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Bill Sharman

William Walton Sharman (May 25, 1926 – October 25, 2013) was an American professional basketball player and coach. He is mostly known for his time with the Boston Celtics in the 1950s, partnering with Bob Cousy in what was then considered the greatest backcourt duo of all time. As a coach, Sharman won titles in the ABL, ABA, and NBA, and is credited with introducing the now-ubiquitous morning shootaround.

Bill Sharman
Sharman with USC, c. 1950
Personal information
Born(1926-05-25)May 25, 1926
Abilene, Texas, U.S.
DiedOctober 25, 2013(2013-10-25) (aged 87)
Redondo Beach, California, U.S.
Listed height6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Listed weight175 lb (79 kg)
Career information
High schoolPorterville (Porterville, California)
CollegeUSC (1946–1950)
NBA draft1950: 2nd round, 17th overall pick
Selected by the Washington Capitols
Playing career1950–1961
PositionShooting guard
Number10, 21
Coaching career1961–1976
Career history
As player:
1950–1951Washington Capitols
19511961Boston Celtics
As coach:
1961–1962Cleveland Pipers
19661968San Francisco Warriors
19681971Los Angeles / Utah Stars
19711976Los Angeles Lakers
Career highlights and awards
As player:

As coach:

As executive:

Career playing statistics
Points12,665 (17.8 ppg)
Rebounds2,779 (3.9 rpg)
Assists2,101 (3.0 apg)
Stats  at NBA.com
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Career coaching record
NBA & ABA466–353 (.569)
Basketball Hall of Fame as player
Basketball Hall of Fame as coach
College Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted in 2006

Sharman was the first North American sports figure to win a championship as a player, coach, and executive. He was a 15-time NBA champion (having won four titles as a player with the Celtics, one as head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers, and ten as a Lakers executive), and a 17-time World Champion in basketball overall counting his ABL and ABA titles.[1][2] Sharman is also a two-time Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductee, having been inducted in 1976 as a player, and in 2004 as a coach.[3] Only John Wooden, Lenny Wilkens, Tommy Heinsohn and Bill Russell share this double honor.

Sharman is also notable for coaching the 1971-72 Lakers to an NBA record 33 game win streak, a then-record regular season 69–13 win–loss mark, and the first Lakers championship in Los Angeles.

Early life edit

William Walton Sharman was born on May 25, 1926, in Abilene, Texas. He attended Porterville High School, a high school in the Central California city of Porterville, California, where he excelled in basketball and baseball.

College career edit

Sharman served during World War II from 1944 to 1946 in the US Navy, and was a graduate of the University of Southern California. He played first base on the 1948 USC Trojans' College World Series championship team. Following his senior year, Sharman was selected as one of the 1950 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans.

Professional baseball career edit

Minor leagues edit

From 1950 to 1955, Sharman played professional baseball in the Brooklyn Dodgers minor league system. He was called up to the Dodgers late in the 1951 season but did not appear in a game. He was part of a September 27 game in which the entire Brooklyn bench was cleared from the dugout for arguing with the home plate umpire over a ruling at the plate. This has led to the legend that Sharman holds the distinction of being the only player in baseball history to have ever been ejected from a major league game without ever appearing in one. However, although Sharman was among the Dodger bench players that had to go to the clubhouse, none of them were actually barred from playing in the game. In fact, in the top of the ninth, one of the other dismissed players, Wayne Terwilliger, was used as a pinch-hitter in the game.[4]

Professional basketball career edit

Washington Capitols (1950–1951) edit

 
Sharman c. 1960

Sharman was drafted by the Washington Capitols in the second round of the 1950 NBA draft.

