Bob Knight
Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | Massillon, Ohio, U.S. | October 25, 1940
Died | November 1, 2023 Bloomington, Indiana, U.S. | (aged 83)
Playing career | |
1959–1962 | Ohio State |
Position(s) | Forward |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1962–1963 | Cuyahoga Falls HS (assistant) |
1963–1965 | Army (assistant) |
1965–1971 | Army |
1971–2000 | Indiana |
2001–2008 | Texas Tech |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 902–371 (.709) |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
As player:
| |
Awards | |
| |
Basketball Hall of Fame Inducted in 1991 | |
College Basketball Hall of Fame Inducted in 2006 | |
Medal record |
Robert Montgomery Knight (October 25, 1940 – November 1, 2023) was an American men's college basketball coach. Often referred to as Bobby Knight and nicknamed "the General", he won 902 NCAA Division I men's basketball games, a record at the time of his retirement and sixth all-time record at the time of his death.[1]
Knight was the head coach of the Indiana Hoosiers from 1971 to 2000. He also coached the Texas Tech Red Raiders (2001–2008) and Army Black Knights (1965–1971).[2] He was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1991.
While at Army, Knight led the Black Knights to four post-season tournament appearances in six seasons, winning two-thirds of his games along the way. After taking the job at Indiana, his teams won three
Knight sparked controversy with his outspoken nature and his volatility. He once threw a chair across the court during a game and was ejected, was once arrested following a physical confrontation with a police officer,[4] and engaged in verbal conflicts with members of the press.[5] After Knight was accused of choking an Indiana player during practice in an incident that was recorded on video,[6][7] the university instituted a "zero tolerance" policy specifically for Knight. Following a subsequent run-in with a student, Knight was fired in the fall of 2000.[8] He went on to coach at Texas Tech, mostly without incident, from 2001 to 2008. In the seven full seasons that Knight coached the Red Raiders, his teams qualified for a post-season tournament five times. He retired partway through the 2007–2008 season and was replaced by his son Pat Knight at Texas Tech. Knight remains "the object of near fanatical devotion" from many of his former players and Indiana fans.[9]
Knight was also successful on the international stage. In 1984, he coached the
In 2008, Knight joined ESPN as a men's college basketball studio analyst during Championship Week and for coverage of the NCAA Tournament.[10] He continued covering college basketball for ESPN through the 2014–15 season.[11]
Knight was one of college basketball's most successful and innovative coaches, having popularized the motion offense. He received national coach of the year honors four times and Big Ten Coach of the Year honors eight times.
Early life and college career
Knight was born on October 25, 1940, in the town of Massillon, Ohio, and grew up in Orrville, Ohio.[6] His father Pat worked for the railroad and his mother Hazel was a school teacher.[12] He began playing organized basketball at Orrville High School.[3]
Knight continued at
Due in part to the star power of those Ohio State teams, Knight usually received scant playing time, but that did not prevent him from making an impact. In the 1961 NCAA championship game, Knight came off the bench with 1:41 on the clock and Cincinnati leading Ohio State, 61–59.[17] In the words of then–Ohio State assistant coach Frank Truitt:
Knight got the ball in the left front court and faked a drive into the middle. Then [he] crossed over like he worked on it all his life and drove right in and laid it up. That tied the game for us, and Knight ran clear across the floor like a 100-yard dash sprinter and ran right at me and said, "See there, coach, I should have been in that game a long time ago!"[18]
To which Truitt replied, "Sit down, you hot dog. You're lucky you're even on the floor."[19]
In addition to lettering in basketball at Ohio State, it has been claimed that Knight also lettered in football and baseball;[20] however, the official list of Ohio State football letter earners does not include Knight.[21] Knight graduated with a degree in history and government in 1962.[22]
After graduating from Ohio State University in 1962, he coached junior varsity basketball at
Coaching career
Army
While in the army, he accepted an assistant coaching position with the Army Black Knights in 1963, where, two years later, he was named head coach at the relatively young age of 24.[25] In six seasons as a head coach at West Point, Knight won 102 games, with his first coming against Worcester Polytechnic Institute.[26] He led Army to four NITs, advancing to the semifinals three times.[27] One of his players was Mike Krzyzewski, who later served as his assistant before becoming a Hall of Fame head coach at Duke.[28] Mike Silliman was another of Knight's players at Army, and Knight was quoted as saying that Silliman was the best player that he had coached.[29]
During his tenure at Army, Knight gained a reputation for having an explosive temper.
