Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | (1915-04-05)April 5, 1915 Hiawatha, Kansas, U.S. |
Died | October 8, 1999(1999-10-08) (aged 84) Cleveland Heights, Ohio, U.S. |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1941–1952 | North Carolina College |
1953–1954 | Hampton |
1955–1959 | Tennessee A&I |
1959–1962 | Cleveland Pipers |
1964–1966 | Kentucky State |
1966–1969 | Cleveland State |
1969 | Denver Rockets |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
3×NAIA Champion (1957–1959) 8×CIAA (1941, 1943–44, 1946–47, 1949–50, 1952) 2×CIAA conference (1946, 1950) | |
Basketball Hall of Fame Inducted in 1979, 2016 | |
College Basketball Hall of Fame Inducted in 2006 | |
John B. McLendon Jr. (April 5, 1915 – October 8, 1999) was an Americanbasketball coach who is recognized as the firstAfrican American basketball coach at a predominantly white university and the first African American head coach in any professional sport. He was a major contributor to the development of modern basketball and coached on both the college and professional levels during his career. He has been enshrined three times in theNaismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, and also inducted into theNational Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame.
McClendon was born inHiawatha, Kansas.[1] McLendon Jr. was partAfrican American and partDelaware Indian from his mother's side.[2] His mother died in the1918 flu pandemic[3] which would lead to the temporary break-up of his family. McClendon and his younger brother were sent to be with his Delaware Indian grandparents on a ranch nearTrinidad, Colorado while his older sister was sent to be with an aunt inOmaha, Nebraska, and his younger sister was sent to be with other relatives, but would end up with a foster family on a ranch inIdaho.[3] McClendon would not see his younger sister again for 45 years, but the rest of the family were reunited after his father remarried in 1921.
The family settled inKansas City, Kansas, where McClendon would first go to Dunbar Elementary School and laterSumner High School.[4] He became enamored with the sport of basketball while on a field trip from Dunbar Elementary to the new Northeast Junior High School[4] in Kansas City, Kansas, where he saw his first official basketball court. He soon became an all-around athlete at Sumner High School and chose basketball as his favorite sport, although he failed to make the basketball team at Sumner. Instead, he lettered in gymnastics and was the basketball team manager.[4]
After high school, McClendon first attendedKansas City Kansas Junior College where he finally made the basketball team.[4] The team went undefeated, although he only played sparingly. After one year at Kansas City Kansas Junior College he then transferred to theUniversity of Kansas, where he learned the intricacies of basketball from the sport's inventor,James Naismith, who was the athletic director at the school.[2] However, McLendon was not permitted to actually play college basketball, as the KU varsity team wassegregated and would not suit up its first black player until 1951.[5] He graduated with a master's degree in physical education from theUniversity of Iowa in 1937.[6][7][8]
He went on to become a successful high school and college coach, at schools such as North Carolina College for Negroes (nowNorth Carolina Central University),Hampton Institute (now University), Tennessee A&I (nowTennessee State University),Kentucky State College (now University) andCleveland State University. In his early years, his teams were restricted to playing only against other all-black teams. However, while coaching at North Carolina College for Negroes, McLendon participated in "The Secret Game", a match against a team fromDuke University, which was the first collegiate basketball contest where blacks and whites competed on the same floor.[9] He led the Eagles to eightCIAA Championships (1941, 1943–44, 1946–47, 1949–50, 1952).[10] McLendon's teams were credited with increasing the pace of the game of basketball from the slow tempo of its early years to the faster tempo that prevails today. At Cleveland State, he was the first African American head coach of a predominantly white university.[2]
He was a three-time winner of theNAIA Coach of the Year award and won three consecutive NAIA championships at Tennessee State, making him the first college basketball coach ever to have won three consecutive national titles.[11]
McLendon also coached professionally on two occasions.Cleveland Pipers General Manager Mike Cleary hired him in 1962 to be the head coach of theAmerican Basketball League team which was owned byGeorge Steinbrenner. McLendon's hiring made history, as he became the first African American head coach in professional sports. In his, and the Pipers', only season in the ABL, partway through the season he quit or was fired (sources differ). McLendon was replaced as coach byBill Sharman of the recently defunctLos Angeles Jets of the ABL; under Sharman, the team completed the season and won the league championship. McLendon went on to coach theAmerican Basketball Association'sDenver Rockets (which later became theDenver Nuggets of theNBA) in 1969, although he was fired after the team started the season 9–19. Despite the fact that he was only 54 when dismissed, this was the last college or professional head coaching job in his career.
