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Cam Henderson
American sports coach, college athletics administrator

Cam Henderson

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American sports coach, college athletics administrator
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Joetown, Marion County, West Virginia, USA
Place of death
Richmond, USA
Age
66 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Eli Camden Henderson (February 5, 1890 – May 3, 1956) was an American football, basketball, and baseball coach and college athletics administrator.He served as the head football coach at Muskingum College (1920–1922), Davis & Elkins College (1923–1934), and Marshall University (1935–1949), compiling a career college football record of 161–91–13.Henderson was also the head basketball coach at Muskingum (1920–1923), Davis & Elkins (1923–1935), and Marshall (1935–1955), tallying a career college basketball mark of 621–234.As a coach in basketball, he originated the fast break and the 2–3 zone defense, hallmarks of the modern game.

Early life and education

Henderson was born in 1890 in the small town of Joetown in Marion County, West Virginia.He graduated from Glenville Normal School in 1911.

High school coaching career

Henderson began coaching at Shinnston High School in rural West Virginia, then moved to Bristol, West Virginia, where no gymnasium existed on his arrival. Henderson managed to have a gym constructed there, but poorly-cured wood and a leaky roof resulted in a slippery floor. Henderson began to distribute his defenders in "zones" to avoid the slick spots. He then developed an offense of "breaking fast" off a missed basketball, with two forwards tearing down each sideline and a point guard bringing the ball up the court quickly for a number of options. Henderson is credited with the creation of the 2–3 zone defense and the fast break in basketball.

College coaching career

Henderson moved on to a head coaching position in football and basketball at Muskingum College in Ohio in 1920, but his greatest glory came during the period of 1923 to 1934 as head basketball and football coach of Davis & Elkins College in Elkins, West Virginia. Henderson coached the first undefeated (22–0) West Virginia collegiate basketball team (1924–25) at Davis & Elkins and coached the first (proclaimed) D&E state collegiate football championship team in 1928. Henderson's 1933 team won the West Virginia Athletic Conference title. At Davis & Elkins, Henderson had a 220–40 record in basketball and an 81–33–6 record in football. His Davis & Elkins football teams beat much larger schools like West Virginia University, Army, Fordham, Villanova, George Washington and Navy.

Marshall

Henderson assumed a position at Marshall College, now Marshall University, in 1935, after Marshall had hired Dr. John Allen from D&E to be President of Marshall. Henderson was hired as athletic director and head coach for basketball and football. Henderson would win 68 football games and one Buckeye Conference title (a 9–0–1 season in 1937). He sent the Thundering Herd to the 1948 Tangerine Bowl and he produced College Football Hall of Fame running back Jackie Hunt, who set the national scoring mark with 27 touchdowns in 1940. His basketball teams won 368 games and won the Buckeye Conference in 1936–37, 1937–38 and 1938–39, the final year for the league. He won 35 straight home games from 1944 to 1947, started the 1946–47 season 17–0, then went on to a 32–5 mark and Marshall's only national championship in basketball in the NAIB (today's NAIA) Basketball Tournament in Kansas City, Missouri. Henderson also sent teams to the 1938 and 1948 tournament. His 1947–48 team won the Helms Foundation's Los Angeles Invitational by defeating Syracuse, 46–44.

Henderson's first All-Americans were Bill Smith for football (1937) and Jule Rivlin for basketball (1940). He sent numerous players to the professional ranks, including Frank "Gunner" Gatski (Marshall 1940–42), who is the first of the Herd's two members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. Gatski went on to play in 11 title games in 12 seasons with the Cleveland Browns (1946–56) and Detroit Lions (1957), winning four All-American Football Conference and three NFL titles with the Browns and one NFL title with the Lions. Henderson also recruited the first African-American to play at the formerly all-white colleges of West Virginia when he signed Hal Greer from Huntington in 1954. Greer helped Marshall to the Mid-American Conference (MAC) title in 1955–56, then led the nation in scoring in 1957–58 with 88 points per game. Greer signed with the Syracuse Nationals of the NBA, but went on to greatest glory with the Philadelphia 76ers by winning the title in 1966–67 and becoming a multi-year All-Star and MVP of the 1968 All-Star game. Greer, named as one of the top 50 players in the NBA 50th Anniversary, averaged 19 points per game (1,122 games played), five rebounds and four assists and was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 1982.

