1983 McDonald's All-American Boys Game | |
Visitor: | West |
Home: | East |
Visitor Total: | 115 |
Home Total: | 113 |
Visitor Per1: | 62 |
Visitor Per2: | 53 |
Home Per1: | 73 |
Home Per2: | 40 |
Date: | April 9, 1983 |
Referee: | 1 2 3 |
Arena: | Omni Coliseum |
City: | Atlanta, GA |
Attendance: | 14,926 |
Mvp: | Winston Bennett and Dwayne Washington |
Series: | McDonald's All-American |
Previous: | 1982 |
Next: | 1984 |
The 1983 McDonald's All-American Boys Game was an All-star basketball game played on Saturday, April 9, 1983 at the Omni Coliseum in Atlanta, Georgia. The game's rosters featured the best and most highly recruited high school boys graduating in 1983. The game was the 6th annual version of the McDonald's All-American Game first played in 1978.
The East team could count on the two top guards from the state of New York: Kenny Smith and Dwayne "Pearl" Washington, and also had several of the top 10 players of the class. The West had top-ranked forward Winston Bennett and center Joe Wolf.[1] The East dominated the first half and at halftime led the score 73 to 62.[2] The West came back during the second half, guided by two Kentucky commits: James Blackmon and Winston Bennett.[3] With 4:31 remaining, the West was still 11 points behind, but an 11-0 run tied the score. The decisive layup was scored by Blackmon with 9 seconds remaining on the clock: Dwayne Washington scored a layup with 1 second left, but the officials called a charge and the basket did not count. The West won the game 115 to 113: Washington (11 points and 8 assists) was named MVP together with Bennett, who scored 21 points. Other players who had good performances were Tom Sheehey (the top scorer of the game with 22 points), Blackmon (21 points), Bruce Dalrymple (16) and Michael Smith (15).[4] [5] Of the 25 players, 12 went on to play at least 1 game in the NBA.
No. | Name | Height | Weight | Position | Hometown | High school | College of Choice |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
– | 6-2 | – | Fairfax, VA, U.S. | Duke | |||
– | Mark Cline | 6-7 | – | Williamson, WV, U.S. | Wake Forest | ||
– | 6-9 | – | Philadelphia, PA, U.S. | DePaul | |||
– | Tom Curry | 6-9 | – | Baton Rouge, LA, U.S. | LSU[8] | ||
– | 6-4 | – | St. Johnsbury, VT, U.S. | Georgia Tech | |||
– | Frank Ford | 6-4 | – | Kissimmee, FL, U.S. | Auburn | ||
– | 6-5 | – | Greenville, NC, U.S. | Maryland | |||
– | Melvin Howard | 6-1 | – | Decatur, GA, U.S. | Georgia | ||
– | 6-9 | – | Kingston, PA, U.S. | Bishop O'Reilly | North Carolina | ||
– | 6-8 | – | Rochester, NY, U.S. | Virginia | |||
– | 6-2 | – | Jamaica, NY, U.S. | North Carolina | |||
– | 6-2 | – | Brooklyn, NY, U.S. | Syracuse | |||
– | 6-7 | – | Baltimore, MD, U.S. | Georgetown | |||
No. | Name | Height | Weight | Position | Hometown | High school | College of Choice |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
– | 6-2 | – | Las Vegas, NV, U.S. | UNLV | |||
– | 6-7 | – | Louisville, KY, U.S. | Kentucky | |||
– | 6-3 | – | Marion, IN, U.S. | Kentucky | |||
– | 6-3 | – | Playa del Rey, CA, U.S. | Saint Bernard | UCLA | ||
– | 6-5 | – | Detroit, MI, U.S. | Michigan | |||
– | 7-2 | – | Whitehall, OH, U.S. | Duke | |||
– | Kevin Smith | 6-7 | – | Lansing, MI, U.S. | Minnesota | ||
– | 6-9 | – | Hacienda Heights, CA, U.S. | BYU | |||
– | 6-11 | – | Lovejoy, IL, U.S. | Lovejoy | Louisville | ||
– | 6-7 | – | Westchester, IL, U.S. | Indiana | |||
– | 6-8 | – | Houston, TX, U.S. | Houston | |||
– | 6-10 | – | Kohler, WI, U.S. | North Carolina | |||
The East team was coached by:
The West team was coached by: