Wooden: A Coach's Life (88 page)

Read Wooden: A Coach's Life Online

Authors: Seth Davis

Tags: #Biography, #Non-Fiction

“Our practices were hellish”: Charlie Caress interview with Alan Karpick.

Lambert insisted that they remain on campus: Karpick,
Boilermaker Basketball
, p. 30.

“He was way ahead of his time in fast break basketball”: Purdue interview.

a solution of benzoin and tannic acid: Ward L. Lambert,
Practical Basketball
(Chicago: Athletic Journal Publishing, 1932), p. 229.

Lambert himself was a smoker and inveterate poker player: Karpick,
Boilermaker Basketball
, p. 60.

“He taught me the value of a controlled offense”: Bisheff,
John Wooden
, p. 18.

“I’ve seen Piggy getting up, leading cheers, coaching, and officiating all at the same time”: Clyde Lyle interview with Alan Karpick.

“it’s an uncomfortable feeling to be calling them as you see ’em”: Wilson and Brondfield,
Big Ten
, p. 105.

“anxious to be relieved of the nervous strain and mental punishment”: Karpick,
Boilermaker Basketball
, p. 60.

the place was so jammed that some fans sat on steel trusses above the floor: Ibid., p. 23.

his habit of flinging his elbows when cradling the ball could be a menace to his teammates during practice: Ibid., p. 28.

“He was a beanpole”: Lyle interview with Karpick.

Gordon Graham, reported that Wooden “had proven himself capable”: “Boilermaker Quintet Looks Good in Opener Against Don White’s Bears,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Dec. 16, 1929.

“I saw them at the hospital instead of at the game”: Wooden interview with Jares.

Wooden’s absence was “keenly felt”: “Butler Downs Purdue’s Cage Quintet, 36–29,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Dec. 23, 1929.

“The Boilermakers, without a doubt, turned in one of the most disgusting exhibitions of basketball”: “Boilermakers Are Beaten by Montana State Outfield, 38–35,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Jan. 2, 1930.

Wooden “lacked the stamina”: “Coach Piggy Lambert Must Whip Five Into Shape for Conference,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Jan. 4, 1930.

“the Bob Cousy of our day”: Reporter’s file for
Sports Illustrated
by Red Marston of the
St. Petersburg Times
.

“he often flew five or six rows into the stands”: Reporter’s file for
Sports Illustrated
by Jack Tobin, Aug. 9, 1968.

“You need to put two men on Murphy and two men on Wooden”: “Boilermaker Quintet Grabs 2nd Conference Triumph by Downing Purple Five, 39–22,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Jan. 14, 1930.

“Lambert gave us considerable freedom in our play”: Reporter’s file for
Sports Illustrated
by Red Marston of the
St. Petersburg Times
.

“India Rubberman”:
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Jan. 14, 1930.

“He never held a grudge and you simply couldn’t rattle the guy”: Reporter’s file for
Sports Illustrated
by Art Rosenbaum, Aug. 1, 1968.

“a sophomore who promises to become an immortal in this league”: “A.P. Places Murphy and Wooden on All Star Conference Team,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Mar. 12, 1930.

Lambert called Wooden into his office to report that a well-to-do doctor in town had offered to take care of Wooden’s living expenses: Wooden with Tobin,
They Call Me Coach
, p. 45; Bisheff,
John Wooden
, p. 17.

“When you walk out of here, your head will be up”: John Wooden interview with Alan Karpick.

5. JOHNNY WOODEN, ALL-AMERICAN

Interview: John Wooden

“comparative midgets”: “Lead Purdue Net Champions Against Notre Dame’s Quintet,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Dec. 15, 1930.

“The thing I remember the most is that he was so fast”: Krider,
Indiana High School Basketball’s 20 Most Dominant Players
, p. 247.

“It took a hunk of meat”: Wooden interview with Jares.

Wooden missed a chance to tie the score: “Free Throws Win for Easterners; Wooden Injured,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Dec. 31, 1930.

she actually fainted in the stands: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 14.

“He was always moving”: Ibid., p. 290.

Wooden was again offered the chance to play professional baseball: Wooden with Tobin,
They Call Me Coach
, p. 47.

“You can’t play in the dirt without getting dirty”: Bisheff,
John Wooden
, p. 17.

She told Wooden that if he accepted, she would call off the marriage and join a convent: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 16.