Boston Celtics (1951–1961) edit

Following the disbanding of the Capitols, Sharman was selected by the Fort Wayne Pistons in the dispersal draft and was subsequently traded to the Boston Celtics (with Bob Brannum) for Chuck Share prior to the 1951–52 season.[5] Sharman played a total of ten seasons for the Celtics, leading the team in scoring between the 1955–56 and 1958–59 seasons and averaging over 20 points per game during three of them.[6]

Sharman was one of the first NBA guards to shoot better than .400 from the field. He led the NBA in free throw percentage a record seven times (including a record five consecutive seasons),[3] and his mark of 93.2% in the 1958–59 season remained the NBA record until Ernie DiGregorio topped it in 1976–77. Sharman still holds the record for consecutive free throws in the playoffs with 56.[7] Sharman was named to the All-NBA First Team from 1956 through 1959, and was an All-NBA Second Team member in 1953, 1955, and 1960.[5]

Sharman played in eight NBA All-Star games, scoring in double figures in seven of them. He was named the 1955 NBA All-Star Game MVP after scoring ten of his fifteen points in the fourth quarter.[8] Sharman still holds the NBA All-Star Game record for field goals attempted in a quarter with 12.

Sharman ended his NBA playing career after 11 seasons in 1961.

Coaching career edit

Cleveland Pipers (1961–1962) edit

Sharman coached the Cleveland Pipers of the American Basketball League to the league championship in 1962.[3] He next went on to coach Los Angeles State (now California State, Los Angeles) for two seasons.

San Francisco Warriors (1966–1968) edit

In 1966, Sharman became the coach of the NBA's San Francisco Warriors. In their first season under Sharman, the Warriors won the Western Division and made it to the Finals, where they lost to the Philadelphia 76ers. In his second and final season with the Warriors, the team finished third and lost in the Division Finals to the Lakers.

Los Angeles / Utah Stars (1968–1971) edit

 
Sharman as a coach in 1971

In 1970–71, Sharman coached the Utah Stars to an ABA title and was a co-recipient of the ABA Coach of the Year honors.

Los Angeles Lakers (1971–1976) edit

After resigning as coach for the Utah Stars, Sharman signed a contract to coach the Los Angeles Lakers. Controversy later ensued when the owner of the Utah Stars brought suit against Sharman for breach of contract stemming from his resignation, and a tort case against the owner of the Los Angeles Lakers for inducing such breach of contract. Sharman was originally ordered to pay $250,000 in damages, but later appealed the trial court decision and reversed the judgement.

The following season, Sharman guided the Wilt Chamberlain and Jerry West-led Los Angeles Lakers to an NBA record 33 game win streak, a then-record 69–13 win–loss mark, the first Lakers championship in Los Angeles and the first for the team in more than a decade. That season, Sharman was named NBA Coach of the Year. He is one of two men to win NBA and ABA championships as a coach; coincidentally, the other, Alex Hannum, also coached a Chamberlain-led team (the 1967 Philadelphia 76ers) to an NBA championship.

Sharman invented the morning shootaround as a way to burn off nervous energy on game days. He took the shootaround with him to his first coaching jobs in the ABL, the ABA, and later, the NBA. After the Lakers won the championship in 1972, every other team in the league added the shootaround to its game-day regimen.[3]

Post-playing career edit

 
L-R: Sharman, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Jack Kent Cooke at press conference announcing Lakers' signing Kareem in Los Angeles, 1975

Sharman was enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1976 as a player and again in 2004 as a coach. He is one of only five people to be enshrined in both categories, the others being John Wooden, Lenny Wilkens, and his former teammates Tom Heinsohn and Bill Russell.

In 1971, Sharman was named to the NBA 25th Anniversary Team.[9] On October 29, 1996, Sharman was named one of the NBA's 50 Greatest Players.[10] In October 2021, Sharman was again honored as one of the league’s greatest players of all time by being named to the NBA 75th Anniversary Team.[11]

Executive career edit

As Lakers general manager, Sharman built the 1980 and 1982 NBA championship teams, and as Lakers president he oversaw the 1985, 1987, and 1988 NBA championship teams. Sharman retired from the Lakers front office in 1991 at age 65.[7]

Sharman was the author of two books, Sharman on Basketball Shooting and The Wooden-Sharman Method: A Guide to Winning Basketball with John Wooden and Bob Selzer.