Marshall had three basketball wins over Tennessee and Colorado during Henderson's tenure. They beat the Dayton Flyers 17 times and topped teams like BYU, South Carolina, Cincinnati, Long Island, St. Francis, St. Louis, Loyola, Virginia Tech, Cal, Louisville, Denver, Wichita State, Miami-Florida, City College of New York, Xavier, Indiana State, Maryland, Murray State, Western Kentucky, Kansas State, Creighton, Hawaii, Washington, Idaho, Evansville, Pepperdine, Texas A&M, Memphis (State), Southern Miss and Virginia. Over 20 seasons they had only one losing campaign, going 6–10 in Henderson's first year. His teams won as many as 32 games and they won 20 or more games eight times. He produced the first-ever first round draft pick for the NBA, Andy Tonkovich, and produced All-Americans like Walt Walowac (two-times on Helms Foundation Teams, first in 1953, third in 1954 and scored 1,982 career points). NAIB All-Americans in 1947 and 1948 included Gene James, who played in the NBA, Bill Hall, Bill Toothman, Marvin Gutshall and Tonkovich. Rivlin was on the AP Little All-American team in 1940. Charlie Slack set a still-standing NCAA record of 25.4 rebounds per game for Henderson's final team in 1954–55, and finished his career with 1,916 rebounds and 1,551 points in four seasons. Slack and Walowac played for the Goodyear Winged Foots of Akron, Ohio, in national and international AAU contests, and Slack was an alternate for the 1960 Olympic team.

After a 6–4 season in 1949, Director of Athletics Luther Poling asked Henderson to resign his football position. Henderson would remain at Marshall as head basketball coach until 1955. His championship basketball team of 1947 spurred the move into the new Cabell County Veteran's Memorial Field House, a 6,500-seat arena that was Marshall's home from 1950 to 1980. His final team in 1954–55 was 18–4, but the MAC prevented Marshall from accepting an invitation to the National Invitational Tournament. Henderson's failing health from diabetes forced him to step down after the season and he would die that summer.

Awards

Marshall has a Cam Henderson Award for the top student-athlete and the building that houses the athletic department and the 9,000-seat Marshall basketball arena are named the Cam Henderson Center. In 2007, Emmy Award-winning producer and director Deborah Novak and John Witek released "Cam Henderson: A Coach's Story" on public television and DVD to great acclaim. The film was honored with a first place Platinum Award at the Worldfest of Film in Houston, Texas.

Cam Henderson has been inducted into the Helms Foundation Hall of Fame, the West Virginia Sports Writers Hall of Fame, the D&E Hall of Fame, the Marshall Hall of Fame and the NAIA Hall of Fame.

Death

Henderson died on May 3, 1956, while visiting his daughter in Richmond, Kentucky.He had suffered a heart attack several months before in Huntington and spent several weeks recovering in a hospital there.

Head coaching record

College football

YearTeamOverallConferenceStandingBowl/playoffs
Muskingum Fighting Muskies (Independent)
1920Muskingum4–4
1921Muskingum4–3–2
Muskingum Fighting Muskies (Ohio Athletic Conference)
1922Muskingum4–51–417th
Muskingum:12–12–21–4
Davis & Elkins Senators (Independent)
1923Davis & Elkins
Davis & Elkins Senators (West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference)
1924Davis & Elkins
1925Davis & Elkins
1926Davis & Elkins
1927Davis & Elkins
1928Davis & Elkins
1929Davis & Elkins
1930Davis & Elkins
1931Davis & Elkins
1932Davis & Elkins
1933Davis & Elkins
1934Davis & Elkins
Davis & Elkins:81–33–6
Marshall Thundering Herd (Buckeye Conference)
1935Marshall4–6
1936Marshall6–3–1
1937Marshall9–0–14–0–11st
1938Marshall5–4
Marshall Thundering Herd (West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference)
1939Marshall9–2
1940Marshall8–2
1941Marshall7–1
1942Marshall1–7–1
1943No team—World War II
1944No team—World War II
1945No team—World War II
1946Marshall2–7–1
1947Marshall9–3L Tangerine
Marshall Thundering Herd (Ohio Valley Conference)
1948Marshall2–7–1
1949Marshall6–44–0
Marshall:68–46–5
Total:161–91–13

