MSU's appearance in the tournament was controversial in their home state. To that point, MSU's all-white teams had only played against other all-white teams, but the NCAA Tournament was open to integrated teams, including Loyola, which fielded four black starters.[3] The school had to sneak out of town to reach the tournament, since an unwritten Mississippi law prevented racial integration on the basketball court. Mitchell later said, "We wanted to play. We had just won the SEC championship for the third year in a row and we hadn't been allowed to play in the NCAA Tournament the past two years. For us, the biggest thing was getting the opportunity to play in the tournament because it was something we felt we deserved."[4] He also noted, "It was much more than a basketball game. We were making history. We were ambassadors for the south, though none of us realized it at the time".[5]
^Jim Mashek. "History on the Hardwood: McCarthy, State made statement in 1963". The Sun Herald. March 20, 2003.
^Henry Goolsby. "Top Ten Sports Stories of the Century". The Clarion-Ledger. December 29, 1999.
^Slim Smith. "Remembering '63". The Sun Herald. March 30, 1996.
^Russell J. Henderson. "The 1963 Mississippi State University Basketball Controversy and the Repeal of the Unwritten Law: 'Something more than the game will be lost'. The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 63, No. 4. (Nov. 1967).