The gymnasium at Porterville High School is named after Sharman. After his former basketball team the Los Angeles Jets dissolved in 1962, he sued to enforce his employment contract with the Jets, culminating in the case Sharman v. Longo (1967) 249 Cal.App.2d 948.

In 2013, Sharman sold his 2010 NBA championship ring from the Lakers to benefit charity.[12]

Death edit

Sharman died at his home in Redondo Beach, California, on October 25, 2013, at the age of 87, after having had a stroke the week prior.[13]

NBA career statistics edit

Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field goal percentage  3P%  3-point field goal percentage  FT%  Free throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game  Bold  Career high
 †  Won an NBA championship  *  Led the league

Regular season edit

Year Team GP MPG FG% FT% RPG APG PPG
1950–51 Washington 31 .370 .889 3.5 1.3 12.2
1951–52 Boston 63 22.0 .389 .859 3.5 2.4 10.7
1952–53 Boston 71 32.9 .436 .850* 4.1 2.7 16.2
1953–54 Boston 72 34.3 .450 .844* 3.5 3.2 16.0
1954–55 Boston 68 36.1 .427 .897* 4.4 4.1 18.4
1955–56 Boston 72 37.5 .438 .867* 3.6 4.7 19.9
1956–57 Boston 67 35.9 .416 .905* 4.3 3.5 21.1
1957–58 Boston 63 35.1 .424 .893 4.7 2.7 22.3
1958–59 Boston 72 33.1 .408 .932* 4.1 2.5 20.4
1959–60 Boston 71 27.0 .456 .866 3.7 2.0 19.3
1960–61 Boston 61 25.2 .422 .921* 3.7 2.4 16.0
Career 711 32.0 .426 .883 3.9 3.0 17.8
All-Star 8 24.3 .385 .815 3.9 2.0 12.8

Playoffs edit

Year Team GP MPG FG% FT% RPG APG PPG
1952 Boston 1 27.0 .583 1.000 3.0 7.0 15.0
1953 Boston 6 33.5 .333 .938 2.5 2.5 11.7
1954 Boston 6 34.3 .432 .860 4.2 1.7 18.8
1955 Boston 7 41.4 .500 .921 5.4 5.4 20.7
1956 Boston 3 39.7 .391 .941 2.3 4.0 17.3
1957 Boston 10 37.7 .381 .953 3.5 2.9 21.1
1958 Boston 11 36.9 .407 .929 4.9 2.3 21.1
1959 Boston 11 29.3 .425 .966 3.3 2.5 20.1
1960 Boston 13 28.0 .421 .811 3.5 1.5 16.8
1961 Boston 10 26.1 .511 .889 2.7 1.7 16.8
Career 78 33.0 .426 .911 3.7 2.6 18.5

Head coaching record edit

Legend
Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W–L % Win–loss %
Playoffs PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW–L % Playoff win–loss %
Team Year G W L W–L% Finish PG PW PL PW–L% Result
San Francisco 1966–67 81 44 37 .543 1st in Western 15 9 6 .600 Lost in NBA Finals
San Francisco 1967–68 82 43 39 .524 3rd in Western 10 4 6 .400 Lost in Div. Finals
Los Angeles (ABA) 1968–69 78 33 45 .423 5th in Western - - - Missed Playoffs
Los Angeles (ABA) 1969–70 84 43 41 .512 4th in Western 17 10 7 .588 Lost in ABA Finals
Utah (ABA) 1970–71 84 57 27 .679 2nd in Western 18 12 6 .667 Won ABA Championship
Los Angeles 1971–72 82 69 13 .841 1st in Pacific 15 12 3 .800 Won NBA Championship
Los Angeles 1972–73 82 60 22 .732 1st in Pacific 17 9 8 .529 Lost in NBA Finals
Los Angeles 1973–74 82 47 35 .573 1st in Pacific 5 1 4 .200 Lost in Conf. Semifinals
Los Angeles 1974–75 82 30 52 .366 5th in Pacific - - - Missed Playoffs
Los Angeles 1975–76 82 40 42 .488 4th in Pacific - - - Missed Playoffs
Career 819 466 353 .569 97 57 40 .588