Knight was one of seven candidates vying to fill the
Indiana
In 1971, Indiana University Bloomington hired Knight as head coach.[36] During his 29 years at the school, the Hoosiers won 662 games, including 22 seasons of 20 or more wins, while losing 239, a .735 winning percentage.[37] In 24 NCAA tournament appearances at Indiana, Hoosier teams under Knight won 42 of 63 games (.667), winning titles in 1976, 1981, and 1987, while losing in the semifinals in 1973 and 1992.[38]
1970s
In 1972–73, Knight's second year as coach, Indiana won the Big Ten championship and reached the Final Four, losing to UCLA, which was on its way to its seventh consecutive national title.[39] The following season, in 1973–74, Indiana once again captured a Big Ten title.[40]
In the two following seasons,
The following season, in
Throughout the 1970s, however, Knight was beginning to be involved in several controversies.[48] 1960 Olympic gold medalist Douglas Blubaugh was head wrestling coach at IU from 1973 to 1984. Early in his tenure while he jogged in the practice facility during basketball practice, Knight yelled at him to leave, using more than one expletive. Blubaugh pinned Knight to a wall, and told him never to repeat the performance, and Knight never did.[49]
On December 7, 1974, Indiana defeated Kentucky 98–74. Near the end of the game, Knight went to the Kentucky bench where the official was standing to complain about a call. Before he left, Knight hit Kentucky coach
Years after the incident, it was reported that Knight choked and punched Indiana University's longtime sports information director, Kit Klingelhoffer, over a news release that upset the coach.[48] In 1976, Knight grabbed IU basketball player Jim Wisman and jerked him into his seat.[48]
During the 1979 Pan American Games in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Knight was accused of assaulting a police officer while coaching the US Basketball team before a practice session. He was later convicted in absentia and given a six-month jail sentence, but extradition efforts by the Puerto Rican government were unsuccessful—at that time.[4] However, a 1987 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court overturning a Civil-War law that allowed governors from rejecting many instances of extradition requests was interpreted by some as allowing such a request to be successful this time. Knight apologized for his 1979 action in a letter to the President of the Puerto Rico Olympic Committee, Germán Rieckehoff. Rieckehoff "urged the Commonwealth not to consider any further legal action against Knight".[53]
1980s
The
In 1982–83, with the strong play of Uwe Blab and All-Americans Ted Kitchel and Randy Wittman, the No. 1 ranked Hoosiers were favorites to win another national championship.[56] However, with an injury to Kitchel mid-season,[54] the Hoosiers lost to Kentucky in the 1983 Sweet Sixteen.[57]
In the 1985–86 season, the Hoosiers were profiled in a bestselling book A Season on the Brink.[58] To write it, Knight granted author John Feinstein almost unprecedented access to the Indiana basketball program, as well as insights into Knight's private life.[59] The following season, in 1986–87, the Hoosiers were led by All-American Steve Alford and captured a share of the Big Ten title.[60] The team won Knight's third national championship (the school's fifth) against Syracuse in the 1987 NCAA tournament with a game-winning jump shot by Keith Smart with five seconds remaining in the championship game.[61]
In the 1988–89 season, the Hoosiers were led by All-American Jay Edwards and won a Big Ten championship.[62]
Knight was involved in several controversies in the 1980s as well. In a game between Indiana and Purdue in Bloomington on January 31, 1981, Isiah Thomas allegedly hit Purdue guard Roosevelt Barnes in what some critics described as a "sucker punch".[63] Video replay later shown by Knight showed Barnes had thrown the first punch, and that Thomas was merely reacting to this.
