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andyokstate
09-07-2008, 07:41 PM
Haskins, Hall of Fame basketball coach, dies (http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/basketball/news;_ylt=Av.d7QfQHpj31JJ.7NE1saY5nYcB?slug=ap-obit-haskins&prov=ap&type=lgns)

By ALICIA A. CALDWELL, Associated Press Writer 11 minutes ago

EL PASO, Texas (AP)—Don Haskins, credited with helping break color barriers in college sports in 1966 when he used five black starters to win a national basketball title for Texas Western, died Sunday. He was 78.

Texas-El Paso spokesman Jeff Darby said the Hall of Fame coach died Sunday afternoon. He had no other details. UTEP was previously known as Texas Western.

Haskins was an old-time coach who believed in hard work and was known for his gruff demeanor. That attitude was portrayed in the 2006 movie “Glory Road,” the Disney film that chronicled Haskins’ improbable rise to national fame in the 1966 championship game against Kentucky. The movie, which was preceded by a book of the same title, also sparked renewed interest in Haskins’ career.

During his career, Haskins turned down several more lucrative offers, including one with the now-defunct American Basketball Association, to remain at UTEP as one of the lowest paid coaches in the Western Athletic Conference.

Haskins retired in 1999 after 38 seasons at the school. He had a 719-353 record and won seven WAC championships. He took UTEP to 14 NCAA tournaments and to the NIT seven times and briefly worked as an adviser with the Chicago Bulls.

His health had been an issue in his final coaching years, often forcing him to remain seated during games, and his program struggled after twice being slapped with NCAA sanctions. Serious health concerns continued in his retirement. In the midst of a series of book signings and other appearances Haskins was hospitalized with various woes.

After his retirement, Haskins kept close ties with the Miners. The school’s most recent hire, Tony Barbee, said he even met with Haskins just after accepting the job.

“He is a guy who has forgotten more basketball than I will ever know,” Barbee said.

Haskins played for Hall of Fame coach Henry “Hank” Iba at Oklahoma State, back when the school was still Oklahoma A&M. Haskins was later an assistant under Iba for the 1972 U.S. Olympic team in Munich.

As a coach, Haskins became a star early in his career by leading his Miners to the 1966 NCAA championship game, then making the controversial decision to start five blacks against all-white, heavily favored Kentucky, coached by Adolf Rupp. The Miners won, and shortly after that many schools began recruiting black players.

Haskins said he wasn’t trying to make a social statement with his lineup; he was simply starting his best players. The move, however, raised the ire of some who sent Haskins hate mail and even death threats during the racially charged era.

The coach always was focused on the game of basketball. He had a reputation for working his players hard.

“Our practices wore us out so much that we’d have to rest up before the games,” said Harry Floury, a starter in the 1966 championship. “If you work hard all the time and if you go after every loose ball, you see things like that (championship) happen.”

Haskins is credited with helping Nate Archibald, Tim Hardaway and Antonio Davis, among others, make it to the NBA.

In November 2000, Haskins was awarded the John Thompson Foundation’s Outstanding Achievement Award during a tournament hosted by Arkansas.

“We couldn’t think of anyone that deserves this recognition more than coach Haskins,” said Nolan Richardson, the former Arkansas coach who played under Haskins for two years. “He opened the door for African-American players to play basketball.”

legelegel
09-07-2008, 07:51 PM
A good man has left us.

BackHomePoke
09-07-2008, 09:19 PM
That is one of my favorite, based on a true story, sports movies. To know of his ties to OSU and Iba always made it that much better.

Verb
09-07-2008, 09:20 PM
Rest in peace, Coach.

JimBob
09-07-2008, 09:31 PM
Doyle Parrack also passed away per today's TW; he played for Mr. Iba on one of the Nat'l Championship teams.

Tokyoken
09-07-2008, 09:48 PM
It was my understanding that Don was in a nursing home in Tulsa. Obit will probably let us know for sure. Fantastic coach. Go Pokes!!!!

pokeinokc
09-07-2008, 10:47 PM
The world has lost a good man, and heaven has gained one.

snuffy
09-08-2008, 12:00 PM
Game always came first to Haskins

Story Highlights

* Haskins' historic 1966 title earned him a deserving spot in the Hall of Fame
* The coach never claimed he made a statement when he started five black players

Upon learning of the death tonight of longtime UTEP coach Don (The Bear) Haskins, these thoughts made their way through my head, in roughly this order:

• Thank goodness the end came after Haskins had made it into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. His enshrinement in 1997, after six unavailing nominations, came far too late -- not to Haskins himself, for he was a self-effacing man, but to chroniclers of the game, who regarded his 1966 NCAA title as more and more meaningful the smaller it appeared in our rear-view mirrors.

• As regards to that national championship, known as the Brown v. Board of Ed of college basketball because Haskins' Texas Western team with its five black starters whipped Adolph Rupp's all-white Kentucky team in the final: Haskins never veered off message in insisting, from that day forward, that he intended no political statement. He was simply fielding his best possible team.

• No one who knew Haskins and his plainspoken Oklahoma ways ever doubted that this was true.

• I last saw him more than 10 years ago. The Miners had just weathered three seasons without a winning record. The Bear was supplementing his income by going into the hills above El Paso to call and shoot coyotes, then selling the pelts for $75 a piece. Visits from national sportswriters like me came fewer and further between. In his office he told me of growing up in Enid, Okla., and the story of Herman Carr -- and with it I got the closest thing to a social manifesto that Don Haskins would ever deliver.

Haskins was a stud in his day, good enough to draw a scholarship offer from coach Henry Iba at Oklahoma A&M. But throughout his high school career it nagged at him that he might not have been even the best player in town. He'd hook up with Carr, a 6-foot-2 black kid from the west side, for epic games of one-on-one in Government Springs Park. But come September, each headed off to a separate, segregated school. "Would have been nice to have played with Herman in high school," Haskins told me. "I remember just thinking how unfair it was that this guy couldn't play. Unfortunately there wasn't a little more equality back then."

For the "stand" he took in 1966, the Bear got 40,000 pieces of hate mail and a dozen death threats.

For this story he told on a December morning in 1997, he had an audience of one.

The path coursed its way through his life, consistent and true: To Haskins, from his early pinnacle to his largely anonymous twilight, the game always came first.