“We could make a lot more sandwiches that way”: Wooden interview with Karpick.

“a squad that depends more on speed and cleverness than physical power”: “Purdue Basketball Squad Will Play Tough Schedule,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Dec. 3, 1931.

George Keogan went so far as to devise a “Wooden defense”: Reporter’s file for
Sports Illustrated
by Jack Tobin, Aug. 9, 1968.

his tonsils did flare up: Wooden interview with Karpick; Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 26.

“‘Fire department basketball,’ they call it in Indiana”: Associated Press, “Purdue Cage Team Looms as Big Ten’s Strongest Following Great Showing in Early Season Games,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Jan. 6, 1932.

he sliced the ring finger on his shooting hand: Wooden interview with Karpick.

“He had a way of stalling the game out by fantastic dribbling”: Reporter’s file for
Sports Illustrated
by Art Rosenbaum, Aug. 1, 1968.

“Wooden’s going to play tomorrow. All you’re going to do is sit”: Chapin and Prugh,
Wizard of Westwood
, p. 57.

“He had a very unusual thing he did”: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 25.

“Wooden was somewhat of a folk hero here in Indiana”: Ibid., p. 277.

“the name of John Wooden outshines all others”: “Johnny Wooden Called Best Amateur Player in America,”
Lafayette Journal and Courier
, Mar. 21, 1932.

“probably the greatest all-around guard of them all”: Krider,
Indiana High School Basketball’s 20 Most Dominant Players
, p. 243.

“because people remembered him thirty years prior as one of the greatest basketball players”: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 209.

“Wooden to the kids of my era was what Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, or Lew Alcindor is today”: Reporter’s file for
Sports Illustrated
by Jack Tobin, Aug. 9, 1968.

Halas paid Wooden $100 a game: Wooden with Tobin,
They Call Me Coach
, p. 247.

The Celtics were willing to pay Wooden $5,000: Purdue interview.

“He told me without telling me”: Ibid.

First Bank and Trust had gone under: Wooden with Tobin,
They Call Me Coach
, p. 48; Wooden interview with Jares.

“You guys sang so long, I thought you would never stop”: Purdue interview.

6. AN ENGLISH TEACHER

Interviews: Bob Dunbar, Eddie Ehlers, John Gassensmith, Ed Powell, Jim Powers, Jim Rudasics, Ben Stull, Tom Taylor, John Wooden

“We went down there with nothing”: Wooden interview with Jares.

the regular varsity coach, Willard Bass, was demoted to the girls’ team: Chapin and Prugh,
Wizard of Westwood
, p. 46.

he spent some time picking the brain of Noble Kizer: Wooden interview with Jares.

“You’re not man enough to do it”: Wooden with Jamison,
My Personal Best
, p. 53.

“We had some real loafers on our team”: Chapin and Prugh,
Wizard of Westwood
, p. 44.

“If you missed an easy layup, he’d be right there to crack you”: Ibid., p. 45.

“Having been a player of outstanding reputation, perhaps I expected too much”: Wooden interview with Jares.

Lou Foster, accused Wooden of teaching “dirty basketball”: Bisheff,
John Wooden
, p. 27; Chapin and Prugh,
Wizard of Westwood
, p. 44.

Dayton finished the season with just 6 wins to 11 losses: Chapin and Prugh,
Wizard of Westwood
, p. 45.

“He was such a good Christian man”: Ibid., p. 47.

“He laid down a set of rules and expected the guys to follow it”: Reporter’s file for
Sports Illustrated
from Jim Schottelkotte, Aug. 9, 1968.

“He’d invite us for supper and we stayed the rest of the evening”: Ibid.

The teacher had asked his students to come up with their own personal definition of
success
: Wooden with Jamison,
My Personal Best
, p. 86.

the “ladder of success” that Glenn Curtis had presented to him: “Glenn Curtis Dies in Hospital,”
Martinsville Daily Reporter
, May 13, 1982.

a 15–3 record: Chapin and Prugh,
Wizard of Westwood
, p. 46.

At South Bend’s Central High School, Wooden was again wearing many hats: Bisheff,
John Wooden
, p. 27.

In addition, he was the school’s comptroller: Wooden with Jamison,
My Personal Best
, p. 60.

“I don’t think South Bend knew whether I’d be a good English teacher or not”: Purdue interview.