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Bill Sharman: Former Lakers Head Coach, General Manager, & President". NBA.com. Retrieved September 21, 2023.
  2. ^ "Former Celtics Player, Lakers Coach Bill Sharman Passes Away at Age 87". BleacherReport.com. Retrieved September 21, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d Lavietes, Stuart (October 25, 2013), "Bill Sharman, N.B.A. Hall of Fame Player and Coach, Dies at 87", The New York Times
  4. ^ "No, Bill Sharman was never ejected from a major league baseball game as a member of the Dodgers". October 28, 2013.
  5. ^ a b basketball-reference.com. "Bill Sharman". Retrieved October 27, 2013.
  6. ^ The Official NBA Basketball Encyclopedia. Villard Books. 1994. p. 749. ISBN 0-679-43293-0.
  7. ^ a b Shouler, Ken (October 25, 2013). "Sharman was HOF player, coach".
  8. ^ The Official NBA Basketball Encyclopedia. Villard Books. 1994. p. 238. ISBN 0-679-43293-0.
  9. ^ "NBA Silver Anniversary Team | Basketball-Reference.com".
  10. ^ "NBA at 50: Top 50 Players". NBA.com. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
  11. ^ . NBA.com. Archived from the original on February 17, 2022. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
  12. ^ Rzeppa, Brian. "Inside The League (Bonus Edition): A TLN Exclusive Interview with Hall of Fame Player/Coach Bill Sharman". Interview. The League News. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  13. ^ Crowe, Jerry (October 25, 2013), , Los Angeles Times, archived from the original on October 26, 2013

