Front Page
MLB Tickets
MLB News
World Series Tickets
World Series News
NBA Tickets
NBA News
NFL Tickets
NFL News
Super Bowl Tickets
Super Bowl News
NHL Tickets
NHL News
Stanley Cup Tickets
Stanley Cup News
NASCAR Tickets
NASCAR News
Soccer Tickets
Soccer News
NCAA Football Tickets
NCAA Football News
NCAA Basketball Tickets
NCAA Basketball News
Ticket Request
Contact Us
Link Request
gls55 holdings
Website Agreement
Site Map
e-mail me

NCAA Basketball News - Sports News | November 18, 2008

  Pete Newell dies at 93; Hall of Fame basketball coach guided Cal to 1959 NCAA title
As the Lakers' general manager, Newell, who retired from coaching at 44, brought Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to L.A. in 1975.

By Robyn Norwood
November 18, 2008


Pete Newell, who coached UC Berkeley to the 1959 National Collegiate Athletic Assn. basketball title and was one of only three men to guide teams to National Invitation Tournament, NCAA and Olympic championships, died Monday. He was 93.

Newell, a resident of Rancho Santa Fe, died at the nearby home of Dr. Earl Shultz, one of his former Cal players who had been caring for him. Newell had been in poor health since lung surgery in 2005, his son Roger said.

By winning the then-prestigious NIT with the University of San Francisco in 1949, guiding Cal to the NCAA title and winning the 1960 Olympic gold medal with a roster that included Oscar Robertson, Jerry Lucas and Jerry West, Newell became the first coach to claim all three titles.

The only others are Dean Smith and Bob Knight.

West and a writer had planned to meet with Newell on Monday to do an interview for an upcoming book, Roger Newell said.

"He was my Olympic coach," West said later Monday. "He was my mentor. When you are around a guy like him, you realize how beloved he really is. He was a great teacher. He loved basketball. He loved to teach young kids how to play basketball."

"In his time, I think he was one of the better coaches the game has ever seen," former UCLA coach John Wooden, a close rival of Newell early in his career, said in 2005.

"When I think of the outstanding teachers of the game, he ranked up there with the very best," Wooden said.

Knight, a generation younger than Newell, considered him a mentor.

"From a personal standpoint, no one had a greater influence on what I do or try to teach than Pete Newell has had," Knight said.

"The influence he had in basketball has been something that carried on for over 60 years, beginning when he was coaching at the University of San Francisco."


Hall of Fame

Inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1979, Newell was elected not as a coach but as a "contributor," because his brief but stellar career was a year short of the 15-year requirement for coaches.

He retired from coaching in 1960 at only 44 -- in part because of the self-induced stress that contributed to his chain-smoking, chugging coffee and going without food before games, and in part, he later suggested, because of his discomfort with the adulation surrounding him.

Though he left the bench early, by the end of his life, Newell's effect on the game had extended almost five decades after his retirement as a coach.

As general manager of the Los Angeles Lakers from 1972 to '76, Newell made the trade that brought Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to the Lakers in 1975 -- a watershed in the history of L.A. sports -- after Abdul-Jabbar let it be known he wanted to leave the smaller-market Milwaukee Bucks for either New York, where he grew up, or L.A., where he played college ball for UCLA.

Newell sent Elmore Smith, Brian Winters, Dave Meyers and Junior Bridgeman to Milwaukee to acquire Abdul-Jabbar along with Walt Wesley.

In the late 1970s, Newell began an annual clinic that came to be known as the Pete Newell Big Man Camp, a summer training ground for more than 250 NBA players over the years -- with a list of alumni that included Shaquille O'Neal, Hakeem Olajuwon, James Worthy, Scottie Pippen, Sam Perkins, Jermaine O'Neal and the Lakers' Andrew Bynum, who was 17 when the 89-year-old Newell first tutored him.


Guards not invited

Though there was never an official height requirement for the camp, guards were not invited.

"I just don't feel I could do what I want to do, which is keep the American center in business," Newell said at the 2005 camp in Las Vegas, where he counseled players even though he was less than five months removed from lung cancer surgery.

Newell considered today's players "over-coached but under-taught," meaning coaches focus too much on strategy without teaching players fundamental skills. In his camp, Newell emphasized footwork, spacing and a versatile array of individual offensive moves for post players in his camp.

