Everything about Red Holzman totally explained
William "Red" Holzman (
August 10 1920 –
November 13 1998) was an
NBA basketball player and
coach probably best known as the
head coach of the
New York Knicks from 1967 to 1982. Holzman helped lead the Knicks to two
NBA Championships in 1970 and 1973, and was elected into the
Basketball Hall of Fame in 1985.
Early career
Born in
Brooklyn,
New York in 1920, Holzman played basketball for
Franklin K. Lane High School in the mid-1930s. He attended the
University of Baltimore and later the
City College of New York, where he played for two years until graduation in 1942. Holzman joined the
United States Navy in the same year, and played on the
Norfolk,
Virginia Naval Base team for two years.
Professional career
Holzman was discharged from the Navy in 1945 and subsequently joined the
NBL Rochester Royals, which won the NBL championship in Holzman's first season. Holzman was Rookie of the Year in 1944-45. In 1945-46 and 1947-48 he was on the NBL's first All League team; in the interim year he was on its second team.
(External Link
) Holzman stayed with the team through their move to the NBA and subsequent NBA championship in 1951. In 1953, Holzman left the Royals and joined the
Milwaukee Hawks as a player-coach, eventually retiring as a player in
1954 but continuing as the team's head coach. During the 1956–1957 season, Holzman led the Hawks (then in
St. Louis,
Missouri) to 19 losses during their first 33 games, and was subsequently fired.
In 1957, Holzman became assistant coach of the
New York Knicks for a stretch of ten years ending in 1967, whereupon he became the team's head coach for the most part until 1982. (Holzman's former player,
Willis Reed, replaced him as Knicks head coach in 1977, but Holzman returned near the start of the 1978–1979 season.) During this 15-year span as Knicks' coach, Holzman won a total of 613 games, including two NBA championships in 1970 and 1973.
In 1969, Holzman coached the Knicks to a then-NBA record
18 game win streak, breaking the 17-game record first set back in 1946. For his efforts leading up to the Knicks' 1970 championship win, Holzman was named the
NBA Coach of the Year for that year. He was one of very few individuals to have won an NBA championship as both player and coach. As a coach, his final record was 696 wins and 604 losses. In 1985, he was elected into the
Basketball Hall of Fame. The
New York Knicks have retired the number 613 in his honor, equaling the amount of wins he accumulated as head coach.
Following his lengthy NBA coaching career, Holzman was diagnosed with
leukemia and died in
New Hyde Park, New York in 1998.
Further Information
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