External links edit

bill, sharman, william, walton, sharman, 1926, october, 2013, american, professional, basketball, player, coach, mostly, known, time, with, boston, celtics, 1950s, partnering, with, cousy, what, then, considered, greatest, backcourt, time, coach, sharman, titl. William Walton Sharman May 25 1926 October 25 2013 was an American professional basketball player and coach He is mostly known for his time with the Boston Celtics in the 1950s partnering with Bob Cousy in what was then considered the greatest backcourt duo of all time As a coach Sharman won titles in the ABL ABA and NBA and is credited with introducing the now ubiquitous morning shootaround Bill SharmanSharman with USC c 1950Personal informationBorn 1926 05 25 May 25 1926Abilene Texas U S DiedOctober 25 2013 2013 10 25 aged 87 Redondo Beach California U S Listed height6 ft 2 in 1 88 m Listed weight175 lb 79 kg Career informationHigh schoolPorterville Porterville California CollegeUSC 1946 1950 NBA draft1950 2nd round 17th overall pickSelected by the Washington CapitolsPlaying career1950 1961PositionShooting guardNumber10 21Coaching career1961 1976Career historyAs player 1950 1951Washington Capitols1951 1961Boston CelticsAs coach 1961 1962Cleveland Pipers1966 1968San Francisco Warriors1968 1971Los Angeles Utah Stars1971 1976Los Angeles LakersCareer highlights and awardsAs player 4 NBA champion 1957 1959 1961 8 NBA All Star 1953 1960 NBA All Star Game MVP 1955 4 All NBA First Team 1956 1959 3 All NBA Second Team 1953 1955 1960 NBA anniversary team 25th 50th 75th No 21 retired by Boston Celtics Consensus first team All America 1950 2 First team All PCC 1949 1950 No 11 retired by USC TrojansAs coach NBA champion 1972 ABA champion 1971 ABL champion 1962 NBA Coach of the Year 1972 ABA Coach of the Year 1970 3 NBA All Star Game head coach 1968 1972 1973 As executive 10 NBA champion 1980 1982 1985 1987 1988 2000 2001 2002 2009 2010 Career playing statisticsPoints12 665 17 8 ppg Rebounds2 779 3 9 rpg Assists2 101 3 0 apg Stats at NBA comStats at Basketball Reference comCareer coaching recordNBA amp ABA466 353 569 Basketball Hall of Fame as playerBasketball Hall of Fame as coachCollege Basketball Hall of FameInducted in 2006Sharman was the first North American sports figure to win a championship as a player coach and executive He was a 15 time NBA champion having won four titles as a player with the Celtics one as head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers and ten as a Lakers executive and a 17 time World Champion in basketball overall counting his ABL and ABA titles 1 2 Sharman is also a two time Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductee having been inducted in 1976 as a player and in 2004 as a coach 3 Only John Wooden Lenny Wilkens Tommy Heinsohn and Bill Russell share this double honor Sharman is also notable for coaching the 1971 72 Lakers to an NBA record 33 game win streak a then record regular season 69 13 win loss mark and the first Lakers championship in Los Angeles Contents 1 Early life 2 College career 3 Professional baseball career 3 1 Minor leagues 4 Professional basketball career 4 1 Washington Capitols 1950 1951 4 2 Boston Celtics 1951 1961 5 Coaching career 5 1 Cleveland Pipers 1961 1962 5 2 San Francisco Warriors 1966 1968 5 3 Los Angeles Utah Stars 1968 1971 5 4 Los Angeles Lakers 1971 1976 6 Post playing career 7 Executive career 8 Death 9 NBA career statistics 9 1 Regular season 9 2 Playoffs 10 Head coaching record 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksEarly life editWilliam Walton Sharman was born on May 25 1926 in Abilene Texas He attended Porterville High School a high school in the Central California city of Porterville California where he excelled in basketball and baseball College career editSharman served during World War II from 1944 to 1946 in the US Navy and was a graduate of the University of Southern California He played first base on the 1948 USC Trojans College World Series championship team Following his senior year Sharman was selected as one of the 1950 NCAA Men s Basketball All Americans Professional baseball career editMinor leagues edit From 1950 to 1955 Sharman played professional baseball in the Brooklyn Dodgers minor league system He was called up to the Dodgers late in the 1951 season but did not appear in a game He was part of a September 27 game in which the entire Brooklyn bench was cleared from the dugout for arguing with the home plate umpire over a ruling at the plate This has led to the legend that Sharman holds the distinction of being the only player in baseball history to have ever been ejected from a major league game without ever appearing in one However although Sharman was among the Dodger bench players that had to go to the clubhouse none of them were actually barred from