When the two schools played their second game of the season at Purdue on February 7, 1981, Knight claimed a number of derisive chants were directed at him, his wife, and Indiana University. In response, Knight invited Purdue athletic director George King on his weekly television show to discuss the matter, but King declined. Therefore, in place of King, Knight brought onto the show a "jackass" (male donkey) wearing a Purdue hat as a representative of Purdue.[64][65]
On February 23, 1985, during a Purdue–Indiana game in Bloomington, five minutes into the game a scramble for a loose ball resulted in a foul call on Indiana's Marty Simmons. Immediately after the resumption of play, a foul was called on Indiana's Daryl Thomas. Knight, irate, insisted the first of the two calls should have been for a
He apologized for his actions the next day and was given a one-game suspension and two years' probation from the Big Ten. In later years, Knight would occasionally joke about the chair-throwing incident by saying that he saw an old lady standing on the opposite sideline and threw her the chair so she could sit down.[66][67]
Former Indiana basketball player Todd Jadlow has written a book alleging that from 1985 to 1989, Knight punched him in the face, broke a clipboard over the top of his head, and squeezed his testicles and the testicles of other Hoosiers, among other abuses.[68]
In an April 1988 interview with Connie Chung, when discusssing an Indiana basketball game in which he felt the referees were making poor calls against the Hoosiers, Knight said, "I think that if rape is inevitable, relax and enjoy it." In response, women's groups nationwide were outraged by Knight's comments.[69]
1990–2000
From
Throughout the mid and late 1990s Knight continued to experience success with continual NCAA tournament appearances and a minimum of 19 wins each season.[72] However, 1993 would be Knight's last conference championship and 1994 would be his last trip to the Sweet Sixteen.[56][73]
Throughout the 1990s Knight was yet again involved in several controversies:
- At a practice leading up to an Indiana–Purdue game in West Lafayette in 1991, Knight yelled expletives and threats that were designed to motivate his Indiana team. In one portion he exclaimed he was "fucking tired of losing to Purdue." The speech was secretly taped and has since gone viral, receiving over 1.84 million views on YouTube alone.[74] Although it is still not known who taped the speech, many former players suspect it was team manager Lawrence Frank. Players who were present were unable to remember the specific speech because such expletive-filled outbursts by Knight were so frequent.[75]
- In March 1992 prior to the NCAA regional finals, controversy erupted after Knight playfully mock whipped Indiana players Calbert Cheaney and Pat Graham during practice. The bullwhip had been given to Knight as a gift from his team. Several black leaders complained at the racial connotations of the act, given that Cheaney was a black student.[76]
- In January 1993, Knight mentioned the recruiting of Ivan Renko, a fictitious recruiting experts.[77] Even though Renko was completely fictitious, several recruiting services started listing him as a prospect with in-depth descriptions of his potential and game style. Some of the more reputable recruiting gurus claimed to have never heard of Renko, whereas some other "experts" even claimed to possess or to see film of him actually playing basketball.[78]
- Knight was recorded berating an NCAA volunteer at a March 1995 post-game press conference following a 65–60 loss to Missouri in the first round of the NCAA tournament held in Boise, Idaho. The volunteer informed the press that Knight would not be attending the press conference, when Knight was actually running a few minutes late and had planned on attending per NCAA rules.[79][80]
- Neil Reed and former Indiana player Richard Mandeville alleged in a CNN interview that Knight once showed players his own feces. According to Mandeville, Knight said, "This is how you guys are playing."[81]
- On February 19, 2000, Clarence Doninger, Knight's boss, alleged that he had been physically threatened by Knight during a confrontation after a game.[6]
- An Indiana investigation inquired about an allegation in which Knight berated and physically intimidated a university secretary, once throwing a potted plant in anger, showering her with glass and debris. The university later asked Knight to issue an apology to the secretary.[6]
- It was alleged that Knight attacked assistant coach Ron Felling, throwing him out of a chair after overhearing him criticizing the basketball program in a phone conversation.[6]
Dismissal from Indiana
On March 14, 2000, (just before Indiana was to begin play in the NCAA tournament), the
