Recent Quotes View Full List My Watchlist Create Watchlist Indicators DJI Nasdaq Composite SPX Gold Crude Oil EL&P Market Index Markets Stocks ETFs Tools Overview News Currencies International Treasuries Hoops hero who inspired 'Hoosiers' now serves legendarily large Indiana-style fried pork sandwiches By: FOXNews.com March 20, 2024 at 09:53 AM EDT Hoops legend Bobby Plump hit the winning shot in the 1954 Indiana state title basketball game that inspired "Hoosiers." He serves serves winning pork tenderloin today at Plump's Last Shot. Bobby Plump's last shot for tiny Milan High School was a 17-foot jumper that captured the 1954 Indiana state basketball championship. The victory by the Milan Indians, 70 years ago today, inspired the David-beats-Goliath 1986 Hollywood sports flick "Hoosiers."Plump’s Last Shot is the family's slam-dunk sports bar in Indianapolis that today serves giant breaded fried pork tenderloin sandwiches, an Indiana culinary tradition. PINBALL HALL OF FAME OFFERS 25-CENT FAMILY FUN ON THE LAS VEGAS STRIP, DONATED $1.2M TO CHARITY IN 2023Plump's fried tenderloin has inspired mouthwatering praise from coast to coast. One national outlet named it one of the five best regional sandwiches in North America. The hardwood hero behind both Hoosier legends is now 87 years old, alive and well.Plump, a longtime insurance executive, still goes to the office only two blocks from his family’s restaurant in the Broad Ripple neighborhood of Indianapolis. His son Jonathan runs the operation."People in neighboring states occasionally have breaded tenderloin, but it’s really an Indiana thing," Plump told Fox News Digital in a telephone interview. "Everybody knows about tenderloin in Indiana. The thing is here, we don’t put the word ‘pork’ in front of it. We just call it tenderloin."The oversized sandwiches at Plump’s Last Shot hit nothing but net with sports and food fans. MEET THE AMERICAN WHO COINED ‘MARCH MADNESS,' ILLINOIS HIGH SCHOOL HOOPS PIONEER AND VISIONARY H.V. PORTERTenderloin comes from the lean but tender muscle along the spine of the pig, similar to the cut on a cow that becomes filet mignon. The meat is butterflied and pounded thin, doused with flour and soaked in buttermilk, then coated in crusty bread crumbs. The half-pound tenderloin is deep-fried to crispy perfection, then served between a sandwich roll … sort of. In reality, the 10-inch-wide tenderloin taunts the overmatched bread. The roll appears tiny in comparison and comically incapable of containing the plate-sized portion of pork. The sandwiches are so tender, crispy and delicious — and so monstrously mammoth — that they attract and inspire visitors from far and wide. NEW YORK CITY CORNED BEEF SANDWICHES TELL SALTY TALE OF AMERICAN IMMIGRANT SUCCESSPlump's Last Shot features Indiana high school basketball memorabilia, including Plump's varsity jacket from Milan's 1953 state final four his junior year. He was named Indiana's best player, Mr. Basketball, in the championship season that followed.The restaurant occupies a cottage-style structure with a porch that overlooks a bend in the White River, which cuts through the heart of Indianapolis. The river flows past Plump's college alma mater, Butler University, where he set several basketball team scoring records. Plump's last shot in 1954 for Milan High "beat Muncie Central and forever cast Milan as a symbol of hope for small schools everywhere," says the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame.CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTERPlump still remembers every detail of the wild celebration that followed his high school's miraculous victory. "The police estimated that 30,000 to 40,000 people came to our town of 1,100 people — and they came from four surrounding states," he said.The victory tour continues today. Milan High School hosts a 70th anniversary celebration of its 1954 basketball title on Saturday. Plump said he expects Gov. Eric Holcomb, "Hoosiers" screenwriter Angelo Pizzo and other dignitaries to attend. He closed his conversation with age-old words of wisdom he said were made during that unforgettable victory party in 1954. "It's nice to be important," he said. "But it's more important to be nice."For more Lifestyle articles, visit www.foxnews.com/lifestyle. Related Stocks: Fancamp Exploration Ltd Data & News supplied by www.cloudquote.io Stock quotes supplied by Barchart Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes. By accessing this page, you agree to the following Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.