playing in the game In fact in the top of the ninth one of the other dismissed players Wayne Terwilliger was used as a pinch hitter in the game 4 Professional basketball career editWashington Capitols 1950 1951 edit nbsp Sharman c 1960Sharman was drafted by the Washington Capitols in the second round of the 1950 NBA draft Boston Celtics 1951 1961 edit Following the disbanding of the Capitols Sharman was selected by the Fort Wayne Pistons in the dispersal draft and was subsequently traded to the Boston Celtics with Bob Brannum for Chuck Share prior to the 1951 52 season 5 Sharman played a total of ten seasons for the Celtics leading the team in scoring between the 1955 56 and 1958 59 seasons and averaging over 20 points per game during three of them 6 Sharman was one of the first NBA guards to shoot better than 400 from the field He led the NBA in free throw percentage a record seven times including a record five consecutive seasons 3 and his mark of 93 2 in the 1958 59 season remained the NBA record until Ernie DiGregorio topped it in 1976 77 Sharman still holds the record for consecutive free throws in the playoffs with 56 7 Sharman was named to the All NBA First Team from 1956 through 1959 and was an All NBA Second Team member in 1953 1955 and 1960 5 Sharman played in eight NBA All Star games scoring in double figures in seven of them He was named the 1955 NBA All Star Game MVP after scoring ten of his fifteen points in the fourth quarter 8 Sharman still holds the NBA All Star Game record for field goals attempted in a quarter with 12 Sharman ended his NBA playing career after 11 seasons in 1961 Coaching career editCleveland Pipers 1961 1962 edit Sharman coached the Cleveland Pipers of the American Basketball League to the league championship in 1962 3 He next went on to coach Los Angeles State now California State Los Angeles for two seasons San Francisco Warriors 1966 1968 edit In 1966 Sharman became the coach of the NBA s San Francisco Warriors In their first season under Sharman the Warriors won the Western Division and made it to the Finals where they lost to the Philadelphia 76ers In his second and final season with the Warriors the team finished third and lost in the Division Finals to the Lakers Los Angeles Utah Stars 1968 1971 edit nbsp Sharman as a coach in 1971In 1970 71 Sharman coached the Utah Stars to an ABA title and was a co recipient of the ABA Coach of the Year honors Los Angeles Lakers 1971 1976 edit After resigning as coach for the Utah Stars Sharman signed a contract to coach the Los Angeles Lakers Controversy later ensued when the owner of the Utah Stars brought suit against Sharman for breach of contract stemming from his resignation and a tort case against the owner of the Los Angeles Lakers for inducing such breach of contract Sharman was originally ordered to pay 250 000 in damages but later appealed the trial court decision and reversed the judgement The following season Sharman guided the Wilt Chamberlain and Jerry West led Los Angeles Lakers to an NBA record 33 game win streak a then record 69 13 win loss mark the first Lakers championship in Los Angeles and the first for the team in more than a decade That season Sharman was named NBA Coach of the Year He is one of two men to win NBA and ABA championships as a coach coincidentally the other Alex Hannum also coached a Chamberlain led team the 1967 Philadelphia 76ers to an NBA championship Sharman invented the morning shootaround as a way to burn off nervous energy on game days He took the shootaround with him to his first coaching jobs in the ABL the ABA and later the NBA After the Lakers won the championship in 1972 every other team in the league added the shootaround to its game day regimen 3 Post playing career edit nbsp L R Sharman Kareem Abdul Jabbar and Jack Kent Cooke at press conference announcing Lakers signing Kareem in Los Angeles 1975Sharman was enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1976 as a player and again in 2004 as a coach He is one of only five people to be enshrined in both categories the others being John Wooden Lenny Wilkens and his former teammates Tom Heinsohn and Bill Russell In 1971 Sharman was named to the NBA 25th Anniversary Team 9 On October 29 1996 Sharman was named one of the NBA s 50 Greatest Players 10 In October 2021 Sharman was again honored as one of the league s greatest players of all time by being named to the NBA 75th Anniversary Team 11 Executive career editAs Lakers general manager Sharman built the 1980 and 1982 NBA championship teams and as Lakers president he oversaw the 1985 1987 and 1988 NBA championship teams Sharman retired from the Lakers front office in 1991 at age 65 7 Sharman was the author of two books Sharman on Basketball Shooting and The Wooden Sharman Method A Guide to Winning Basketball with John