well, you can tell
by lookin' at it.

- Well, it looks like alot of interesting things

have happened to this
hat, probably a lot

more than sweat.
- Well, the horse

drank water out of it,
and ate oats out of it,

and we did all sorts of
things with that hat.

- What else did you--
- I drank out of it.

But you can tell by lookin'at it, it's had a few years.

- So can I put this on your head

just to see what it
looks like today?

I think it's good for him, and for me, to test his wit.

Keeps him sharp.

He's gotta have comebacks, and he can dish it right back.

- I treat this hat with
a lot of respect, Bill.

- It doesn't deserve any.

- Anytime
Kenny's in the building,

I wanna make sure heunderstands the love's there.

- Hi, Coach.

Excuse me for not gettin' up.

- You don't have to get up.

I'm supposed to get
up for the old man.

You're not supposed toget up for the young man.

- Okay.

- How you doin'?

- He wanders our halls.

He comes to our games.

He hugs our kids when we lose.

He hugs our kids when we win.

We're fortunate that he'sbeen part of our experience.

- Three-up, guys.

- Sometimes what you give getsthrown back to you tenfold,

and that's the dream, I think,

all of us have
for Kenny Sailors.

- You bet.

- He's
already put his name

amongst the greatest
college players,

he and the College
Basketball Hall of Fame,

but it would be
great for him to be

in the Naismith Hall of Fame,

and have his name
with all those great

college and
professional players.

- Everyone
who knows his story

would love to see
this happen for him

when he can appreciate
it, when he can live it,

when he can know
that he went down

with the greatest
basketball players ever,

and he'll be there forever.

He deserves to know that.

- The sooner the
election, the better.

- It's a borrowed
time situation.

It would be great right now.

- Please welcome your host

for the NBA All-Star

Naismith Memorial Hall
of Fame announcement--

- It is a big day.

A lot of people
have worked a lot.

- Yeah, you know, this weekend,

hopefully we'll
get some good news.

- It's so exciting justthinking about if it happens.

- I think Kenny's probablyhandelin' it the best.

But for those of us
who really would like

to see him get this honor,

we're probably a little
more anxious than he is.

- Good morning, everybody,

and thank you for
joining us here.

A very special welcome to

all of our friendswatching around the world

on NBA--
- Well, that's the

million dollar question,
"Does he have a chance?"

- Truthfully, I think
they're about 50/50.

It should be 100 %.

- We need to get to
now the introduction

of the first members of theHall of Fame class of 2015.

- Oh, shit.

I'm so down in some ways,

and then I'm so pissed
off in other ways.

And to me, it goes back
to the two basic areas.

One, it happened so long
ago it's not relevant.

And then the second
part of it is,

we just haven't reallyproved our case well enough.

I need to sit down,
and think about this,

and I think all of us do.

But from winning you
get some feedback,

and from losing you
get some feedback,

and I think that we get
all our ducks in a row,

and then we bang 'em
early for next year.

Please believe me,
this aint finished.

- When Kenny Sailors getsinto the Hall of Fame

it will, unfortunately,
be a ripple.

Not with a bang, but a whimper.

It will, however,

complete the Naismith MemorialBasketball Hall of Fame,

because right now
it's incomplete,

and it can't be
complete without Kenny.

- The evidence is there.

It's been there.

You're hopin' that over time,

maybe the next year somehow, they see it differently

than they saw it a year before.

But I just don't think peopleare gonna appreciate something

that happened, in their
eyes, so long ago.

- His name, his accolades, it's just his whole legacy

should be in the Hall of Fame,

and his family
deserves that as well.

We're gonna keep fightinguntil we get him in there.

- The game is built onwhat the pioneers have done

in every era, and
we owe 'em a lot,

because that's the
foundation of the game,

and you see trial and error,

you see innovation atthat time, and new things,

like Kenny Sailors
and the jump shot.

- His story has to be told.

Now that I know, I'm gonnatake it to the Hall of Fame.

I'm gonna share this storywith other athletes and people

so they know the origin
of where this started.

- All of us that have everplayed or coached the game

should have a picture of KennySailors' ass up somewhere

that we can kiss every timewe go into the locker room.

- I want Sailors'
family just to know

that we appreciate him.

We appreciate what
he did for the game.

We appreciate just
the level of teaching

that he brought after hefinished playing the game.

It's just something
I've never seen before.

Just to love and care forother people, and for the game,

that's just an amazing
man right there.

- I don't think to this
day Kenny is interested

in his legacy as a jump shooter.

He doesn't care that he'sthe first jump shooter.

He doesn't even wanna
talk about that.

He's interested in talkingabout what he had to do

to be the best
version of himself.

- There's only
one number retired

at the University of Wyoming, and that's number four.

If you've got a
legacy in that size,

you've got a high ladder toclimb to reach Kenny Sailors.

- This is probably the quote

that summed Kenny up
the best for me I said,

"Do you wanna go into
the Hall of Fame?"

He says, "Oh, sure I wannago into the Hall of Fame".

"It'd mean a great deal to me."

"Basketball's done
a lot for me."

I told Jim Brandenburg that, and he laughed and said,

"Kenny's got that backwards".

"Nobody's ever done morefor basketball than Kenny."

- I guess, from a
world standpoint,

they'd probably say, "I had acalling to play basketball".

Since it's worked out,
basketball's given me an opportunity

to speak to people thatprobably wouldn't have even

spoke to me if I hadn't
been a good ball player.

And the Lord uses these thingsin the lives of individuals.

My case, it was sports,
and the jump shot.

Yeah, I'm not in
the Hall of Fame.

So far, I've never made it.

If I were to make the
Hall of Fame today,

oh, you know, it'd be nice.

I mean, I'm a human beingjust like everybody else.

But I know I belong tothe greatest Hall of Fame

that any man or woman
can ever belong to,

and when you belong to that, and you know you belong to it,

you don't worry about
these Halls of Fames

that men create down here.

Don't mean that much to you.

- Wyoming's Kenny Sailors,

who had just turned95-years-of-age two weeks ago,

passed away in his sleepthis morning at 2:50 a.m.

Here in Laramie, Wyoming.

I'll just say this,
there's no bigger fan,

or a fellow that lovedCowboy and Cowgirl basketball

as much as Kenny Sailors.

- I remember one time we werewatchin' the NCAA Tournament,

and I asked Kenny about hisFinal Four, and he said,

"Well, my Final Four
would be God, husband,

father, and US Marine
in that order".

I noticed that basketballwas not on the list,

and he said, "Yeah".

He said, "Those are the mostimportant things to me".

"Those are my Final Four."

- When we think
about UW athletes,

it's not just what they do onthe court, or on the field,

it's how they represent
the university,

how they represent
the state of Wyoming

that gives us such
pride in what they do.

Today, we recognize one veryspecial athlete, Kenny Sailors.

- Well, a statue wasunveiled of my grandfather.

The first thing I thoughtwas, "That is so huge".

- It's a great replica ofhis shot in all the detail.

It brings him back to
life just a little bit.

- Kenny Sailors, as you
look at this statue,

it's larger than life,
which is appropriate,

because he certainly
was that way.

- I think of all the
things we've done here,

I'm most proud of this
because of that man.

I don't know if you can
ever tribute him enough,

but this is about as
good as we could do.

- It's almost surreal.

It makes me feel reallyproud that I'm a Sailors.

- It's appropriate
we celebrate somebody

that has meant so much tothis state, to the game,

and not just when
he was playing,

but he always gave
back to the community.

A great UW Cowboy.

- I know he'd be embarrassed, and he'd be mad at us,

but we're very proud thatit turned out as it did.