College basketball

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Muskingum Fighting Muskies (Independent)
1920–21Muskingum20–4
1921–22Muskingum8–10
Muskingum Fighting Muskies (Ohio Athletic Conference)
1922–23Muskingum6–11
Muskingum:34–25 (.576)
Davis & Elkins Senators (Independent)
1923–24Davis & Elkins10–7
Davis & Elkins Senators (West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference)
1924–25Davis & Elkins22–0
1925–26Davis & Elkins15–4
1926–27Davis & Elkins23–3
1927–28Davis & Elkins14–4
1928–29Davis & Elkins20–5
1929–30Davis & Elkins22–3
1930–31Davis & Elkins17–4
1931–32Davis & Elkins19–2
1932–33Davis & Elkins15–8
1933–34Davis & Elkins11–6
1934–35Davis & Elkins27–4
Davis & Elkins:225–50 (.818)
Marshall Thundering Herd (Independent)
1935–36Marshall6–10
1936–37Marshall23–8
1937–38Marshall28–4NAIA Second Round
1938–39Marshall22–5
1939–40Marshall26–3
1940–41Marshall14–9
1941–42Marshall15–9
1942–43Marshall10–7
1943–44Marshall15–7
1944–45Marshall17–9
1945–46Marshall24–10
1946–47Marshall32–5NAIA Champion
1947–48Marshall22–11NAIA Second Round
Marshall Thundering Herd (Ohio Valley Conference)
1948–49Marshall16–122–24th
1949–50Marshall15–95–43rd
1950–51Marshall13–132–66th
1951–52Marshall15–115–74th
Marshall Thundering Herd (Independent)
1952–53Marshall20–4
Marshall Thundering Herd (Mid-American Conference)
1953–54Marshall12–96–74th
1954–55Marshall17–410–42nd
Marshall:362–159 (.695)30–30 (.500)
Total:621–234 (.726)

           
           
           
     

College baseball

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Marshall Thundering Herd (Independent)
1938Marshall6–3
Marshall:6–3 (.667)
Total:6–3 (.667)
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQ
Who is Cam Henderson?
Cam Henderson is a former American football and basketball player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Davis & Elkins College from 1924 to 1926, at Marshall University from 1935 to 1942, and at West Virginia Wesleyan College from 1951 to 1959. He was also the head basketball coach at Marshall from 1935 to 1955, tallying a career college basketball coaching record of 358–158. Henderson is considered one of the greatest coaches in the history of college athletics.
What was Cam Henderson's coaching career like at Marshall University?
At Marshall University, Cam Henderson had a highly successful coaching career. He led the football team to a record of 68 wins, 46 losses, and 10 ties. The basketball team under his leadership achieved even greater success, with a record of 359 wins and 158 losses. Henderson's basketball teams won three conference championships and made three appearances in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT). He is widely credited with establishing the fast-break style of play in basketball and was known for emphasizing teamwork and sportsmanship.
What impact did Cam Henderson have on college athletics?
Cam Henderson's impact on college athletics is significant. He revolutionized the game of basketball by introducing the fast-break style of play, which has since become a fundamental aspect of the sport. Henderson's emphasis on teamwork and sportsmanship also left a lasting impression on his players, as well as the broader sports community. His success as a coach at Marshall University helped put the school on the map and brought attention to the program.
Why is the basketball arena at Marshall University named after Cam Henderson?
The basketball arena at Marshall University is named the Cam Henderson Center in honor of the legendary coach. This is a testament to Henderson's contributions to the university and the sport of basketball. The dedication of the arena in his name serves as a lasting tribute to his achievements and the impact he had on the basketball program at Marshall.
What is Cam Henderson's coaching record?
Throughout his coaching career, Cam Henderson achieved remarkable success. He had a football coaching record of 111 wins, 70 losses, and 15 ties. In basketball, he tallied an impressive record of 359 wins and 158 losses. Henderson's overall coaching record in both sports stands at 470 wins, 228 losses, and 15 ties. His coaching prowess and accomplishments have made him one of the most celebrated and respected figures in the history of college athletics.
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