"To me, the center position is the most demanding and important in basketball," he said. "I think Bill Russell proved that with the amount of championships he won in the NCAA and NBA. Today, Shaq [Phoenix Suns center Shaquille O'Neal] is an example of how important the center can be."

Though his legacy in the NBA is tied to the big men whose skills he honed as a college coach, Newell made the most out of the undersized and the less-talented, and he did it with defense, discipline and conditioning.


'Hands up' drill

At a 2005 reunion of players from his teams at Cal and Michigan State, where Newell coached from 1950 to 1954, men nearly 50 years removed from their college days let out a collective groan at the mention of the "hands up" drill -- an exhausting knees-bent, hands-up defensive shuffle that Newell required his players keep up for as much as 20 minutes at a time.

"Apart from intelligence, he looked for toughness," said Stan Morrison, a member of the 1959 Cal team who went on to coach at Pacific, USC and San Jose State and is now athletic director at UC Riverside.

One of the players most emblematic of the rugged work ethic Newell prized was the star of Cal's championship team, Darrall Imhoff, a onetime walk-on who went on to become a 12-year NBA center despite a single-digit career scoring average.

Making it hard for the other team to score was the cornerstone of Newell's coaching philosophy.

Cal won the 1959 NCAA title by defeating two of the great offensive stars in basketball history in consecutive games: future Hall of Fame players Robertson of Cincinnati and West of West Virginia.

"Defense was his game," Morrison said. "Of all the innovations, the one that stands out was what was called 'sloughing defense.' It was a helping defense, and back then everybody used to guard their man like they owed him money."

Robertson led the nation in scoring in 1959, averaging almost 33 points, but against Cal in the NCAA semifinals, he made only five of 16 shots and was held to 19 points. The next year, the teams met in the semifinals again, and Robertson -- a three-time college player of the year -- made only four of 16 shots and finished with 18 points.

The Cal defense in '59 so impressed Fred Taylor, the Ohio State coach, that he sought out Newell at a coaching clinic and spent hours with him, learning the nuances of the system.

The next season, Cal met Ohio State in the title game and lost by 20 points, though it might not have been only the defense: Ohio State had future Hall of Fame players Jerry Lucas and John Havlicek and a bench player named Bobby Knight, a future Hall of Fame coach.

Later, beginning when Knight was a young coach at Army, he and Newell became close friends -- perhaps not kindred in personal style, but in their love of the intricacies of the game.

"I think Pete probably understands the game better than anybody, ever," Knight told author Bruce Jenkins in the 1999 biography, "A Good Man: The Pete Newell Story."

"In all of sport, I think Pete is the least-known outstanding figure there is," Knight said. "He was at his best at a time when media coverage was nothing like it is now. Just imagine if he won the NCAA title today, went back to the title game the following year, then coached the Olympic team. He'd be at the forefront of everything. And he's so unusual, he has no animosities, no regrets whatsoever about leaving coaching when he did. You never hear, 'Boy, I wish I could have. . . . ' He is more at peace with himself and what he's done than any person I've known in my life."

Born Aug. 31, 1915, in Vancouver, Canada, Newell grew up in Los Angeles.

His mother, Alice, made her son into a reluctant child actor for a time, and he appeared in several of the "Our Gang" movies.

But sports soon consumed Newell's interests.

After graduating from St. Agnes High School at West Adams Boulevard and Vermont Avenue, Newell played basketball at Loyola University, now known as Loyola Marymount, and began moonlighting before he graduated, coaching football, basketball, track and softball at a local prep school.


Career ends

It was a coaching career that began early, and in the eyes of some, ended far too soon.

Morrison, his former player, believes Newell was "embarrassed out of coaching" by the adulation that came with Cal's success.

"People attribute it to coffee and cigarettes, but I attribute it to that," Morrison said. "He was such a humble guy and it was just too much. Everyone would be on their feet when he came out, and we'd put the ball down and applaud. Even the visiting team would do it sometimes."

Newell acknowledged his discomfort in Jenkins' 1999 biography. "It goes way back to my early days as a kid, when I hated everything that came with being an actor," he said. "Obviously, my health was the major thing. But toward the end there, the whole experience was kind of chokin' me."

Some people find it hard to resist what Morrison called the "woulda-shoulda-couldas" about what Newell might have accomplished if he had coached more than 14 years. A few of Newell's ex-players and colleagues still bristle over perceived slights in the rivalry with Wooden, who had not yet won an NCAA title when Newell won his first but finished with a record 10.

