Had a great chat with him yesterday, and I can say that he's one of the kindest, finest people I've met. We chatted about his family, faith, his current coaching role at NCCU, Duke's current team and a certain DUNK he had versus Scott Williams over at UNC! (We were at Duke at the same time).
I reminded him of this dunk and the fact that the referee had called a walk on him on that play (and it was NOT a walk!) and he remembered the play!
He said 'yes, when I got back home that night, my roommate had it on the tape and he showed me the film, and I really didn't walk on it. That was Dick Paparo who called me for walking, and I felt like I should call him up and get on him about that call!' Duke was playing the holes over at The Hill, and Brick just wound up his dunk and jumped higher than I've ever seen him jump. He crammed the ball right over Williams' head and then the ref whistled him! It was criminal I tell you, criminal.
dth.
I was 10 years old when he threw that one down and even back then I knew he didn't walk. Terrible call. The next day at school that's all anyone wanted to talk about. Interestingly enough, JD Alleva was in my class back then.
great video collection. RB wasn't a great shooter, but man could he dunk the ball!!!
I played pickup with him when at Duke...pretty much made no sense to box him out. He just soared over you for the rebound!
To this day I'm convinced we'd have beat Seton Hall and then Michigan had Brickey not been undercut and injured in that game.
Brickey remains one of my favorite duke players ever. If anyone happens to have his jersey anywhere, I'd be very interested.
That was one of many memorable dunks the Brickeyman had. Someone should create a highlight reel of them all; some were truly incredible. I'd have to say next to Grant Hill, he was the best Duke dunker of all time.
He had an outstanding block on a last-second Jeff Lebo jumper where he came out of nowhere to seal the victory against Carolina.
Serious hops.