Former Arizona players Jason Terry, center, and Andre Iguodala, right, with former UA associate coach Jim Rosborough after Rosborough's speech during the University of Arizona's Memorial Service for Lute Olson on Sunday.

Sean Elliott couldn’t be in Tucson for Lute Olson’s memorial service Sunday, so he sat in his San Antonio office and sent a video. Elliott dressed for the occasion, wearing a blue Arizona shirt while sitting in front of a basketball depicting the 1989 afternoon he broke Arizona’s career scoring record.

Elliott spoke solemnly about Olson. β€œWhen he walked into practice, it was like God showed up,” he said. β€œHis presence, his aura. It was a little intimidating.”

That was the theme at Sunday’s 90-minute service at McKale Center.

β€œWhere would our athletic department be β€” where would our university be, where would our community be β€” without (Olson’s) greatness and standard of excellence?” said UA athletic director Dave Heeke, who referred to McKale Center as β€œhallowed ground.”

But none of the nine speakers, from Steve Kerr to Cedric Dempsey to Olson’s widow, Kelly, chose to make Olson’s memorial a weepy, mournful afternoon. Emcee Brian Jeffries opened the ceremony by reminding about 400 former players, coaches, fans and UA administrators that Olson was β€œthe man who brought us perhaps the most important thing in life β€” joy.”

Olson, who died in August 2020 at age 85, would’ve preferred it that way. He lived a full and joyful life. His smile was straight out of Hollywood and he used it often.

Former UA associate athletic director Rocky LaRose, an up-close witness to Olson’s 11 Pac-10 championships and 23 consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances, said that when she thinks of Olson, she thinks not of the pressure of meeting those expectations but of his ability to β€œbe calm and carry on.”

That’s how I prefer to remember Olson, too.

It wasn’t the drama of March Madness that defined his life. It was how he carried on and enjoyed the journey.

Every time I see Elliott and Kerr, I think back to a mid-summer afternoon in France, 1986, when they were part of Olson’s Team USA underdog entry in the FIBA World Championships. The USA Basketball administrators had unknowingly booked Olson’s team into a budget hotel in Jouy-en-Josas, a suburb of Paris.

No air conditioning. Cot-sized beds. The hotel bordered a cornfield and the humidity was stifling. Syracuse center Rony Seikaly said he had been bitten by so many mosquitoes he wasn’t sure he could play in an exhibition game against the French national team.

Kelly Olson, center, wife of Lute Olson, smiles after watching a video tribute Sunday at McKale Center. Lute Olson passed away at age 85 last year.

Rather than sit in that hotel, Olson gave the team Sunday off and arranged for a bus to take the players to Paris, stopping at Notre Dame, near all of the leading tourist attractions: the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower and the Champs Elysees.

But when Olson stepped on the bus that morning β€” he kindly allowed me and Jack Rickard of the Tucson Citizen to accompany the team β€” he wore an Indiana Hoosiers shirt. Olson’s luggage hadn’t survived the flight from Los Angeles through Amsterdam to Paris, but the team trainer, employed by Olson’s longtime nemesis Bobby Knight, had several extra Hoosiers game-day shirts.

When Olson stepped on the bus, Navy center David Robinson laughed.

β€œShould we start calling you Coach Knight?” he asked.

Laughter filled the bus. Lute laughed, too.

Once the bus stopped at the Notre Dame cathedral, Olson told the team they were on their own for several hours and to meet at the bus at 5 p.m. I accompanied Olson, Rickard and assistant coach Bobby Cremins of Georgia Tech for the day.

After seeing the sights, Olson suggested we get a table at an outdoor restaurant and have a beer on the Champs Elysees. The waiter took our order and returned with four large β€œyards” of beer. You had to use two hands to lift the container, as if drinking out of a saxophone. One yard of French beer felt like a six-pack.

About an hour later, the waiter asked if we wanted another round.

Olson, who was about 6 feet 4 inches tall with a tight end’s body, ordered another. The others were still trying to finish the first yard.

Finally, about an hour before the bus was to leave, Olson said he was hungry. We found a Burger King on the Champs Elysees. Olson ate his cheeseburger while walking to the bus. He did not notice that the ketchup and mustard dripped onto his Indiana Hoosiers basketball shirt.

We stepped back onto the bus following a long, hot afternoon, and Olson sat in the first row of seats. He was asleep in maybe two minutes.

When Kerr, Elliott, Robinson and Team USA arrived 30 minutes later, they all saw the imposing coach dozing, ketchup and mustard stains defying his typically spotless appearance.

β€œHey coach,” said North Carolina guard Kenny Smith. β€œMaybe you better wear my Tar Heels shirt tomorrow.” Everybody laughed.

With that, Olson awoke. He looked down at his shirt, shook his head, and delivered one of the best one-liners I’ve ever heard.

β€œSomeone take a picture and send it to Bobby Knight,” he said. β€œI’ve always wanted him to know what I think of him.”

Two weeks later, coaching a team of college players against the heavily-favored Russian pros, Olson’s team won the world championship.

As Elliott said in his video, β€œmy fondest memories of Coach Olson have nothing to do with basketball.”

Contact sports columnist Greg Hansen at 520-573-4362 or ghansen@tucson.com. On Twitter: @ghansen711


Become a #ThisIsTucson member! Your contribution helps our team bring you stories that keep you connected to the community. Become a member today.

Contact sports columnist Greg Hansen at 520-573-4362 or ghansen@tucson.com. On Twitter: @ghansen711