National Player of the Year at North Carolina — ran Dean Smith's Four Corners offence to perfection.
Philip Jackson Ford Jr. was born in Rocky Mount, North Carolina in 1956. He attended the University of North Carolina under coach Dean Smith and won the Naismith Award as national player of the year in 1978. He was a two-time consensus All-American and two-time ACC Player of the Year. He averaged 16.6 points and 6.3 assists per game across four seasons. He was the master of Dean Smith's Four Corners offence — the delay game designed to force fouling and protect leads — which Phil Ford ran with such precision and intelligence that it was used as the model for coaching clinics across the country. He led North Carolina to the Final Four in 1977. Kansas City Kings selected him second overall in the 1978 NBA Draft. His professional career was disrupted by a knee injury and personal issues, limiting his impact. His college career — four years, two All-American selections, one national player of the year award — was the most celebrated guard performance in North Carolina history until Michael Jordan arrived. He was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2018. His mastery of the point guard role under Smith's disciplined system defined how the position was taught at North Carolina for a generation.
Naismith Award (1978)
Career Honours
- Naismith Award (1978)
- ACC Player of Year 2x
- Final Four (1977)
- Consensus All-American 2x