Green transferred to the University of California, Los Angeles, where he was a three-year starter at guard for the Bruins.[6][9] Extroverted and lively, he was nicknamed "the Mouth" by his teammates.[10] Green earned second-team All-AAWU honors in each of his first two seasons.[11] He led the team in scoring as a sophomore in 1959–60 with 265 points in 26 games for an average of 10.2 points per game, and ranked fourth in 1960–61 with 324 points (12.5 per game).[2][12] In his senior year in 1961–62, UCLA began the season slowly, losing seven of their first 11 games.[13] The team grew adept at handling sophomore guard Walt Hazzard's incredible passes, which they initially thought were impossible and were not expecting.[10] He became a catalyst for their fast breaks.[14] The Bruins went 12–2 to become AAWU champions.[15] They clinched the title against Washington after coming back from 12 points down with 12 minutes remaining, winning the game on a driving layup by Green.[10]
Unranked all season,[16] UCLA entered the 1962 NCAA tournament with the worst record at 16–9.[17] They reached the Final Four for the first time in the school's history, and the first of 12 for their coach, John Wooden.[3] The Bruins lost 72–70 to No. 2–ranked and eventual champion Cincinnati, after the Bearcats' Tom Thacker made a deep 25-foot (7.6 m) shot with three seconds remaining.[15][16] Green finished the game with a team-high 27 points,[18] including 19 in the second half and two free throws to tie the contest with 1:34 remaining.[19] He was chosen for the all-tournament second team.[20] UCLA's leading scorer for the season at 19.3 points per game,[21] he developed into one of the country's top shooters.[22] He played at top speed, convinced that Hazzard would get him the ball if he got open.[10] Green was voted an honorable mention All-American by United Press International.[23] The Helms Foundation named him a first-team All-American,[24] while Converse placed him on their second team.[a][25] He was a unanimous selection for the All-AAWU first team.[26] Green's season total of 559 points ranked second in UCLA history, behind Willie Naulls' 661 points in 1955–56. Green's 262 free throw attempts were almost twice as many as the next teammate.[b][28] He left the Bruins ranked No. 4 in school history with 1,148 career points.[c] He was inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame in 2001.[3]
Green was selected by the Los Angeles Lakers in the third round of the 1962 NBA draft with the 26th overall pick.[2] He was impressive at their rookie camp in June, when Lakers coach Fred Schaus said that "Green's good collegiate background is evident here" and he "can probably make the squad".[30][31] However, they released him in September after acquiring veteran guard Dick Barnett.[32][33] Schaus was satisfied with his backcourt of Barnett and Hot Rod Hundley as backups to starters Jerry West and Frank Selvy.[34] Later that year, Green played in the San Fernando Valley Municipal Sports Association's preseason basketball tournament,[35] and won the championship with Goddard's.[36] In 1963, he played in the Valley College summer league with Powers Realty.[37] In the championship game, Green scored a game-high 24 points in a 81–63 win over Entre Nous.[38]
Later years
Green worked in banking and real estate appraising before retiring and moving back to Houston in 2003.[3]
^ abJohnson, Gary K. (October 2005). NCAA Men's Basketball Finest(PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association. pp. 188, 189, 211. ISSN1521-2955. Retrieved April 30, 2024.