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Charles Doak
Basketball and baseball coach

Charles Doak

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Basketball and baseball coach
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Guilford County, USA
Place of death
Raleigh, USA
Age
71 years
Education
Guilford College
Sports Teams
Albany Babies
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Charles Glenn "Chick" Doak (October 7, 1884 – April 21, 1956) coached baseball at North Carolina State University from 1924 to 1939 where he accumulated 145 wins, 131 losses, 6 ties.

Doak also played in the minor leagues and coached several college teams, such as at Guilford College, the University of North Carolina, and Trinity College.

Doak led the Wolfpack (the players were known as the "Doakmen") to the South Atlantic Championship only twice in his 16 seasons as coach (1924 and 1928), but his view that "the best defense is a hell of an offense" made for exciting games. Doak remained on NC State's physical education faculty until 1955. The baseball field to the east of Reynolds Coliseum (a space now occupied by the Coliseum parking deck) was named in his honor, and the name persisted to the fields current site. His sons, Charles and Robert, both played baseball for NC State.

Coach at North Carolina

After Nathaniel Cartmell was fired as the North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball coach in 1914 for playing dice with known gamblers, Doak took over as the second head coach for the Tar Heels.Doak was generally more interested in coaching baseball and was not fully focused on coaching basketball.During the 1915–16 season, it was too difficult to get referees and so on some occasions Doak would actually referee games that the Tar Heels were playing. Doak was fairly successful as the head coach of the basketball team, but stepped down as head coach after the 1916 season to be replaced by Howell Peacock.

Death

Doak died of a heart attack in 1956.

Head coaching record

Basketball

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
North Carolina Tar Heels (Independent)
1914–15North Carolina6–10
1915–16North Carolina12–6
North Carolina:18–16
Trinity Blue and White (Independent)
1916–17Trinity20–4
1917–18Trinity10–5
Trinity:30–9
Total:48–25
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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