In response, Indiana University president Myles Brand announced that he had adopted a "zero tolerance" policy with regard to Knight's behavior.[83] Later in the year, in September 2000, Indiana freshman Kent Harvey (not a basketball player) reportedly said, "Hey, Knight, what's up?" to Knight. According to Harvey, Knight then grabbed him by the arm and lectured him for not showing him respect, insisting that Harvey address him as either "Mr. Knight" or "Coach Knight" instead of simply "Knight."[7] Brand stated that this incident was only one of numerous complaints that occurred after the zero-tolerance policy had been put into place. Brand asked Knight to resign on September 10, and when Knight refused, Brand relieved him of his coaching duties effective immediately. Knight's dismissal was met with outrage from students. That night, thousands of Indiana students marched from Indiana University's Assembly Hall to Brand's home, burning Brand in effigy.[7]
Harvey was supported by some and vilified by many who claim he had intentionally set up Knight. Kent Harvey's stepfather, Mark Shaw, was a former Bloomington-area radio talk show host and Knight critic.[84] On September 13, Knight said goodbye to a crowd of some 6,000 supporters in Dunn Meadow at Indiana University.[85] He asked that they not hold a grudge against Harvey and that they continue to support the basketball team.[86] Knight's firing made national headlines, including the cover of Sports Illustrated and around-the-clock coverage on ESPN, as well as mentions on CNN and CBS.[87]
Two days after Knight was fired from Indiana University, Jeremy Schaap of ESPN interviewed him and discussed his time at Indiana. Towards the end of the interview, Knight talked about his son, Pat, who had also been dismissed by the university, wanting an opportunity to be a head coach. Schaap, thinking that Knight was finished, attempted to move on to another subject, but Knight insisted on continuing about his son. Schaap repeatedly tried to ask another question when Knight shifted the conversation to Schaap's style of interviewing, notably chastising him about interruptions. Knight then commented (referring to Schaap's father, Dick Schaap), "You've got a long way to go to be as good as your dad."[88]
In a March 2017 interview on The Dan Patrick Show, Knight stated that he had no interest in ever returning to Indiana.[36] When host Dan Patrick commented that most of the administration that had fired Knight seventeen years earlier were no longer there, Knight said, "I hope they're all dead."[89]
Knight ultimately returned to Assembly Hall at halftime of Indiana's game against
Texas Tech
Following his dismissal from Indiana, Knight took a season off while on the lookout for coaching vacancies.[92] He accepted the head coaching position at Texas Tech University, although his hiring was opposed by a faculty group led by Walter Schaller, associate professor of philosophy.[93] When he was introduced at the press conference, Knight quipped, "This is without question the most comfortable red sweater I've had on in six years."[94]
Knight quickly improved the program, which had not been to an NCAA tournament since 1996.
During Knight's coaching at Texas Tech, Knight was also involved in several controversies. In March 2006, a student's heckling at Baylor University resulted in Knight having to be restrained by a police officer. The incident was not severe enough to warrant any action from the Big 12 Conference.[97]
On November 13, 2006, Knight was shown allegedly hitting player Michael Prince under the chin to get him to make eye contact. Although Knight did not comment on the incident afterwards, Prince, his parents, and Texas Tech athletic director Gerald Myers insisted that Knight did nothing wrong and that he merely lifted Prince's chin and told him, "Hold your head up and don't worry about mistakes. Just play the game." Prince commented, "He was trying to teach me and I had my head down so he raised my chin up. He was telling me to go out there and don't be afraid to make mistakes. He said I was being too hard on myself." ESPN analyst Fran Fraschilla defended Knight by saying "That's coaching!"[98]
On October 21, 2007, James Simpson of Lubbock, Texas, accused Knight of firing a shotgun in his direction after he yelled at Knight and another man for hunting too close to his home.[99] Knight denied the allegations, however an argument between the two men was recorded via camera phone and aired later on television.[100]
Knight won his 900th game in his coaching career on January 16, 2008, in a 68–58 win against Texas A&M, but not before arguing with referees during the match.[101][102]
Retirement
On February 4, 2008, Knight announced his retirement.
