- Orsten Artis
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Orsten Artis is a retired American basketball player. He started at guard for the 1965–66 Texas Western Miners basketball team, the first team in history to win an NCAA championship with five African-American players in the starting lineup.
Artis, a 6'1 guard from Froebel High School in Gary, Indiana, played for coach Don Haskins at Texas Western University (now the University of Texas at El Paso). With teammates Bobby Joe Hill, David Lattin, Nevil Shed and Harry Flournoy, Artis was a part of the first team with an all-black starting lineup to win an NCAA championship after upsetting the Kentucky Wildcats in the 1966 NCAA championship. Artis averaged 12.6 points per game that season and was the team's third leading scorer.[1]
The team would be inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2007 and were the subject of the book and movie Glory Road.[2]
Artis later became a police detective in his native Gary. He is now retired.[3]
References
- ^ 1965-66 Texas Western stats, accessed September 11, 2011
- ^ Hall of Fame bio, accessed September 11, 2011
- ^ UTEP biography, accessed September 11, 2011
Texas Western Miners Basketball 1965–66 NCAA Champions 11 Willie Cager | 14 Bobby Joe Hill | 23 Orsten Artis | 24 Willie Worsley | 33 Nevil Shed | 42 Dave Lattin | 44 Harry Flournoy
Coach Don Haskins
Assistant Coaches: Moe IbaCategories:- 1943 births
- Living people
- African American basketball players
- Basketball players from Indiana
- People from Gary, Indiana
- UTEP Miners basketball players
- Shooting guards
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