Postseason play became a frequent occurrence for the University of Louisiana when Bobby Paschal was its head basketball coach from 1978-86.
The Ragin' Cajuns of then-USL won 153 games under Paschal and lost 85, competing in the NCAA Tournament twice and three times playing in the National Invitation Tournament.
That was a far cry from 1975, when Paschal arrived on campus as an assistant under Jim Hatfield.
The Cajun program had been dismantled for two years for NCAA infractions, and it was the task of Hatfield and Paschal to get it back on its feet as quickly as possible.
Hatfield stayed for three seasons, then turned the reins over to Paschal, whose 1979-80 squad reached the quarterfinals of the NIT.
"I think the very first time we got back in postseason play after we re-started the program will always be a special moment," said Paschal, who will join the 2005 induction class in the Louisiana Association of Basketball Coaches Hall of Fame.
"We were able to get into the NIT, then beat Alabama-Birmingham and Texas to reach the quarterfinals against Minnesota. That was a big moment."
Future Philadelphia 76ers star Andrew Toney led that team, along with fellow seniors Dion Rainey and Carl Jordan.
Paschal's 1981-82 team stunned No. 1 Georgetown, beat Washington State and then Marquette in the finals to open with a title in the Great Alaska Shootout on the way to a 24-8 record, a Southland Conference title and an NCAA Tournament berth.
The rest of the story
Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com