Hoops hero who inspired 'Hoosiers' now serves legendarily large Indiana-style fried pork sandwiches By: FOXNews.com March 20, 2024 at 09:53 AM EDT Hoops legend Bobby Plump hit the winning shot in the 1954 Indiana state title basketball game that inspired "Hoosiers." He serves serves winning pork tenderloin today at Plump's Last Shot. Bobby Plump's last shot for tiny Milan High School was a 17-foot jumper that captured the 1954 Indiana state basketball championship. The victory by the Milan Indians, 70 years ago today, inspired the David-beats-Goliath 1986 Hollywood sports flick "Hoosiers."Plump’s Last Shot is the family's slam-dunk sports bar in Indianapolis that today serves giant breaded fried pork tenderloin sandwiches, an Indiana culinary tradition. PINBALL HALL OF FAME OFFERS 25-CENT FAMILY FUN ON THE LAS VEGAS STRIP, DONATED $1.2M TO CHARITY IN 2023Plump's fried tenderloin has inspired mouthwatering praise from coast to coast. One national outlet named it one of the five best regional sandwiches in North America. The hardwood hero behind both Hoosier legends is now 87 years old, alive and well.Plump, a longtime insurance executive, still goes to the office only two blocks from his family’s restaurant in the Broad Ripple neighborhood of Indianapolis. His son Jonathan runs the operation."People in neighboring states occasionally have breaded tenderloin, but it’s really an Indiana thing," Plump told Fox News Digital in a telephone interview. "Everybody knows about tenderloin in Indiana. The thing is here, we don’t put the word ‘pork’ in front of it. We just call it tenderloin."The oversized sandwiches at Plump’s Last Shot hit nothing but net with sports and food fans. MEET THE AMERICAN WHO COINED ‘MARCH MADNESS,' ILLINOIS HIGH SCHOOL HOOPS PIONEER AND VISIONARY H.V. PORTERTenderloin comes from the lean but tender muscle along the spine of the pig, similar to the cut on a cow that becomes filet mignon. The meat is butterflied and pounded thin, doused with flour and soaked in buttermilk, then coated in crusty bread crumbs. The half-pound tenderloin is deep-fried to crispy perfection, then served between a sandwich roll … sort of. In reality, the 10-inch-wide tenderloin taunts the overmatched bread. The roll appears tiny in comparison and comically incapable of containing the plate-sized portion of pork. The sandwiches are so tender, crispy and delicious — and so monstrously mammoth — that they attract and inspire visitors from far and wide. NEW YORK CITY CORNED BEEF SANDWICHES TELL SALTY TALE OF AMERICAN IMMIGRANT SUCCESSPlump's Last Shot features Indiana high school basketball memorabilia, including Plump's varsity jacket from Milan's 1953 state final four his junior year. He was named Indiana's best player, Mr. Basketball, in the championship season that followed.The restaurant occupies a cottage-style structure with a porch that overlooks a bend in the White River, which cuts through the heart of Indianapolis. The river flows past Plump's college alma mater, Butler University, where he set several basketball team scoring records. Plump's last shot in 1954 for Milan High "beat Muncie Central and forever cast Milan as a symbol of hope for small schools everywhere," says the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame.CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTERPlump still remembers every detail of the wild celebration that followed his high school's miraculous victory. "The police estimated that 30,000 to 40,000 people came to our town of 1,100 people — and they came from four surrounding states," he said.The victory tour continues today. Milan High School hosts a 70th anniversary celebration of its 1954 basketball title on Saturday. Plump said he expects Gov. Eric Holcomb, "Hoosiers" screenwriter Angelo Pizzo and other dignitaries to attend. He closed his conversation with age-old words of wisdom he said were made during that unforgettable victory party in 1954. "It's nice to be important," he said. "But it's more important to be nice."For more Lifestyle articles, visit www.foxnews.com/lifestyle. Related Stocks: Fancamp Exploration Ltd