Johnny Orr
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johnny Orr (born June 10, 1927 in Yale, Kansas) is a former American basketball player and coach, best known as the head coach of men's basketball at the University of Michigan and at Iowa State University.
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[edit] Life as a player
Johnny grew up in the central Illinois town of Taylorville during the great depression. Orr attended Taylorville High School under coach Dolph Stanley and in his senior year led the Purple Tornadoes to a state championship and undefeated season. After high school Orr went to the University of Illinois and was the youngest freshman to compete in three sports. After joining the United States Navy for the end of World War II, Orr returned to the college game at Beloit College.
Orr was initially drafted in 1948 BAA draft by the Minneapolis Lakers of the Basketball Association of America, the precursor to the NBA. Orr did not play for the Lakers, and was again drafted the next year in the 2nd round by the St. Louis Bombers. In 1950, Orr played 21 games for the Bombers before moving to the Waterloo Hawks for 13 more games.
[edit] Early coaching career
During the 1950's, Orr was the head coach at Dubuque Senior High School in Dubuque, Iowa.
After a long time as an assistant coach, including at Wisconsin, Orr attained a head coaching position in 1963 at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, commonly known as UMass, and guided the team to 15-9 record in 1963-64.
[edit] University of Michigan
Shortly afterward, Orr moved to the University of Michigan. His 1973-74 team made it to the Elite Eight in the NCAA tournament and Orr was named Big Ten Coach of the Year. In 1976, Michigan was the NCAA tournament runner-up (to the undefeated Indiana Hoosiers) and Orr was named National Coach of the Year. Orr remains the winningest coach in Michigan history with 209 and only 113 losses.
[edit] Iowa State University
People thought he was crazy to leave a high-profile job at Michigan to go coach in the cornfields. Nevertheless, Orr joined the Iowa State Cyclones in 1980. The move came about when the Iowa State Athletic Director called him to inquire about Orr's assistant, Bill Frieder. When Orr learned how much Iowa State was willing to pay Frieder, Orr negotiated the job for himself (Frieder then succeeded Orr at Michigan). In Orr's fifth season in Ames, he led the Cyclones to their first NCAA Tournament berth in 40 years. The following season, Orr's Cyclones reached the Sweet Sixteen of the 1986 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament with a second round victory over the number five ranked team in the nation, Michigan. Orr claims this was the greatest victory of his career. Orr led Iowa State to four more NCAA tournament berths before retiring from Iowa State in 1994. He remains the winningest coach in Iowa State history with 218 wins and 200 losses.
[edit] External links
- player bio at databaseBasketball.com
- Where's Coach Now?
- Here's Johnny Orr. ISBN 0-8138-1291-7
Preceded by: Dave Strack |
Michigan Men's Head Basketball Coach 1968–1980 |
Succeeded by: Bill Frieder |
Preceded by: Lynn Nance |
Iowa State University Men's Head Basketball Coach 1981–1994 |
Succeeded by: Tim Floyd |
Iowa State Cyclones Head Basketball Coaches |
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Williams • Hubbard • Walters • Berryman • Kent • Chandler • Menze • Sutherland • Strannigan • Anderson • John • Trickey • Nance • Orr • Floyd • Eustachy • Morgan • McDermott |
Michigan Wolverines Head Basketball Coaches |
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Corneal • Mitchell • Mather • Veenker • Cappon • Oosterbaan • Cowles • McCoy • Perigo • Strack • Orr • Frieder • Fisher • Ellerbe • Amaker |
Categories: 1927 births | Living people | American basketball coaches | Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball coaches | Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball players | Michigan Wolverines men's basketball coaches | UMass Minutemen basketball coaches | St. Louis Bombers players | Waterloo Hawks | People from Illinois