International coaching
In the
Life after coaching
In 2008, ESPN hired Knight as a studio analyst and occasional color commentator.[112] In November 2012, he called an Indiana men's basketball game for the first time, something he had previously refused to do.[113] Then-men's basketball coach Tom Crean reached out to Knight in an attempt to get him to visit the school again.[114] On April 2, 2015, ESPN announced that it would not renew its contract with Knight.[115]
On February 27, 2019, Don Fischer, an IU radio announcer since 1974, said during an interview that Knight was in ill health. He continued by saying Knight's health "has declined" but did not offer any specifics.[116]
On April 4, 2019, Knight made his first public appearance after Fischer made his comments. He appeared with longtime friend and journalist Bob Hammel and spoke about different aspects of his career. During the presentation, Knight seemed to struggle with his memory: he re-introduced his wife to the audience after doing so only 10 minutes earlier, he mistakenly said that former IU basketball player Landon Turner had died, and, after telling a story about Michael Jordan, he later told the same story, replacing Jordan with former IU basketball player Damon Bailey.[117]
Knight and his wife resided in Lubbock, Texas, even after his retirement.[118] On July 10, 2019, the Indiana Daily Student, IU's campus newspaper, reported that Knight and his wife had purchased a home in Bloomington for $572,500, suggesting that Knight had decided to return to Bloomington to live.[119]
Coaching philosophy
Knight was an innovator of the
Knight's motion offense did not take shape until he began coaching at Indiana. Prior to that, at Army, he ran a "reverse action" offense that involved reversing the ball from one side of the floor to the other and screening along with it.[120] According to Knight, it was a "West Coast offense" that Pete Newell used exclusively during his coaching career.[27] After being exposed to the Princeton offense, Knight instilled more cutting with the offense he employed, which evolved into the motion offense that he ran for most of his career.[120] Knight continued to develop the offense, instituting different cuts over the years and putting his players in different scenarios.[121]
Knight was well known for the extreme preparation he put into each game and practice. He was often quoted as saying, "Most people have the will to win, few have the will to prepare to win."[122] Often during practice, Knight would instruct his players to a certain spot on the floor and give them options of what to do based on how the defense might react.[120] In contrast to set plays, Knight's offense was designed to react according to the defense.[120]
The three-point shot was adopted by the NCAA in 1986, which was midway through Knight's coaching career. Although he opposed the rule change throughout his life, it did complement his offense well by improving the spacing on the floor.[120] He sardonically said at the time that he supported institution of the three-point shot because if a team's offense was functioning efficiently enough to get a layup, the team should be rewarded with three points for that basket. Knight's offense also emphasized a two-count.[120] Players in the post are expected to try to post in the paint for two seconds and if they do not receive the ball they go set a screen. Players with the ball are expected to hold the ball for two seconds to see where they are going to take it. Screens are supposed to be held for two seconds, as well.[120]
On defense Knight was known for emphasizing tenacious "man-to-man" defense where defenders contest every pass and every shot, and help teammates when needed. However, Knight also incorporated a zone defense periodically after eschewing it for the first two decades of his coaching career.[123]
Knight's coaching also included a firm emphasis on academics. All but four of his four-year players completed their degrees, or nearly 98 percent. Nearly 80 percent of his players graduated; this figure was much higher than the national average of 42 percent for Division 1 schools.[124]
Legacy
Accomplishments
Knight's all time coaching record is 902–371.[125] His 902 wins in NCAA Division I men's college basketball games is fourth all-time to Knight's former player Mike Krzyzewski, Syracuse head coach Jim Boeheim, and North Carolina head Coach Roy Williams.[15] Knight achieved his 880th career win on January 1, 2007, and passed retired North Carolina coach Dean Smith for most career victories, a title he held until his win total was surpassed by Krzyzewski on November 15, 2011.[15][126] It was later surpassed by Boeheim on January 2, 2013,[127] and by Williams on March 11, 2021.[128][129] Knight is the youngest coach to reach 200, 300, and 400 wins, as well as among the youngest to reach other milestones of 500, 600, 700, and 800 wins.[130]
