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Coach Wooden Sized Up 5-8 Goodrich Right Away

Scouting another player, Wizard of Westwood saw the potential of an undersized junior guard at Poly High.

VALLEY / VENTURA COUNTY SPORTS

CENTURY OF STARS. A look at the top athletes from the region.

December 17, 1999|ERIC SONDHEIMER, TIMES STAFF WRITER

As a 5-foot-8, 145-pound junior guard at Poly High, Gail Goodrich hardly resembled a future Hall of Fame basketball player--except in the eyes of John Wooden.

Wooden, the UCLA coach, had never seen Goodrich play when he went to scout another player in a City Section playoff game in 1960.


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"I was seated there with my closest friend," Wooden said. "As they were playing, I said to my friend, 'That little fellow from Poly is the smartest player on the floor. He's quick and he's just a junior and I'll be watching him next year.'

"Right after that, a couple tapped me on my shoulder. 'Coach Wooden, did you really mean what you said about that little guard?' I said, 'Yes.' They were his parents. They said, 'Could we bring him over to talk to you.' "

Later, after reviewing Goodrich's transcripts, Wooden told his parents, "From what I see, I'll undoubtedly give him a scholarship.' I definitely felt he was going to grow."

A year later, Goodrich was 5-11 and leading Poly to the City championship with an unforgettable performance on a broken ankle in the final against Manual Arts. He chose UCLA over USC, the school where his father, Gail Sr., had been team captain in 1939.

"If [his parents] hadn't been there, we undoubtedly wouldn't have gotten him," Wooden said.

Wooden saw in Goodrich special skills that others might have missed because of his size.

"I thought he had a feel for the game," Wooden said. "It makes you feel good when you really have that feeling [about somebody] and they come through."

Goodrich would become one of the few players in basketball history to win championships at the high school, college and professional levels.

He helped UCLA win its first two NCAA championships in 1964 and '65. And he was the leading scorer on the Lakers' 1971-72 NBA championship team that won a record 33 consecutive games.

Growing up in North Hollywood, the left-handed Goodrich practiced his shooting skills anywhere and everywhere.

"I grew up with a basketball in my hand," he said.

His backyard, the park, the local high school--they all served as Goodrich's sandbox. As a young boy, he'd tag along with his father, a basketball official, to small college games and shoot between breaks.

"When I was small, I'd take a volleyball because a basketball was too big and I'd shoot at halftime," Goodrich said.

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