Rodman emerged from nowhere, caught the ball and threw down a 180-degree dunk. “He goes back down the floor and gets a standing ovation from their crowd,” Reisman said. “That’s how fast that guy was. Hell, I even got up. I’d never seen anything like it.” “Philip and Worm just had this unspoken language,” Chaffin said. Southeastern, then coached by Jack Hedden, went 74-22 in Rodman’s three seasons. The man they called Worm led Southeastern to a 30-4 record in his senior season. In Rodman’s final game, Southeastern beat St. Thomas Aquinas (New York) 75-74 in the third-place game of the 1986 NAIA National Tournament in Kansas City. Rodman scored 46 points and collected 32 rebounds in the comeback victory.