
‘Hoosiers' star Gene Hackman will leave a lasting impression on basketball fans
Gene Hackman's portrayal of coach Norman Dale in 'Hoosiers' represented the soul of the legendary 1986 movie.
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On its face, 'Hoosiers' was intended to be a snapshot of the unique hysteria of small-town high school basketball in Indiana, culminating in Hickory High's improbable run to the state title.
Dale was a hypercompetitive former big-city East Coast college coach who arrived in rural Hickory, Ind., brimming with bemusement and befuddled by the norms of the small town. His transformation — and redemption — throughout the film was the heartbeat of the box-office classic.
'Hoosiers' fans lost their Coach Dale on Wednesday. Hackman and his wife were found dead in their home Wednesday afternoon, the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Office according to multiple reports. Hackman was 95.
Part of the nostalgic obsession Generation X has for 'Hoosiers' is that so many had contemporaneous high school sports experiences with coaches like Dale, who preached 'my practices aren't designed for your enjoyment.' Many of those coaches then would probably qualify now as undeniably toxic, but Hackman's portrayal of Dale transcended that archetype.
Dale's strict standards are conveyed early on through classic lines: 'You are in the Army. You're in my Army. Every day between 3 and 5 (p.m.).'
The magic of Hackman's performance is how he evolves the character from there.
Rest in Peace to the great Gene Hackman! 🙏🏀🎥And thank you for your contributions to Indiana high school basketball as Coach Norman Dale in the 1986 movie, "Hoosiers". pic.twitter.com/myLKLLPxQi
— IHSAA (@IHSAA1) February 27, 2025
Hackman was not a stranger to playing a movie coach: Along with Dale in 'Hoosiers,' he also played U.S. ski coach Eugene Claire in the 1969 film 'Downhill Racer.' Thirty-one years later, Hackman was football coach Jimmy McGinty in 'The Replacements,' a comedy about misfit scab players taking over a pro football roster.
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But Hackman will be remembered most as Dale, who had his own story within the big-picture story. Exiled from college basketball coaching for the cardinal sin of putting his hands on a player, Dale became loyal to the six Hickory players who stuck with him. A classic line from Dale as he introduced the players to his philosophy: 'Five players on the floor functioning as one single unit: team, team, team — no one more important than the other.'
Dale displayed a powerful empathy for his volunteer assistant coach Wilbur 'Shooter' Flatch (played by Dennis Hopper). He fell for basketball skeptic Myra Fleener (Barbara Hershey), and he found a way to relate to her surrogate ward, Jimmy Chitwood (Maris Valainis).
It isn't all redemption arc: Part of the enjoyment of watching Hackman immerse in the role of Dale are those moments where he delivered memorable outbursts at the refs, opposing coaches and opposing fans — even at ornery townsfolk.
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To the townspeople: 'I would hope you would support who we are, not who we are not. These six individuals have made a choice to work, a choice to sacrifice, to put themselves on the line 23 nights for the next four months, to represent you, this high school. That kind of commitment and effort deserves and demands your respect! This is your team.' (Hackman's delivery of 'deserves and demands your respect' is incredible.)
To the refs, after Dale benched a petulant player, leaving him with only four players: 'My team's on the floor!'
And, of course, during the film's climax during the state championship game's final moments in a huddle: 'I love you guys.'
As the film hit that crescendo of Dale's redemption arc — and remember, this was amid the 'Rambo' and 'Terminator'-led mid-1980s — it was a stunning demonstration of vulnerability from a coach who, 90 minutes earlier in the movie, was a cynical, just-win tough guy.
Nearly 40 years later, it is impossible to imagine any actor other than Hackman embodying Dale, a nuanced and commanding performance in what could have otherwise landed as a schmaltzy sports flick. If there is a Mount Rushmore of coaches portrayed in modern U.S. sports movies, I would argue the following three are locks: Hackman's Dale, Denzel Washington's Herman Boone in 'Remember the Titans' and Pat Morita's Mr. Miyagi in 'The Karate Kid.'
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Fourteen years after 'Hoosiers,' Hackman would play McGinty in 'The Replacements,' who might be considered a campy version of Dale. Then at 70 years old, Hackman had fun with the role; his performance as McGinty, however, might not have resonated as much had moviegoers not had the collective memory of his performance as Dale.
Dale's 'We're gonna be winners' quote just before Hickory takes the court for the regional finals is worth watching (and rewatching) in its original form. The part that gets me — the genius of Hackman in this role — is not the stemwinder of the end of that monologue. It is the pause just after that. With his speech left hanging in the air, he delivers the visceral 'OK?!' Right then, it clicked for his players.
It wasn't enough that he delivered a rah-rah pep talk. That 'OK?!' is the culmination of everything Dale went through: Exile from college basketball, arriving in Hickory, changing (and being changed by) the town, the pressure and overall promise of what lies ahead. In that moment, Dale is at his most exposed.
Hackman showed why, for many sports fans, Norman Dale is a coach we all wanted to have.
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