Home Bruce Hornsby: UVA Basketball’s University Hall good-luck charm
Sports

Bruce Hornsby: UVA Basketball’s University Hall good-luck charm

Contributors

Bruce Hornsby was the only interview for Mad About U: Four Decades of Basketball at University Hall that made me nervous.

I remember him indicating to me in his email response to my request for an interview that it seemed to be coming out of left field to want to talk with him for the book.

It seemed obvious to me. He had become known, over the years, as a bit of a good-luck charm for UVA basketball.

That was my excuse, anyway.

“I played basketball in high school – had an offer to play at Randolph-Macon when they were (Division II). But by my junior year, senior year in high school, I got more and more interested in the piano, so I let the basketball go. I had two roads to choose, and chose the correct one,” said Hornsby, an internationally renowned musician and singer who became a fan of Virginia basketball, as he said, “when a lot of people did, in the early ’80s during the Sampson era.”

A 1988 tour of the Commonwealth included a stop at University Hall.

“After the show, Terry Holland came by,” Hornsby said. “He was at the show. He was the basketball coach then, and he and his daughters had come to the show. Coach started talking to me then about doing something for the program.”

The two became fast friends – and in 1989, Holland called on Hornsby to serve as a celebrity coach for the program’s annual Blue-Orange game.

“John Havlicek’s son, Chris, played for the team then, so they got Havlicek to be one coach, and I was the other coach,” said Hornsby, who challenged the Boston Celtics great to a game of H-O-R-S-E at halftime of the game.

“He beat me H-O-R-S-E to H-O-R. Of course, he was cheating his ass off on some of the shots. He wouldn’t shoot double-clutches. He would just shoot it from the spot. That’s my whining version of it, anyway,” Hornsby said.

Hornsby coached in the Blue-Orange game several times thereafter. The most memorable was the 1990 game that featured actor Woody Harrelson on the opposing sideline.

“We played one-on-one at halftime, and I waxed his hind parts – 11-2. Coming straight over from a Grateful Dead tour in Europe. I took the red-eye back from London after we played Wembley Stadium the night before with the Dead and played Woody at halftime,” Hornsby said.

It was around this time that Hornsby began to get a reputation among the UVa. faithful of being a good-luck charm.

“This says a lot about the hilarious and inane superstitions of sports people. For a while, it was considered in UVa. athletic-department circles that I was good luck. Because every time I’d come to a game, they would win. Of course, they didn’t think that, you know, we’re just good. We win a lot,” Hornsby said.

“It culminated, hilariously, in going to the ACC tournament down in the Charlotte Coliseum, and when I got there – and I went with my sons – and I walk in and take my seat, and about eight people come up to me and say, ‘Oh, thank God you’re here.’ And I thought, ‘You people need to shake yourselves,’ ” Hornsby said.

“This all started at U Hall games. Those were the games that I would go to that they would always win,” Hornsby said.

Story by Chris Graham

Support AFP

Multimedia

 

Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

Waynesboro Multicultural Festival
Local News, Politics

Waynesboro Schools hold Multicultural Festival: Brave move, in current environment

newspapers
Columns

We sold AFP in 2022: Now the site is back under our 100 percent full control

In 2022, after a year of mental health issues spurred by a life-threatening pulmonary embolism, I decided to sell the augustafreepress.com domain.

supreme court
Go 'Hoos, Politics

UVA set to honor Chief Trump Enabler John Roberts in the name of Thomas Jefferson

UVA and the Thomas Jefferson Foundation at Monticello just rendered their supposed highest honor, a Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal, utterly meaningless, with the move to give one of their 2026 medals to Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts.

nurse doctor medical health
Go 'Hoos, Local News

UVA Health Blue Ridge Poison Center: Don’t Google it, because AI doesn’t know

uva baseball chris pollard
Baseball, Go 'Hoos

UVA Baseball: #9 Virginia outslugs Liberty, 14-12, to improve to 18-4

prison education program classroom inmate learning
Local News

Charlottesville: PVCC to expand prison education program, prep students for career

uva basketball kymora johnson
Basketball, Go 'Hoos

UVA Basketball: Kymora Johnson, Coach Mox, finally going dancing