By Melissa Dunson
mdunson@joplinglobe.com
At 78 years old, Keith Adams, of Joplin, stands 6 feet 4 inches tall.
His memory isn’t as sharp as it once was, but his hands still know how to make a basketball dance.
It was 60 years ago when Adams and his teammates on the Tamko Roofers basketball team “danced” their way across the floor of Joplin Memorial Hall and beat the famous Harlem Globetrotters by one point.
“(The Globetrotters) were used to winning, but we weren’t surprised by the outcome,” Adams said. “We were used to winning, too.”
As some of the younger players on the team, Adams, then 19, and the other living team members, Bud Kite, 78, of Joplin, and Fred Daugherty, 79, of Carthage, were relegated to the bench for the big game. But despite the passage of six decades, the men said they can’t forget the looks on the Globetrotters’ faces.
“I think they were expecting to win by one point,” Daugherty said, laughing. “Their intention was to beat us a little bit, but it didn’t happen like that. They were mad.”
Kite said the Roofers were down by one point in the last three seconds of the game. Lester Cooper, a longtime Tamko employee, looked left, then launched a quick jump shot to his right. It was a long shot, but Adams heard the sweet sound of the ball bouncing off the backboard and falling through the net.
Basketball was rough back then. Kite said one of the Roofers players walked away from that game with three broken ribs. Another had blood running down both arms from scratches.
The beginning
The Tamko Roofers started as a publicity stunt. Kite said what now is Tamko Building Products Inc. struggled in its early years. In 1947, Fred Wolfson, a Tamko partner, thought a basketball team could benefit the company’s image.
The players came from the Joplin YMCA, local colleges and the Tamko employee roster. They played local and national teams two to six times a week. After three years, the Roofers had traveled 3,200 miles and played 92 games, winning 81 of them.
Memories
Beating the Globetrotters isn’t the only good memory the team members have of their years with the Roofers. There are memories of steak dinners on the corporate dime, showing up to work an hour late after a long night on the court, driving shiny 1949 Ford company cars, and the camaraderie of working and playing with friends.
“Every one of the guys were friends,” Daugherty said. “It was a party time, a great time. I just remember the fellowship was wonderful.”
Adams’ favorite memory of his time on the team is making the winning shot to beat an Anderson team in a Four-State Area tournament.
“Rusty (Haynes) had fouled out, so they put me in,” Adams said. “Anderson’s plan was to hold onto the ball and go into overtime, but I grabbed it out of the guy’s hands and made the shot. There was no doubt we would have lost that game without that.”
The Tamko Roofers team dissolved in 1951 when several of the team members went into military service. A small group of those players went on to play with the Joplin Body & Trailer corporate team.
Joplin performance
The Harlem Globetrotters will perform at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Missouri Southern State University’s Leggett & Platt Athletic Center in Joplin. Tickets range from $16 to $70 a person, and may be purchased at the ticket office on the bottom floor of Billingsly Student Center or by visiting www.ticketmaster.com/promo/z8mlyv.
Joplin Metro
<img src="http://www.joplinglobeonline.com/images/zope/extra.gif" border=0>Tamko Roofers remember with glee 1-point victory over Harlem Globetrotters<font color="#ff0000"> w/ link to official Harlem Globetrotter Web site</font>
- Joplin Metro
-
-
Longtime Democrat dies at 81
Sapp, 81, died Thursday. Funeral services were Monday at the First Presbyterian Church of Joplin. A longtime Jasper County Democratic committeewoman and volunteer, Sapp for years was secretary to the county’s central committee.
-
Water company worker killed in construction accident
A Missouri-American Water Company employee died from an injury sustained Wednesday at a work site at 25th Street and Moffet Avenue.
-
Joplin teen pleads guilty to assault on police officer
Allen Russell entered an open plea of guilty on the charge in Jasper County Circuit Court with respect to an attack Dec. 4 on Officer Joshua Hanes of the Joplin Police Department.
-
Public forum on broadband tomorrow
Plans for a regional broadband initiative will be outlined on Friday at a public meeting set for 10 a.m. to noon at the Joplin Public Library.
-
School-bond election an emotional issue for voters
A question of whether to allow the Joplin School District to take out $62 million in bonds for a new high school is bringing out emotions in Joplin voters.
-
Globe wins news-reporting award from ASNE
The Joplin Globe was awarded the Jesse Laventhol Prize for Deadline News Reporting by the American Society of News Editors on Monday in Washington D.C.
-
Joplin man sentenced for role in child's alcohol-poisoning death
The uncle, in whose home an 11-year-old Joplin boy died of alcohol poisoning from a drinking game with the uncle’s girlfriend, has been sentenced to 10 years in prison.
-
Motivational speaker offers free marriage course
Presented by Mark Gungor, the course is being offered free to the community. The event is being held to aid in tornado relief.
-
District sends faculty, administrators on site visits
With the design phase of several buildings in Joplin Schools ending in May, the district has sent 66 administration, faculty, parents and community members on site visits to 22 schools and two technology company headquarters across the country.
-
Mural depicting Joplin High School dedicated
A four-paneled mural depicting the recent history of Joplin High School was dedicated at the Memorial 9th- and 10th-grade Center Tuesday morning. The mural will be moved to the new high school when it is completed in 2014.
- More Joplin Metro Headlines
-