Texas Tech's participation in the 2007 NCAA tournament gave Knight more NCAA tournament appearances than any other coach.[131] He is the only coach to win the NCAA, the NIT, an Olympic Gold medal, and a Pan American Games Gold medal.[131] Knight is also one of only three people, along with Smith and Joe B. Hall, who have both played on and coached an NCAA Tournament championship basketball team.[15]
Recognition
Knight received a number of personal honors during and after his coaching career. He was named the National Coach of the Year four times (1975, 1976, 1987, 1989)
On November 17, 2006, Knight was recognized for his impact on college basketball as a member of the founding class of the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame.[96] The following year, he was the recipient of the Naismith Award for Men's Outstanding Contribution to Basketball.[135] Knight was also inducted into the Army Sports Hall of Fame (Class of 2008)[136] and the Indiana Hoosiers athletics Hall of Fame (Class of 2009).[87] In August 2003, he was honored as the first inductee in The Vince Lombardi Titletown Legends.[137]
Three banners were hung at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall as a result of the three national championship wins led by Knight.[138][139]
Coaching tree
A number of Knight's assistant coaches, players, and managers have gone on to be coaches. In the college ranks, this includes Hall of Fame Duke coach
In the media
Books about Knight
In 1986, author John Feinstein published A Season on the Brink, which detailed the 1985–86 season of the Indiana Hoosiers. Granted almost unprecedented access to the Indiana basketball program, as well as insights into Knight's private life, the book quickly became a major bestseller and spawned a new genre, as a legion of imitators wrote works covering a single year of a sports franchise. In the book Feinstein depicts a coach who is quick with a violent temper, but also one who never cheats and strictly follows all of the NCAA's rules.[58]
Two years later, author Joan Mellen penned the book Bob Knight: His Own Man (
In 1990, Robert P. Sulek wrote Hoosier Honor: Bob Knight and Academic Success at Indiana University which discusses the academic side of the basketball program. The book details all of the players that have played for Knight and what degree they earned.[144]
A number of close associates and friends of Knight have also written books about him. Former player and current Nevada Wolf Pack head basketball coach Steve Alford wrote Playing for Knight: My Six Seasons with Bobby Knight, published in 1990.[145] Former player Kirk Haston wrote Days of Knight: How the General Changed My Life, published in 2016.[146]
Knight's autobiography, written with longtime friend and sports journalist Bob Hammel, was titled Knight: My Story and published in 2003.[147] Three years later Steve Delsohn and Mark Heisler wrote Bob Knight: An Unauthorized Biography.[148]
In 2013, Knight and Bob Hammel published The Power of Negative Thinking: An Unconventional Approach to Achieving Positive Results.[149] Knight discussed his approach to preparing for a game by anticipating all of the things that could go wrong and trying to prevent it or having a plan to deal with it. In the book Knight also shared one of his favorite sayings, "Victory favors the team making the fewest mistakes."[150]
In 2017, sports reporter Terry Hutchens published Following the General: Why Three Coaches Have Been Unable to Return Indiana Basketball to Greatness which discussed Knight's coaching legacy with Indiana and how none of the coaches following him have been able to reach his level of success.[151]
Film and television
Knight appeared or was featured in numerous films and television productions. In 1994 a feature film titled Blue Chips featured a character named Pete Bell, a volatile but honest college basketball coach under pressure to win who decides to blatantly violate NCAA rules to field a competitive team after a sub-par season.[152] It starred Nick Nolte as Bell and NBA star Shaquille O'Neal as Neon Bodeaux, a once-in-a-lifetime player that boosters woo to his school with gifts and other perks.[152] The coach's temper and wardrobe were modeled after Knight's, though at no time had Knight been known to illegally recruit.[153] Knight himself appears in the film and coaches against Nolte in the film's climactic game.[153]
