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Mr. Dwight "Bo" Lamar

Home:
5734 Hibernia Dr.
Columbus, OH 43223

Work:

Home Phone: 614-735-5325
Work Phone: --
Fax: --
Email: --

Please click on any news story in the news box, then the archives link in the upper left which appears on the new page. Click on the December & 2020 tabs in the format on the Archives Page, then click on Bo’s story once that page appears for the complete Spotlight on Former Athlete, written by Bruce Brown includes photos and footnotes which may have been included.

* * * * *

Athletic Network Spotlight on Former Athlete by Bruce Brown, December, 2020

Lamar found spotlight

Bruce Brown

Athletic Network
Tom Cox recalls vividly the first time he saw Dwight “Bo” Lamar on a basketball court.

And now, at a robust 86 years old, long since retired from coaching and a successful insurance agent in Lafayette, Cox still puts Lamar among the best he’s ever seen – certainly among the best he ever coaxed into playing for the UL Ragin’ Cajuns.

“My first sighting of Bo, I was in Columbus, Ohio,” Cox said. “We were recruiting two players from Columbus East High School – Ed Ratleff and Nick Connors, who were high school All-Americans. Everybody in the country wanted them.

“Then I watched them play, and there was a teammate who caught my eye (Lamar). Marvin Winkler was going to be a senior for us, and I knew we really needed to recruit a guard.

“So I called (head coach) Beryl Shipley and told him I really thought he ought to see this kid play.”

Ratleff and Connors were busy finishing up a two-year mastery of high school basketball in Ohio, unbeaten in Class 5A in that time. Lamar transferred to East Columbus as a senior, and had no problem fitting his game in with a pair of stars averaging 30 points per game.

Averaging some 14 points per game, he facilitated more than shot the ball.

And, at a slender 6-foot-1, he was literally in the shadow of the two stars.

“Bo only had one (scholarship) offer, from American University,” Cox recalled. “We were the only big-time program to offer him. I wanted to line up a campus visit with him, and he said, ‘Coach, just send the paperwork. I’m coming.’ We got 10 times more than we ever expected from him.”

Lamar averaged 22.6 points per game as a freshman, giving the Cajuns of 1969-70 a one-two punch with Winkler’s swan song of 25.6 on a 16-10 team.

Then, 50 years ago this season, Lamar exploded onto the national scene, averaging 36.0 points per game to lead the nation’s College Division and sparking the Cajuns’ 25-4 finish.

As a junior in 1971-72, Lamar stepped up into the University Division and promptly paced the country at 36.3 ppg. Once again, the Cajuns finished 25-4.

With more talent around him like Roy Ebron, Freddie Saunders and Larry Fogle in 1972-73, Lamar averaged 28.9 points on a 24-5 team.

By the time he was finished, he had amassed 3,493 points, averaging 31.2 per game, and was (and remains) the school’s all-time point machine.

A member of the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame, Lamar was a once-in-a-lifetime talent in a small package.

Remarkably, the long-range shot artist notched his totals before the 3-point shot was part of the college game. It fairly boggles the mind to picture his numbers in a more modern setting.

Put simply, if he was in the building, Lamar felt he was within range.

“His freshman year, we were playing at Nicholls and it was close all game.” Cox said. “The last 15-20 seconds, we had a play set up for Marvin, but had to throw it out to Bo in the corner and he hit a bomb at the buzzer. Not too many freshmen are going to hit that.

“His junior year, he was leading the nation in scoring and we were scoring about 100 points per game. We were at Northwestern State. There was no shot clock at the time, and they slowed the game down.

“So at halftime Bo had about 10 points. Beryl said we’re going to get a lead, then beat them at their own game. We’re on our way back to the court, and Bo tells the team ‘Don’t worry about my points. Let’s win the game. I’ll get my points later.’

“We won the game (25-21), and the next game he scored 60.”

Individual artist though he was, Lamar was also a team player.

