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Henry Iba
American basketball player and coach

Henry Iba

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American basketball player and coach
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Easton
Place of death
Stillwater
Age
88 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Henry Payne "Hank" Iba (/ˈaɪbə/; August 6, 1904 – January 15, 1993) was an American hall-of-fame basketball coach, winner of two NCAA Men's Division I basketball championships and two Olympic gold medals.

Early life

Iba was born and raised in Easton, Missouri. He played college basketball at Westminster College, where he became a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. The basketball court at Westminster is now named in his honor.

Oklahoma State University

After coaching stints at Maryville Teachers' College (now Northwest Missouri State University) and the University of Colorado, Iba came to Oklahoma A&M College in 1934. He stayed at Oklahoma A&M, renamed Oklahoma State University in 1957, for 36 years until his retirement after the 1969–70 season. For most of his tenure at A&M/OSU, he doubled as athletic director. Additionally, Iba coached OSU's baseball team from 1934 to 1941.

Iba's teams were methodical, ball-controlling units that featured weaving patterns and low scoring games. Iba's "swinging gate" defense (a man-to-man with team flow) was applauded by many, and is still effective in today's game. He was known as "the Iron Duke of Defense." Iba is thought to be one of the toughest coaches in NCAA history. He was a very methodical coach, and he always wanted things done perfectly.

Iba's Aggies became the first to win consecutive NCAA titles (1945 and 1946). His 1945–46 NCAA champions were led by Bob Kurland, the game's first seven-foot player. They beat NYU in the 1945 finals and North Carolina in the 1946 finals. He was voted coach of the year in both seasons. His 1945 champions defeated National Invitation Tournament champion, DePaul, and 6'9" center George Mikan in a classic Red Cross Benefit game.

Inside Gallagher-Iba Arena January 22, 2005.

A&M/State teams won 14 Missouri Valley titles and one Big Eight title, and won 655 games in 36 seasons. All told, in 40 years of coaching, he won 767 games—the second-most in college basketball history at the time of his retirement. As OSU's athletic director, he built a program that won 19 national championships in 5 sports (basketball, wrestling, baseball, golf, cross country) over the years. After his retirement, "Mr. Iba" (as he is still called at OSU) frequently showed up at practices, often giving advice to young players.

In 1987, OSU's home arena, Gallagher Hall, was renamed Gallagher-Iba Arena in Iba's honor. A seat in the southeast concourse level of the arena is known as "Mr. Iba's Seat," and it is maintained without a fan having sat in it.

Iba died on January 15, 1993, in Stillwater, Oklahoma.

Olympic coaching

Iba coached the USA Olympic basketball team in 1964, 1968 and 1972. He is the first coach in USA Olympic basketball history to coach two gold medal winning teams (1964 in Tokyo and 1968 in Mexico City). Coach Mike Krzyzewski was the second. The 1972 final resulted in a controversial loss to the Soviet Union breaking Team USA's 63-game win streak since basketball was introduced to the Olympics in 1936.

Honors and awards

He was elected to the Oklahoma Sports Hall of Fame, the Oklahoma Hall of Fame, the Missouri Hall of Fame, the Helms Foundation All-Time Hall of Fame for basketball, National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame (in 2006), FIBA Hall of Fame (in 2007) and Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (in 1969) at Springfield, Massachusetts.

Iba was indirectly responsible for a $165 million donation to the Oklahoma State University Athletic Program. In 1951, T. Boone Pickens, a graduate of OSU with a degree in petroleum geology, was looking for a job and asked Iba for help. Iba set the young graduate up with two interviews for high-school basketball coaching jobs and although Pickens didn't end up becoming a coach, the favor Iba did for him was the impetus behind his decision 50 years later to make a $165 million donation to Oklahoma State University's athletic program.

Iba was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame in 1965.

