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Houston’s Sampson gets emotional talking about his father

Houston head coach Kelvin Sampson celebrates with the team following Houston's win over Cincinnati an NCAA college basketball game in the final round of the American Athletic Conference men's tournament Sunday, March 14, 2021, in Fort Worth, Texas. (AP Photo/Ron Jenkins) (Ron Jenkins, Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Houston coach Kelvin Sampson grew emotional Friday talking about his father, John W. “Ned” Sampson, the longtime coach of Pembroke High School in North Carolina who once went toe-to-toe with members of the Ku Klux Klan.

The Sampson family are members of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, which has been advocating for federal recognition as Native Americans for more than a century, and the tribe often ran into conflict with Klan members in the 1950s.

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On Jan. 13, 1958, the Klan arrived in Maxton, North Carolina, to rally against what they called “race mixing” after a Lumbee family moved into an all-white neighborhood and a Lumbee woman began dating a white man. Ned Sampson was among a group that forced the Klan out of town in what is still celebrated today as the Battle of Hayes Pond.

Photos of several Lumbees involved in the confrontation were published in “Life” magazine.

“The KKK was huge in that area. That’s a vivid, vivid, very clear memory for me,” said Kelvin Sampson, the only Native American coach among 353 in Division I basketball. “It was very divided, very racist, but we survived and we achieved.

“I think my dad’s reputation was someone that you looked up to,” Sampson said. "He was the coach. He drove a 1963 Falcon. You could fit 10 kids in there. I know, because he would take them home after practice. A lot of them lived in the country, and he would always take them home. That’s a pretty good person to have as a role model and hero growing up.”

NABC AWARDS

Final Four teams were well represented in the National Association of Basketball Coaches Division I award winners for the 2020-21 season.

Gonzaga coach Mark Few was named coach of the year after leading the Zags to an undefeated season heading into the Final Four. Davion Mitchell was the defensive player after spearheading Baylor's swarming defense on the way to its first Final Four in 71 years.

Iowa's Luka Garza took home two awards, earning player of the year and Pete Newell Big Man of the Year for the second straight season.

Oklahoma State’s Cade Cunningham was the freshman of the year.

LONG ODDS

Gonzaga is bidding to become Division I's first undefeated team since Indiana in 1975-76.

Oddsmakers are sure expecting the Zags to at least get to Monday's title game.

The top overall seed in the bracket, Gonzaga is pegged as a 14-point favorite over UCLA, according to BetMGM and Pregame.com. That's the biggest point spread for a Final Four game in 25 years.

The Zags, who covered the spread their first four NCAA Tournament games, are -225 favorites to win the national title. Baylor is +375, Houston +600 and UCLA +2500, according to BetMGM.

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