“In my opinion, there are two types of blue chip guards,” Cox said. “Those who are 100 percent team players, and those who play to show they’re the best player on the court. They aren’t selfish, but they play with a chip on their shoulder. That was Bo.

“At the time, most guards were under 6-5. Bo was 6-1, but he had tremendous leaping ability on his jump shot. He shot a lot of long range jumpers, which takes a lot of power in your legs.”

Cox was at USL for the last 8 years of Shipley’s 16 years at the school, serving as the chief recruiter and helping the Cajuns grow from NAIA small school status to No. 4 in the country among major powers and threatening the national balance of power.

Five of his recruits went on to play in the NBA or ABA – Lamar, Freddie Saunders, Roy Ebron, Larry Fogle and Elvin Ivory.

The Cajuns weren’t able to land Ratleff, who went to Long Beach State (Cox felt Ratleff could have vaulted USL to the Final Four). He did appear at Blackham Coliseum, though, in the 1971-72 season’s Bayou Classic.

USL beat Long Beach State 90-83 and Cal State-Los Angeles 113-102 for the title, and Lamar and Ratleff shared tournament MVP honors.

Often asked who was better, Lamar or Andrew Toney, who helped the rebirth of the program after Shipley’s program ended, Cox had a mixed response.

“You’ve got an outright shooter against an all-around player,” Cox said. “If I were to put together a college team, it would be Bo, hands down. If it was the pro game, it would be Toney.”

But Fogle, who was a freshman on the 1972-73 Cajuns, gets the nod for sheer talent.

“Larry was the best overall player we had,” Cox added. “The year after he played for us, he went to Canisius and led the nation in scoring. Then he averaged 50 points per game in a pro league in New York.
“But Larry was always going to do it his way.”

* * * * * * *

Seeing Bo Lamar’s No. 10 again might shake up traditionalists

By Bruce Brown

Athletic Network

When a school or a professional sports franchise retires a jersey number, it is considered a singular honor to remember forever the achievements and contributions made by a player.

Once that number is retired, it can be hard to imagine anyone else wearing that jersey, even if the number is not officially unavailable.

No. 8 for the New Orleans Saints? Archie Manning.

No. 34 for the Chicago Bears? Walter Payton. No. 51? Dick Butkus. No. 40? Gale Sayers.

No. 17 for the Boston Celtics? John Havlicek.

No. 49 for the New York Yankees? Has to be Ron Guidry, former USL pitcher, Yankees’ Cy Young Award winner and Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame member.

Some names just fit the number forever.

Dwight “Bo” Lamar and the No. 10 are that way for Cajun basketball fans.

The Columbus, Ohio, native poured in 3,493 points for the Cajuns from 1969-73, averaging 36.0 points per game to lead the nation’s College Division as a sophomore and then topping that as a junior in 1971-72 at 36.3 points per game to pace the University Division.

Lamar had more scorers around him as a senior, but still averaged 28.9 points as a senior to finish with a 31.2 career average.

Remarkably, the ultimate long range bomber did all that before the 3-point shot was approved in college ball.

The University announced last month plans to re-purpose some retired jerseys and make them available to current players, starting with Lamar, who was supportive of the move.

“I would be honored for any player to wear the No. 10 in a Ragin’ Cajun uniform,” he said. “USL gave me the opportunity to showcase my talents in front of the greatest fans in the world.

“I enjoyed my time in Lafayette a great deal and I was able to develop lifelong friendships during my time on campus. I hope the next player who wears No. 10 will create their own legacy of success. USL has a special place in my heart and it’s an honor to help the program in any way I can.”
Lamar, who scored 4,478 points and dished out 1,063 assists in the ABA and NBA, is currently recovering from surgery in Columbus.

His flair for the dramatic – if he was in the building, he was within range – sparked the Cajuns to a combined 90-23 record and repeated Top 25 rankings.