Head coaching record

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Northwest Missouri State Bearcats (Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic Association) (1930–1933)
1929–30Northwest Missouri State31–0
1930–31Northwest Missouri State31–6
1931–32Northwest Missouri State20–2NAAU Runner-up
1932–33Northwest Missouri State12–7
Northwest Missouri State:93–15
Colorado Buffaloes (Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference) (1933–1934)
1933–34Colorado9–87–7
Colorado:9–8
Oklahoma A&M (Missouri Valley Conference) (1934–1970)
1934–35Oklahoma A&M9–95–75th
1935–36Oklahoma A&M16–89–4T–1st
1936–37Oklahoma A&M19–311–11st
1937–38Oklahoma A&M25–313–11st
1938–39Oklahoma A&M19–811–31st
1939–40Oklahoma A&M26–312–01stNIT Final Four
1940–41Oklahoma A&M18–78–42nd
1941–42Oklahoma A&M20–69–1T–1st
1942–43Oklahoma A&M14–107–3T–2nd
1943–44Oklahoma A&M27–61st*NIT Final Four
1944–45Oklahoma A&M27–41st*NCAA Champion
1945–46Oklahoma A&M31–212–01stNCAA Champion
1946–47Oklahoma A&M24–88–4T–2nd
1947–48Oklahoma A&M27–410–0T–1st
1948–49Oklahoma A&M23–59–11stNCAA Runner-Up
1949–50Oklahoma A&M18–97–53rd
1950–51Oklahoma A&M29–612–21stNCAA 4th Place
1951–52Oklahoma A&M19–89–32nd
1952–53Oklahoma A&M23–78–21stNCAA Elite Eight
1953–54Oklahoma A&M24–59–11stNCAA Elite Eight
1954–55Oklahoma A&M12–135–53rd
1955–56Oklahoma A&M18–98–42ndNIT 1st Round
1956–57Oklahoma A&M17–98–63rd
Oklahoma State (Big Eight Conference) (1957–1970)
1957–58Oklahoma State21–8NCAA Elite Eight
1958–59Oklahoma State11–145–95th
1959–60Oklahoma State10–154–107th
1960–61Oklahoma State14–118–63rd
1961–62Oklahoma State14–117–74th
1962–63Oklahoma State16–97–75th
1963–64Oklahoma State15–107–74th
1964–65Oklahoma State20–712–21stNCAA Elite Eight
1965–66Oklahoma State4–212–127th
1966–67Oklahoma State7–182–127th
1967–68Oklahoma State10–163–117th
1968–69Oklahoma State12–135–96th
1969–70Oklahoma State14–125–97th
Henry Iba:653–317257–152
Total:755–340

      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

Coaching tree

Iba is known for his coaching tree, the group of prominent coaches who either coached or played for Iba himself, or are linked to Iba by playing for one of his pupils. Coaches in this tree typically use a physical man-to-man defense and an offense predicated on ball movement and passing.

CoachIba connectionYears as Head CoachNotes
Larry BrownPlayed for 1964 U.S. Olympic teamNumerous college and pro teams, 1972–present1988 NCAA title; 2004 NBA title
Doug CollinsPlayed for 1972 U.S. Olympic teamChicago Bulls, Detroit Pistons, Washington Wizards, Philadelphia 76ers, 1986-2013
Jack HartmanPlayed for Oklahoma A&M, 1943–47; assistant coach at Oklahoma A&M, 1954Southern Illinois, Kansas State, 1962-86NABC National Coach of the Year, 1981
Don HaskinsPlayed for Oklahoma A&M, 1949–52; assistant coach on 1972 U.S. Olympic TeamTexas Western/UTEP, 1961-19991966 NCAA title
Moe IbaPlayed for Oklahoma State, 1958–62; assistant to Don Haskins at UTEP, 1962-66Memphis State, Nebraska, Texas Christian, 1966-94Son of Henry Iba
Bob KnightAssistant coach on 1972 U.S. Olympic TeamArmy, Indiana, Texas Tech, 1965-20081976, '81, and '87 NCAA titles
Bud MillikanPlayed for Oklahoma A&M, 1939-42Maryland, 1950–67
Doyle ParrackPlayed for Oklahoma A&M, 1943-46Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 1950-62
Wilbur "Sparky" StalcupPlayed for Iba at Northwest Missouri, 1929-33Northwest Missouri, Missouri, 1933-62
Eddie SuttonPlayed for Oklahoma A&M, 1955–58; assistant coach at Oklahoma State, 1958-59Creighton, Arkansas, Kentucky, Oklahoma State, San Francisco, 1969-20081978 and 1986 AP National Coach of the Year
Brad UnderwoodPlayed for Jack Hartman at Kansas State, 1984-1986Stephen F. Austin, Oklahoma State, 2013-present3X Southland Coach of the Year

Henry Iba Award

The Henry Iba Award was established in 1959 to recognize the best college basketball coach of the year by the United States Basketball Writers Association. Five nominees are presented and the individual with the most votes receives the award which is presented in conjunction with the Final Four. The award is presented at the Oscar Robertson Trophy breakfast the Friday before the Final Four.

Henry P. Iba Citizen Athlete of the Year

In 1994, the Rotary Club of Tulsa established the Henry P. Iba Citizen Athlete of the Year Award to honor 2 athletes, one male and one female, which have exhibited or demonstrated excellence in their sport and in life. In 1997, the Rotary Club of Tulsa established the Henry P. Iba Citizen Athlete of the Year Award with additional acknowledgement by recognized by the Chairman’s Award.

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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