Wooden and Bob Selzer The gymnasium at Porterville High School is named after Sharman After his former basketball team the Los Angeles Jets dissolved in 1962 he sued to enforce his employment contract with the Jets culminating in the case Sharman v Longo 1967 249 Cal App 2d 948 In 2013 Sharman sold his 2010 NBA championship ring from the Lakers to benefit charity 12 Death editSharman died at his home in Redondo Beach California on October 25 2013 at the age of 87 after having had a stroke the week prior 13 NBA career statistics editLegend GP Games played GS Games started MPG Minutes per game FG Field goal percentage 3P 3 point field goal percentage FT Free throw percentage RPG Rebounds per game APG Assists per game SPG Steals per game BPG Blocks per game PPG Points per game Bold Career high Won an NBA championship Led the leagueRegular season edit Year Team GP MPG FG FT RPG APG PPG1950 51 Washington 31 370 889 3 5 1 3 12 21951 52 Boston 63 22 0 389 859 3 5 2 4 10 71952 53 Boston 71 32 9 436 850 4 1 2 7 16 21953 54 Boston 72 34 3 450 844 3 5 3 2 16 01954 55 Boston 68 36 1 427 897 4 4 4 1 18 41955 56 Boston 72 37 5 438 867 3 6 4 7 19 91956 57 Boston 67 35 9 416 905 4 3 3 5 21 11957 58 Boston 63 35 1 424 893 4 7 2 7 22 31958 59 Boston 72 33 1 408 932 4 1 2 5 20 41959 60 Boston 71 27 0 456 866 3 7 2 0 19 31960 61 Boston 61 25 2 422 921 3 7 2 4 16 0Career 711 32 0 426 883 3 9 3 0 17 8All Star 8 24 3 385 815 3 9 2 0 12 8Playoffs edit Year Team GP MPG FG FT RPG APG PPG1952 Boston 1 27 0 583 1 000 3 0 7 0 15 01953 Boston 6 33 5 333 938 2 5 2 5 11 71954 Boston 6 34 3 432 860 4 2 1 7 18 81955 Boston 7 41 4 500 921 5 4 5 4 20 71956 Boston 3 39 7 391 941 2 3 4 0 17 31957 Boston 10 37 7 381 953 3 5 2 9 21 11958 Boston 11 36 9 407 929 4 9 2 3 21 11959 Boston 11 29 3 425 966 3 3 2 5 20 11960 Boston 13 28 0 421 811 3 5 1 5 16 81961 Boston 10 26 1 511 889 2 7 1 7 16 8Career 78 33 0 426 911 3 7 2 6 18 5Head coaching record editLegend Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W L Win loss Playoffs PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW L Playoff win loss Team Year G W L W L Finish PG PW PL PW L ResultSan Francisco 1966 67 81 44 37 543 1st in Western 15 9 6 600 Lost in NBA FinalsSan Francisco 1967 68 82 43 39 524 3rd in Western 10 4 6 400 Lost in Div FinalsLos Angeles ABA 1968 69 78 33 45 423 5th in Western Missed PlayoffsLos Angeles ABA 1969 70 84 43 41 512 4th in Western 17 10 7 588 Lost in ABA FinalsUtah ABA 1970 71 84 57 27 679 2nd in Western 18 12 6 667 Won ABA ChampionshipLos Angeles 1971 72 82 69 13 841 1st in Pacific 15 12 3 800 Won NBA ChampionshipLos Angeles 1972 73 82 60 22 732 1st in Pacific 17 9 8 529 Lost in NBA FinalsLos Angeles 1973 74 82 47 35 573 1st in Pacific 5 1 4 200 Lost in Conf SemifinalsLos Angeles 1974 75 82 30 52 366 5th in Pacific Missed PlayoffsLos Angeles 1975 76 82 40 42 488 4th in Pacific Missed PlayoffsCareer 819 466 353 569 97 57 40 588See also edit nbsp Sports portal nbsp Biography portalList of National Basketball Association career free throw percentage leadersReferences edit Bill Sharman Former Lakers Head Coach General Manager amp President NBA com Retrieved September 21 2023 Former Celtics Player Lakers Coach Bill Sharman Passes Away at Age 87 BleacherReport com Retrieved September 21 2023 a b c d Lavietes Stuart October 25 2013 Bill Sharman N B A Hall of Fame Player and Coach Dies at 87 The New York Times No Bill Sharman was never ejected from a major league baseball game as a member of the Dodgers October 28 2013 a b basketball reference com Bill Sharman Retrieved October 27 2013 The Official NBA Basketball Encyclopedia Villard Books 1994 p 749 ISBN 0 679 43293 0 a b Shouler Ken October 25 2013 Sharman was HOF player coach The Official NBA Basketball Encyclopedia Villard Books 1994 p 238 ISBN 0 679 43293 0 NBA Silver Anniversary Team Basketball Reference com NBA at 50 Top 50 Players NBA com Retrieved September 3 2022 My Finals Moment NBA com Archived from the original on February 17 2022 Retrieved September 3 2022 Rzeppa Brian Inside The League Bonus Edition A TLN Exclusive Interview with Hall of Fame Player Coach Bill Sharman Interview The League News Retrieved June 18 2013 Crowe Jerry October 25 2013 Bill Sharman dies at 87 basketball legend and former Lakers coach Los Angeles Times archived from the original on October 26 2013External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bill Sharman Bill Sharman at IMDb Bill Sharman as a player at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Bill Sharman as a coach at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Profile as a player Profile as a coach Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bill Sharman amp oldid 1191225920, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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