Other players with retired numbers in basketball include the No. 24 worn by Andrew Toney (2,526 points, 23.6 ppg, NBA champion with the 76ers), the No. 14 worn by Marvin Winkler (2,128, 19.7), Dean Church’s No. 12 (1,546 points) and the No. 20 worn by Jerry Flake (2,058, 19.2).

Lamar, Toney and Winkler are in the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame.

Whoever opts to try on the No. 10 for Cajun basketball faces an enormous challenge. How can you top his exploits? You can’t.

You can honor the memory, but No. 10 will always belong to Bo Lamar.

* * * * * *

Lamar reached legendary status at Blackham

December 02, 2005 –
Dan McDonald
dmcdonald@theadvertiser.com

Few people can really claim to be legends in their own time.
But nobody disputes the fact that Dwight “Bo” Lamar is one.

When long-time Ragin’ Cajun basketball fans drive down Johnston Street and pass by Blackham Coliseum, they collectively see one mind’s-eye image.

They see that No. 10 jersey and the big Afro on top, elevating higher than most people thought possible on his jump shot, firing off rainbows that threatened the lights in the venerable building.
As the years have passed, the distances on those shots have grown. So have the stories. That’s what being a legend is all about.

But the facts and the record books don’t lie. In the storied history of USL/UL basketball, even in the current era of the 3-point basket, nobody shot it like Bo … never before, and almost certainly never will again.

“He had as much confidence shooting as anybody that ever played the game,” said long-time coach Beryl Shipley, the architect of the school’s greatest basketball era. “He felt like he could hit from anywhere.”

A lot of times, he did. Lamar led the nation in scoring twice – once in 1970-71 (36.0 points per game) in USL’s final year as a college-division team, and again in 1971-72 (36.3) in the Cajuns’ first year in what was then called the NCAA’s University Division. He remains the only player ever to lead both.

At the same time he and his teammates – and in no small role, the Cajun fans – made Blackham one of the nation’s college basketball hotbeds.

“The crowd is your home-court advantage,” Lamar said. “The basket’s 10 feet high everywhere. It’s what the crowd did that made it special. The fans fed off the team, and the team fed off the fans. It worked both ways. We had a good team and we had a heck of a crowd.”

Standing-room-only crowds weren’t unusual in those early-1970s’ seasons when USL played big games, and it helped that the Cajuns lost only one home game (Baylor, 93-90, in Lamar’s sophomore year) during his final three seasons.

USL went 25-4, 25-4 and 24-5 those years, going deep into the NCAA college division national tournament the first year and winning NCAA Tournament games each of the following two years when the tournament field was only 24 teams.

The fans came to see the Cajuns win, but they also came to see Bo.

“It was home for me,” Lamar said. “I don’t know of any other place I would have wanted to play. You could talk to the people in the crowd and get to know them because you knew where they sat all the time. It was crazy, fun for us but terrible for the visiting team.”

Lamar finished his career with 3,493 points, a lot of them from long range.

“What separated Bo from most guards was he had tremendous jumping ability,” said Tom Cox, a USL assistant coach at the time and the man that recruited Lamar. “When you shoot a jump shot, you have to have power in your legs. He could shoot it 30 feet because he could jump so high.”

“He’d scare you at times when his shots were dropping,” Shipley said.

The only player who has come close to grabbing that kind of Cajun fan attention was Andrew Toney, who played four years in Blackham from 1976-80 and became the second-leading scorer in school history before a standout NBA career.

“People have asked me to compare those guys and those teams,” Cox said. “I still don’t feel you can compare the teams. But when it comes to the players, as a college coach I’d take Bo at the blink of an eye, and as an NBA coach I’d take Andrew without a blink. Andrew was 6-foot-4 and strong, and in the NBA with hand-checking you take away a lot of long-range stuff.

“In Bo’s college career, you couldn’t defend as much on the perimeter because if someone touched you when you went up to shoot, it was a foul. That made him even that much better.”

Originally published December 2, 2005