"Each of us had a pretty good streak against each other as far as victories," said Wooden, who won the first seven games his teams played against Newell's. Newell won the last eight.

"We were competitors, but we were always friends," Wooden said, adding that he admired the discipline and fundamentals of Newell's teams, particularly their defense. "I learned from him," Wooden said.

Newell, whose wife, Florence, died in 1984, is survived by their sons, Pete Jr., a former high school basketball coach who guided Santa Cruz High to the 2005 California Division III state championship; Tom, a former assistant coach and scout in the NBA and WNBA; Roger and Greg, as well as five grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

A public memorial service at Loyola Marymount is planned for sometime after Thanksgiving.

Sports Ticket Depot -
NCAA Basketball News Archive Index



Sports Ticket Depot's NCAA Basketball Tickets - NCAA Basketball Playoff Tickets, NCAA Basketball Season Tickets

 
| ABC Tickets |   | Barry’s Tickets |   | Cheap Tickets |   | Empire Tickets |   | EZ Ticket Search |   | Razor Gator |   | Stub Hub |   | Ticket City |   | Ticket Distributors |   | Ticket Liquidator |   | TicketMaster |   | Ticket Network |   | Tickets Now |   | Ticket Solutions |

Do you need a pinch hitter with a fantastic swinging arm to help you hunt down your cheap sports tickets? Contact us or fill out a Sports Ticket Depot - Sports Ticket Information Request. We will hunt them down for you!

NCAA Gear



  NCAA Top-25 Basketball Game Capsules

November 16, 2008


Final Score: (6) Michigan State 100, Idaho 62

East Lansing, MI (Sports Network) - Chris Allen and Raymar Morgan both scored 21 points, as sixth-ranked Michigan State opened the 2008-09 season with a 100-62 rout of the Idaho Vandals. Morgan shot 7-of-8 from the floor while Allen finished 7-of-12, including 3-of-6 from beyond the arc, for the Spartans (1-0), who were bounced by Memphis in the regional semifinals of the NCAA Tournament last season and are expected to challenge for the national title again. Kalin Lucas had 13 points and nine assists for Michigan State, which improved to 88-22 all-time in season openers. Goran Suton scored 10 points and Marquise Gray grabbed eight rebounds. Mac Hopson posted 13 points and dished out five assists to pace the Vandals (1-1), who got 10 points and eight boards from Brandon Wiley.


Final Score: (8) Duke 82, Rhode Island 79

Durham, NC (Sports Network) - Kyle Singler scored 21 points and made the go- ahead free throws with 19.4 seconds remaining in the game, as eighth-ranked Duke got a scare but came back to edge Rhode Island 82-79, at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Singler finished 6-of-14 from the field, including 3-of-8 from three-point range and converted 6-of-8 free throws for the Blue Devils, who extended their win streak to 62 straight over non-conference opponents at home. The Blue Devils have now won 192 of their last 195 non-conference home games. Jon Scheyer scored a team-high 23 points, while Nolan Smith and Lance Thomas each chipped in with 10 points for Duke (3-0). Gerald Henderson had nine points. The Blue Devils opened up their season last week by routing both Presbyterian (80-49) and Georgia Southern (97-54). Jimmy Baron had a strong game for the upset-minded Rams (1-1), finishing with a game-high 24 points on 8-of-10 shooting from beyond the arc. Delroy James contributed with career-high 21 points and eight boards, while Keith Cothran had 10 for Rhode Island.


Final Score: (9) Notre Dame 94, SC-Upstate 58

South Bend, IN (Sports Network) - Luke Harangody logged 30 points and 14 rebounds to jump-start his All-American campaign as the ninth-ranked Fighting Irish of Notre Dame opened their season with a 94-58 blowout victory over South Carolina-Upstate at the Joyce Center. Harangody, the 2008 Big East Player of the Year, hit 12-of-21 from the field, while Luke Zeller netted four three-pointers en route to an 18-point effort for the Irish (1-0), who finished last season with a 25-8 record before bowing out miserably in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Zach Hillesland and Kyle McAlarney dropped 13 and 10 points, respectively, in the win. Bobby Davis finished with a team-high 14 points, and Nick Schneiders posted 12 points and seven rebounds for the Spartans of USC Upstate (0-2), who dropped their season opener Friday against Georgia.


