Speedy Morris’s Fall From Basketball Glory
IT’S MORNING AT Bob’s Diner, a longtime Roxborough greasy spoon on Ridge Avenue that hustles omelets and offers a bird’s-eye view of a small, lumpy cemetery. At a corner table, leaning over a plate of egg whites and toast, sits a white-haired man who used to be somebody in this town.
William “Speedy” Morris may not be getting a celebrity look-over here at Bob’s, but I wouldn’t judge much by that. Bob’s isn’t exactly show-biz central, which is why you often find Speedy at places like this. Besides, it’s been a decade since Speedy’s been in the news.
Miss a beat, and interest fades; miss two, and people forget.
The basketball heads don’t forget, though. Talk to guys like Fran Dunphy, John Griffin and Phil Martelli, coaching disciples of Speedy and long-standing members of the city’s coaching elite, and they’ll tell you straight out: Speedy Morris was the man. They’ll remind you, should you have dared to forget, how Speedy brought glory to La Salle; how he recruited Lionel Simmons, one of the city’s all-time best, and the job he did with Doug Overton, who could pick the pocket of any player in the game. They’ll make it a point you remember that there were four NCAA appearances and four conference championships, and don’t forget 1990, when no one could touch La Salle, when the team lost just two games and finished the season nationally ranked.
What a ride Speedy had! The neighborhood guys watching on the TVs in the dozens of taverns and taprooms that dot the hills of Manayunk and Roxborough, Speedy’s home turf, couldn’t believe it: Speedy Morris on national TV, rubbing elbows with the big-timers, guys like Coach K and Dean Smith and Bobby Knight!
And let’s not forget, because Speedy never will, all those glorious Big 5 nights at the Palestra in front of 10,000 roaring local fans—half of them screaming for La Salle to stick it to Villanova (or St. Joe’s, or Temple, or Penn), the other half howling for Speedy to sit his ass down.
Heady times? You have no idea.