Knight made a cameo appearance as himself in the 2003 film Anger Management.[157] In 2008, Knight appeared in a commercial as part of Volkswagen's Das Auto series where Max, a 1964 black Beetle, interviews famous people. When Knight talked about Volkswagen winning the best resale value award in 2008, Max replied, "At least one of us is winning a title this year." This prompted Knight to throw his chair off the stage and walk out saying, "I may not be retired."[158]
Knight also made an appearance in a TV commercial for Guitar Hero: Metallica and Risky Business with fellow coaches Mike Krzyzewski, Rick Pitino, and Roy Williams.[159]
In 2009, Knight produced three instructional coaching DVD libraries—on motion offense, man-to-man defense, and instilling mental toughness—with Championship Productions.[160]
Personal life and death
Knight married the former Nancy Falk[161] on April 17, 1963. They had two sons, Tim and Pat.[162] The couple divorced in 1985.[3] Pat played at Indiana from 1991 to 1995 and was head coach at Lamar from the time of his father's retirement until he was dismissed in 2014.[163][164] Pat Knight coached Texas Tech after his father's retirement before he moved to Lamar.[163] In 1988, Knight married his second wife, Karen Vieth Edgar, a former Oklahoma high school basketball coach.[165]
Knight had a high regard for education and made generous donations to the schools he was a part of, particularly libraries. At Indiana University Knight endowed two chairs, one in history and one in law.[166] He also raised nearly $5 million for the Indiana University library system by championing a library fund to support the library's activities. The fund was ultimately named in his honor.[167]
When Knight came to Texas Tech in 2001, he gave $10,000 to the library, while his wife gave $25,000, donations which included the first gifts to the Coach Knight Library Fund which has now collected over $300,000.[168][169] Later, in 2005, Knight donated an additional $40,000 to the library.[170] On November 29, 2007, the Texas Tech library honored this with A Legacy of Giving: The Bob Knight Exhibit.[171]
On April 18, 2011, video surfaced showing Knight responding to a question concerning
Knight supported Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, and later made an appearance at his rally in Indianapolis for the 2018 midterms. At the rally, Knight called Trump "a great defender of the United States of America".[174][175]
Knight died in Bloomington, Indiana, on November 1, 2023, at age 83.[176]
Career playing statistics
GP | Games played | GS | Games started | MPG | Minutes per game |
FG% | Field goal percentage | 3P% | 3-point field goal percentage | FT% | Free throw percentage |
RPG | Rebounds per game | APG | Assists per game | SPG | Steals per game |
BPG | Blocks per game | PPG | Points per game | Bold | Career high |
College
Year | Team | GP | FG% | FT% | RPG | PPG |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1959–60 | Ohio State | 21 | .405 | .630 | 2.0 | 3.7 |
1960–61 | Ohio State | 28 | .397 | .577 | 2.8 | 4.4 |
1961–62 | Ohio State | 25 | .393 | .818 | 1.5 | 3.2 |
Career | 74 | .398 | .641 | 2.1 | 3.8 | |
Source:[177] |
Head coaching record
See also
- List of college men's basketball coaches with 600 wins
- List of NCAA Division I Men's Final Four appearances by coach
References
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- ^ a b "ESPN Classic Sportscentury Biography". ESPN. Archived from the original on July 31, 2010. Retrieved October 11, 2010.
- ^ "Pat Knight to mine for players in Indiana". NBC Sports. February 15, 2008. Archived from the original on March 7, 2012. Retrieved October 11, 2010.
- ^ a b c d e "Bob Knight". Indianapolis Star. February 4, 2008. Archived from the original on April 19, 2010. Retrieved October 11, 2010.
- ^ a b c d CNN.com – Fired Bob Knight calms angry student demonstrators – September 11, 2000 Archived May 18, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Indiana University Fires Knight". ABC News. Archived from the original on January 15, 2018. Retrieved January 14, 2018.
- ^ "A dark side of Knight". Sports Illustrated. September 10, 2000. Archived from the original on July 30, 2012. Retrieved April 26, 2012.
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- ^ Arace, Michael (November 2, 2023). "Arace: Bobby Knight made himself in Indiana, but he was made in Ohio. He never forgot it". The Columbus Dispatch. Archived from the original on November 2, 2023. Retrieved November 2, 2023.
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- ISBN 074324348X.
- ^ "Howstuffworks 'Bob Knight'". Entertainment.howstuffworks.com. Archived from the original on December 6, 2010. Retrieved October 11, 2010.
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- ^ Puma, Mike. "Knight known for titles, temper". ESPN Classic. Archived from the original on August 10, 2020. Retrieved November 2, 2023.
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