Final Score: (19) Florida 81, Bradley 58

Gainesville, FL (Sports Network) - Dan Werner scored 17 points on 6-of-11 shooting to lead 19th-ranked Florida to a convincing 81-58 victory over the Bradley Braves in the 2008 O'Reilly Auto Parts CBE Classic. Nick Calathes added 13 points and seven rebounds, while Walter Hodge also had 17 points in the win for Florida (2-0), which started off its season with an 80-58 win over Toledo. Chandler Parsons had 10 rebounds to go along with four points for the Gators. Florida went 14-of-32 from three-point range in the win. Dodie Dunson scored 15 points to lead the Braves (1-1), who were coming off a win over Illinois-Chicago. Chris Roberts scored 13 points, while Sam Singh added six points and seven rebounds off the bench.


Final Score: (24) Kansas 71, UMKC 56

Lawrence, KS (Sports Network) - Sherron Collins scored 16 points to lead 24th- ranked Kansas past the UMKC Kangaroos, 71-56, in the season-opener for the defending national champion Jayhawks as part of the O'Reilly CBE Classic. Cole Aldrich added 13 points and five rebounds for Kansas (1-0), which hosts Florida Gulf Coast on Tuesday. Tyrel Reed had 12 points in the win, while Markieff Morris had just seven points but grabbed 15 rebounds. Kansas, at 37-3 last year, won its third national championship and first since 1988 with an overtime victory over Memphis. Dane Brumagin scored 14 points for the Kangaroos (0-2), who will play at Wichita State on Wednesday. Reggie Hamilton had 13 points in defeat, while Latreze Mushatt grabbed 10 boards. The Kangaroos finished with an 11-21 overall record and a 6-12 mark in Summit League play last season.


Final Score: (25) Wisconsin 68, Long Beach State 61

Madison, WI (Sports Network) - Marcus Landry scored 23 points on 7-of-10 shooting, and 25th-ranked Wisconsin held on for a 68-61 win over Long Beach State in the Badgers' season-opener. Jason Bohannon scored 12 points, but made only 3-of-10 shots for Wisconsin (1-0), which struggled to pull away from its opponent out of the Big West. Donovan Morris led the 49ers (0-2) with 12 points on 5-of-17 shooting. Arturas Lazdauskas had eight points and nine rebounds for Long Beach State, which drew even with the Badgers with under five minutes remaining, but couldn't wrestle the lead away from the defending Big Ten regular season and tournament champions in the final minutes.

Sports Ticket Depot -
NCAA Basketball News Archive Index



Sports Ticket Depot's NCAA Basketball Tickets - NCAA Basketball Playoff Tickets, NCAA Basketball Season Tickets

 
| ABC Tickets |   | Barry’s Tickets |   | Cheap Tickets |   | Empire Tickets |   | EZ Ticket Search |   | Razor Gator |   | Stub Hub |   | Ticket City |   | Ticket Distributors |   | Ticket Liquidator |   | TicketMaster |   | Ticket Network |   | Tickets Now |   | Ticket Solutions |

Do you need a pinch hitter with a fantastic swinging arm to help you hunt down your cheap sports tickets? Contact us or fill out a Sports Ticket Depot - Sports Ticket Information Request. We will hunt them down for you!

NCAA Gear



 











For Email Marketing you can trust

Convert Currency here



HONESTe Online Member Seal
Click to verify - Before you buy!





Sports Ticket Web Masters,
       Submit your sports event, venue, news, and memorabilia link(s) as ‘articles / advertisements’. Your article(s) will occupy their own EXCLUSIVE and UNIQUE page directly linked to a Sports Ticket Depot sports section of your choice.

Submit details here.







© gls55 holdings 10/07
Sports Ticket Depot - Sports Tickets | Playoff Sports Tickets | Cheap Sports Tickets | Season Sports Tickets

|Front Page| |MLB Tickets| |MLB News| |World Series Tickets| |World Series News| |NBA Tickets| |NBA News| |NFL Tickets| |NFL News| |Super Bowl Tickets| |Super Bowl News| |NHL Tickets| |NHL News| |Stanley Cup Tickets| |Stanley Cup News| |NASCAR Tickets| |NASCAR News| |Soccer Tickets| |Soccer News| |NCAA Football Tickets| |NCAA Football News| |NCAA Basketball Tickets| |NCAA Basketball News| |Ticket Request| |Contact Us| |Link Request| |gls55 holdings| |Website Agreement| |Site Map|