The players found their own way to the game, but Wooden left them on the bench: Bisheff,
John Wooden
, p. 5.

The next day, Nell was looking through a newspaper and came upon a picture of the players at the dance: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 279.

“That made Wooden in South Bend”: Reporter’s file for
Sports Illustrated
from Jack Tobin, Aug. 9, 1968.

he sat his whole team down for fifteen minutes to express his displeasure: “Wooden Files Objection on Umpire Ruling,”
South Bend Tribune
, Apr. 30, 1939.

Wooden was a “stickler for good penmanship”: Bisheff,
John Wooden
, p. 5.

“I think he ended up a common laborer”: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 129.

“He used this as an example to show that he could quit when he wanted to”: Mark Heisler,
They Shoot Coaches, Don’t They?: UCLA and the NCAA Since John Wooden
(New York: Macmillan, 1996), p. 21.

“You no-good little bulldog!”: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 280.

“You have to walk it”: Academy of Achievement interview.

“Johnny Wooden, South Bend Central’s basketball coach, will be the featured speaker at Elkhart High’s sports banquet”: Chapin and Prugh,
Wizard of Westwood
, p. 17.

“Not everybody came out of their exposure to John Wooden and made the grade”: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 285.

“You just never had the ball in your hands”: Ibid., p. 293.

he was floored by how efficient Leahy’s workouts were: John Wooden interview with ESPN, Mar. 12, 1998.

“I noticed that most players wear shoes that are too large”: Academy of Achievement interview.

“He was very concerned about nutrition”: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 284.

“There is no pass that is lower than a roll”: Ibid., p. 291.

“When I tell them it was done shooting two-handed, they really don’t believe it”: “Wooden Hero to Many,”
Indianapolis News
, Dec. 11, 1975.

“We couldn’t stop him”: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 290.

“Back then, we used to think Wooden wasn’t flexible enough”: Bisheff,
John Wooden
, p. 27.

“It was not a healthy situation”: Purdue interview.

Wooden rushed at Shake and swung his fist: Peter J. DeKever,
On the Brink: Shelby Shake and Johnny Wooden
(South Bend, Ind.: South Bend Public Library, 1999), p. 6; Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 294.

“I’ve never seen [Wooden] as upset as I did that night”: Powell interview with Jares.

“Those kids never quit”: “Bears Couldn’t Hit; Wooden Praises Rally,”
South Bend Tribune
, Mar. 8, 1943.

7. THE KAUTSKYS

Interviews: Ed Orme, Ed Powell, John Wooden

“I tell you, he was phenomenal”: Bisheff,
John Wooden
, p. 4.

Kautsky was a bundle of energy who fancied cigars and three-piece suits: Gould,
Pioneers of the Hardwood
, p. 49.

“He was a very wonderful person”: Wooden interview with Jares.

“My dad always said [Wooden] could stop on a dime and give you five cents change”: “A Top Talent in His Day,”
Indianapolis Star
, Apr. 2, 2006.

“The first thing they asked us when we entered the court was, ‘Which one was John Wooden?’” Murry R. Nelson,
The National Basketball League: A History, 1935–1949
(Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2009), p. 49.

“I often worked on my lesson plans as I traveled”: Wooden interview with Jares.

The NBL disbanded after just one year: Gould,
Pioneers of the Hardwood
, p. 57.

“I’d have to be careful I didn’t stop playing and start watching them”: Ibid., p. 59.

“Even Johnny Wooden’s clever dribbling was lost as [Rens guard] Clarence Jenkins policed the Kautsky star throughout the contest”: Ibid.

“I went down hard and I came up fightin’ mad”: Wooden interview with the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame, July 2001 (hereafter cited as Hall of Fame interview).

“Wooden used to be gone two or three days a week”: Johnson,
John Wooden Pyramid of Success
, p. 217.

Kautsky reached out to his erstwhile partner from Akron to form yet another new league, the Midwest Basketball Conference: Nelson,
National Basketball League
, p. 14.

Other books

Blood Trail by Nancy Springer
Enticement by Madelynn Ellis
Vineyard Shadows by Philip R. Craig
Zombie, Illinois by Scott Kenemore
Time to Depart by Lindsey Davis
The Perfect Witness by Iris Johansen
Kolyma Tales by Shalanov, Varlan
Drop Dead Divas by Virginia Brown