McLendon's contributions to the game of basketball include the invention of thefast break,[12]full-court press andfour corners offense.[13]
McLendon was inducted into theNaismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1979 as acontributor.[14] He was, however, selected in 2007 for the second entering class of theNational Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame for his coaching achievements.[15] He was also inducted into the Cleveland State Athletics Hall of Fame in 2007, where his wife Joanna accepted the award on his behalf.
On April 4, 2016, McLendon was announced as an inductee of the Naismith Hall again, this time as a coach. He was formally inducted in this role on September 9 of that year.[16]
A biography of John B. McLendon,Breaking Through: John B. McLendon, Basketball Legend and Civil Rights Pioneer, by Milton S. Katz, was published in 2007. McLendon's coaching legacy is also chronicled in the documentaryBlack Magic, which originally aired as a two-part series on ESPN in March 2008.[2]
TheNational Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics sponsors the John McLendon Minority Scholarship Foundation, which offers postgraduate scholarships to minority students studying athletics administration. The foundation was formed under the directorship of Mike Cleary, who hired McLendon as head coach of the Cleveland Pipers in 1962 as the first African American head coach in professional sports.
Beginning in 2016, a first-round game in theCollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament involving anHBCU team would be known as the Coach John Mclendon Classic.[17] The tradition continued through the tournament's end in 2019.Eracism then took ownership of the event and relaunched it in 2021. It has been held annually ever since.
He was the 2021 recipient of the NCAATheodore Roosevelt Award.[18]
Beginning in 2023, an annual College Basketball game will be hosted by Kansas to support the John McClendon Initiative. In the first edition, the Jayhawks will hostNorth Carolina Central.[19]
Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
North Carolina College(Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association)(1940–1952) | |||||||||
1940–41 | North Carolina College | 19–5 | CIAA | ||||||
1941–42 | North Carolina College | 18–5 | CIAA | ||||||
1942–43 | North Carolina College | 13–6 | CIAA | ||||||
1943–44 | North Carolina College | 19–1 | CIAA | ||||||
1944–45 | North Carolina College | 18–2 | CIAA | ||||||
1945–46 | North Carolina College | 19–5 | CIAA | ||||||
1946–47 | North Carolina College | 20–5 | CIAA | ||||||
1947–48 | North Carolina College | 18–12 | CIAA | ||||||
1948–49 | North Carolina College | 25–5 | CIAA | ||||||
1949–50 | North Carolina College | 24–5 | CIAA | ||||||
1950–51 | North Carolina College | 28–7 | CIAA | ||||||
1951–52 | North Carolina College | 18–10 | CIAA | ||||||
North Carolina College: | 239–68 (.779) | ||||||||
Hampton Pirates(Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association)(1952–1954) | |||||||||
1952–53 | Hampton | 16–6 | CIAA | ||||||
1953–54 | Hampton | 16–13 | CIAA | ||||||
Hampton Pirates: | 32–19 (.627) | ||||||||
Tennessee A&I Tigers(Midwestern)(1954–1959) | |||||||||
1954–55 | Tennessee A&I | 29–4 | Midwestern | ||||||
1955–56 | Tennessee A&I | 26–8 | Midwestern | NAIA Elite Eight | |||||
1956–57 | Tennessee A&I | 31–4 | Midwestern | NAIA National Champion | |||||
1957–58 | Tennessee A&I | 31–3 | Midwestern | NAIA National Champion | |||||
1958–59 | Tennessee A&I | 32–1 | Midwestern | NAIA National Champion | |||||
Tennessee A&I: | 149–20 (.882) | ||||||||
Cleveland State Vikings(Independent)(1966–1969) | |||||||||
1966–67 | Cleveland State | 8–13 | |||||||
1967–68 | Cleveland State | 7–15 | |||||||
1968–69 | Cleveland State | 12–14 | |||||||
Cleveland State: | 27–42 (.391) | ||||||||
Total: | 496–179 (.735) | ||||||||
National champion Postseason invitational champion |