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Harold Olsen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American basketball player and coach
For the American football offensive tackle, seeHarold Olson.
This article includes alist of references,related reading, orexternal links,but its sources remain unclear because it lacksinline citations. Please helpimprove this article byintroducing more precise citations.(June 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Harold Olsen
Olsen from the 1946Makio
Biographical details
Born(1895-05-12)May 12, 1895
Rice Lake, Wisconsin, U.S.
DiedOctober 29, 1953(1953-10-29) (aged 58)
Rice Lake, Wisconsin, U.S.
Playing career
Basketball
1914–1917Wisconsin
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Basketball
1918–1919Bradley
1919–1922Ripon
1922–1946Ohio State
1946–1949Chicago Stags
1950–1952Northwestern
Football
1919–1921Ripon
Baseball
1919Bradley
Head coaching record
Overall311–241 (college basketball)
95–63 (BAA)
13–6–1 (college football)
0–1 (college baseball)
Tournaments6–4
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Basketball
5Big Ten (1925, 1933, 1939, 1944, 1946)
NCAA Runner-up (1939)
4NCAA Division I Regional – Final Four (1939, 1944, 1945, 1946)
Helms Foundation All-American (1917)
Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted in 1959 (profile)
College Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted in 2006

Harold G. Olsen (May 12, 1895 – October 29, 1953) was acollege men's basketball coach. TheRice Lake, Wisconsin native was the head coach of theOhio State University from 1922 to 1946. That year, he became the first head coach of theBAA'sChicago Stags, where he coached almost three seasons before being replaced byPhilip Brownstein. Olsen also coached atNorthwestern University (1950–1952).

While playing atUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison (1914–1917), Olsen was named to the All-Big Ten twice for basketball.[1] After graduating from Wisconsin, he began his coaching career atBradley University andRipon College. In 1922, Olsen followedGeorge Trautman as head coach of the Ohio State University. In 24 years he guided the Buckeyes to a 259–197 record, as well as fiveBig Ten championships (1925, 1933, 1939, 1944, 1946). He served as a chair on the NCAA Basketball Committee. Olsen helped initiate the10-second rule in 1937, which requires teams to advance the ball over the center line within 10 seconds of gaining possession. In 1939, Olsen spearheaded efforts to create the NCAA postseason national playoffs, now known as theNCAA tournament, one that could compete with theNational Invitational Tournament, which started play in 1938 with games hosted atMadison Square Garden in New York. The first NCAA tournament in 1939 sawNorthwestern University host eight teams. Oregon beat Ohio State to become the first tournament champion in a format that has expanded several times to go with its popularity as the premier tournament for college basketball.

In 1959, he was inducted to theNaismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a contributor.

Head coaching record

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College football

[edit]
YearTeamOverallConferenceStandingBowl/playoffs
Ripon Crimson(Independent)(1919–1921)
1919Ripon6–1
1920Ripon4–3
1921Ripon3–2–1
Ripon:13–6–1
Total:13–6–1

College basketball

[edit]
Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Bradley Indians(Independent)(1918–1919)
1918–19Bradley6–9
Bradley:6–9 (.400)
Ripon Crimson(Independent)(1919–1922)
1919–20Ripon11–2
1920–21Ripon9–3
1921–22Ripon7–5
Ripon:27–10 (.730)
Ohio State Buckeyes(Big Ten Conference)(1922–1946)
1922–23Ohio State4–111–11T–9th
1923–24Ohio State12–57–54th
1924–25Ohio State14–211–11st
1925–26Ohio State10–76–65th
1926–27Ohio State11–66–67th
1927–28Ohio State5–123–9T–7th
1928–29Ohio State9–86–6T–5th
1929–30Ohio State9–151–99th
1930–31Ohio State4–133–99th
1931–32Ohio State9–95–76th
1932–33Ohio State17–310–2T–1st
1933–34Ohio State8–124–8T–8th
1934–35Ohio State12–78–4T–4th
1935–36Ohio State12–85–7T–6th
1936–37Ohio State13–77–55th
1937–38Ohio State12–87–5T–3rd
1938–39Ohio State16–710–21stNCAA Runner-up
1939–40Ohio State13–78–43rd
1940–41Ohio State10–107–5T–3rd
1941–42Ohio State6–144–119th
1942–43Ohio State8–95–7T–6th
1943–44Ohio State14–710–21stNCAA Final Four
1944–45Ohio State15–510–22ndNCAA Final Four
1945–46Ohio State16–510–21stNCAA Final Four
Ohio State:259–197 (.568)154–135 (.533)
Northwestern Wildcats(Big Ten Conference)(1950–1952)
1950–51Northwestern12–107–7T–4th
1951–52Northwestern7–154–10T–8th
Northwestern:19–25 (.432)11–17 (.393)
Total:311–241 (.563)

      National champion        Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion        Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion      Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Professional basketball

[edit]
Legend
Regular seasonGGames coachedWGames wonLGames lostW–L %Win–loss %
PlayoffsPGPlayoff gamesPWPlayoff winsPLPlayoff lossesPW–L %Playoff win–loss %
TeamYearGWLW–L%FinishPGPWPLPW–L%Result
CHS1946–47613922.6391st in Western1156.455Lost inBAA Finals
CHS1947–48482820.5833rd in Western523.400Lost inBAA Semifinals
CHS1948–49492821.5713rd in Western202.000Lost inBAA Div. Semifinals
Career1589563.60118711.389

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"March Madness ignited by UW–Madison grad | Wisconsin Alumni Association".

External links

[edit]
Links to related articles

# denotes interim head coach

Players
Guards
Forwards
Centers
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