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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/image_2275.jpeg]]
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3''Hoosiers'' is a 1986 film about Indiana high school basketball, directed by David Anspaugh and starring Creator/GeneHackman.
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5Hackman stars as Norman Dale, a former big-time college basketball coach who comes to the tiny town Hickory, Indiana in 1951 to coach Hickory High School's equally-tiny basketball team. Dale must overcome his own troubled past, win over the humble-yet-all-the-while-skeptical Hickory townsfolk, and get his players to believe in themselves before the game they play. In his spare time, he romances a schoolteacher played by Barbara Hershey. Creator/DennisHopper co-stars as "Shooter" Flatch, a former Hickory High basketball star turned alcoholic hobo, who starts on a redemption quest of his own when he becomes one of Dale's coaches.
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8!!This film provides examples of:
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10* TheAce: Jimmy Chitwood, who will hit just about any shot you ask him to make. The town is very concerned about getting Jimmy to play, as Jimmy has said he won't be playing basketball for the upcoming season.
11* TheAlcoholic: Shooter is an unshaven, unkempt alcoholic mess.
12* AteHisGun: Averted off-screen. After Shooter fell off the proverbial wagon ''hard'' one night, during which time he'd humiliated Coach Dale and the entire Hickory team during an important game of theirs, he was later found by his son and Coach Dale, unconscious in a field somewhere with his rifle, having apparently passed out before he could use it on himself. [[spoiler:They take him to the hospital to dry out, where he recovers, earning his son's respect for the first time in the process.]]
13* BaitAndSwitch: At the first meeting between Dale and the men of the town, the town pastor assumes that Coach Dale is a God-abiding Christian man who will invigorate his boys with the way of the Lord--before then asking if Dale will use a zone defense or play man-to-man.
14* BigGame: For the state championship against the seemingly-unbeatable South Bend Central, no less!
15* BunnyEarsLawyer: Shooter may be the town drunk, but he knows basketball. Even Dale is impressed with his knowledge enough to hire him as an Assistant Coach.
16* DarkAndTroubledPast: Coach Dale has settled for a job at rinky-dink Hickory because he was run out of college basketball for [[spoiler:punching one of his players]].
17* DavidVersusGoliath: [[DiscussedTrope Discussed]]. Quoted verbatim, in fact: "... and David put his hand in the bag and took out a stone and flung it, and it struck the Philistine in the head, and he fell to the ground. Amen."
18* DownOnTheFarm: As hayseed of a Midwestern American town as it gets, populated by nothing but farmers.
19* DownToTheLastPlay: "I'll make it." (The real game actually did end in a buzzer-beater shot to win the title.)
20* EverytownAmerica: The humble hamlet of Hickory, Indiana, populated by simple rural folk whose lives practically revolve around the high school basketball team.
21* GloryDays: Shooter was once a high school basketball star. The memory haunts him, at least when he compares it to the wreck his life has become.
22* GracefulLoser: The South Bend coach consoles a dejected player, then pleasantly shakes hands with Dale after losing.
23* HopeBringer: Jimmy TheAce rejoining the basketball team on the condition that Coach Dale stays is taken seriously by everyone and turns the season around for the team.
24* ImprobableAimingSkills: Count how many shots Jimmy Chitwood takes, and how many of them he makes, over the course of the movie.
25** What's even more improbable? The scene where Jimmy shoots basket after basket while Coach Dale talks to him was shot in one take.
26** And then he misses the final shot of the scene after Coach has finished, foreshadowing that maybe the talk got to him.
27* MarketBasedTitle: Released in the UK as ''Best Shot'', as "Hoosier" is a somewhat-colloquial term referring to someone from Indiana.
28* OpposingSportsTeam: Averted. South Bend Central appears to be a perfectly sportsmanlike team.
29* TheQuietOne: Jimmy Chitwood says hardly anything over the course of the film other than his short "I reckon it's time for me to start playing ball" speech at the town meeting, and "I'll make it" at the end when they're talking about who should take the last shot.
30* RealPersonCameo:
31** The PA announcer for the state final was played by Tom Carnegie, who was the TV play-by-play announcer for the actual 1954 state final (see "Very Loosely Based on a True Story" below).
32** The radio announcer for the state final was played by Hilliard Gates, who filled the same role for the actual 1954 final.
33** South Bend Central's head coach was played by Ray Crowe, who ''also'' had a connection to the real-life basis of the story. In the real 1954 state tournament, he was head coach of the segregated Crispus Attucks High School of Indianapolis, which lost in the state quarterfinals to the film's real-life basis, Milan High.[[labelnote:Postscript]]Attucks, with Crowe as head coach and future Hall of Famer Oscar Robertson as floor leader, won the next two state titles.[[/labelnote]]
34** According to Website/IMDb, Bobby Plump, the very loose basis for Jimmy Chitwood, has a cameo as well.
35* RedemptionQuest: For the disgraced Norman Dale.
36** Shooter too, for his whole wasted life, as well as for disgracing his son.
37* RousingSpeech:
38** The "winners" speech gets the SlowClap of approval from the team.
39** A short and subdued one that shows what a master Coach Dale is at motivating his team. The Hickory kids walk into the arena in Indianapolis and are awed by the sheer size of the place, and how it dwarfs their little gym. Coach Dale then whips out a tape measure and demonstrates that the dimensions of the court are exactly the same as the ones for their court back in Hickory.
40* SeriousBusiness: The people of Hickory really, REALLY care about the high school basketball team, going so far as to hold ''town meetings'' concerning the team.
41** Surprisingly enough, this was TruthInTelevision in small-town Indiana, at least until they [[TheyChangedItNowItSucks started combining the various high schools and getting rid of the one-class championship, in favor of four classes.]] Bring up the issue of "class basketball" for the real SeriousBusiness.
42** The town of Milan is still proud of the actual team victory this film was based on, 70 years later.
43* SlowClap: From the kids after Coach Dale gives his "winners" speech.
44* TruthInTelevision: As cliche as they seem, the final two minutes in the State Championship game are pretty much what happened in real life. The winning shot was hit by a guy named Bobby Plump, who later became one of the leading figures fighting against class basketball in Indiana.
45* {{Tuckerization}}: In the locker room before the final game, on the blackboard are the last names of the players on the opposing team. These are the real last names of the actors who make up the Hickory team.
46* TwoFirstNames: Norman Dale.
47* UnderdogsNeverLose: Hickory High didn't, at least.
48* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: Inspired by the Milan Indians team that won the Indiana high school basketball championship in 1954. However, much was changed and fictionalized for the movie, starting with the name of the town. The real coach, Marvin Wood, was 26 years old and in his second season with the team. The real championship was not quite as shocking: Milan made the semifinals the year before. However, Milan was even then a rather small school, and Muncie Central was a large, integrated, traditional basketball power.
49** Not that this has stopped the town from adoring the movie despite the massive changes. After all, their town was the basis of a movie with a major Hollywood star. Milan's Dairy Queen has a movie poster signed by the '54 Indians team members and any time the movie gets a new release on home media it's going to be sold at the town's grocery store with a prominent display.
50* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Buddy and Whit quit the team in a scene that shows Coach Dale will brook no nonsense from his players. Whit later apologizes and rejoins the team. Buddy later is back on the team too, but we never see how or when he returns.
51** Whit's father says, "If you have any problems with Whit or Buddy, let me know." I think that's meant to show that Buddy also returns and apologizes, if off-screen.

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