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Wikipedia

Gene Shue

Eugene William Shue (December 18, 1931 – April 3, 2022) was an American professional basketball player and coach in the National Basketball Association (NBA).[1] Shue was one of the top guards of the early days of the NBA and an influential figure in the development of basketball. He is credited with having invented the "spin move" while being an early harbinger of other plays and strategies.

Gene Shue
Shue at Maryland in 1954
Personal information
Born(1931-12-18)December 18, 1931
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
DiedApril 3, 2022(2022-04-03) (aged 90)
Marina del Rey, California, U.S
NationalityAmerican
Listed height6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Listed weight170 lb (77 kg)
Career information
High schoolTowson Catholic
(Towson, Maryland)
CollegeMaryland (1951–1954)
NBA draft1954 / Round: 1 / Pick: 3rd overall
Selected by the Philadelphia Warriors
Playing career1954–1964
PositionPoint guard / Shooting guard
Number4, 6, 7, 21, 12
Coaching career1966–1989
Career history
As player:
1954Philadelphia Warriors
19541956New York Knicks
19561962Fort Wayne / Detroit Pistons
1962–1963New York Knicks
1963–1964Baltimore Bullets
As coach:
19661973Baltimore Bullets
19731977Philadelphia 76ers
19781980San Diego Clippers
19801986Washington Bullets
19871989Los Angeles Clippers
Career highlights and awards

As coach:

Career playing statistics
Points10,068 (14.4 ppg)
Rebounds2,855 (4.1 rpg)
Assists2,608 (3.7 apg)
Stats  at NBA.com
Stats  at Basketball-Reference.com
Career coaching record
NBA784–861 (.477)

Shue was an NBA All-Star five consecutive times (1958–62). After his successful playing career, he became a long-serving coach, twice winning NBA Coach of the Year. Throughout his career as player, coach, and executive, Shue was "a specialist at taking over faltering teams".[2]

Early life

Shue was born in Baltimore on December 18, 1931.[3][4] He grew up in the city's Govans neighborhood and attended Towson Catholic High School.[5] His family lived on welfare and he did not own a basketball as a child.[6] He grew up a fan of the Baltimore Bullets and Buddy Jeannette, recollecting in 1994:

When I was a kid growing up in Govans and Buddy was the leader of the Bullets, I was such a fan of his. Those were the early days of TV. We kids used to stand outside J.V. Stout's electronics store on York Road and watch through the window on little black-and-white TVs.[7]

Playing career

College

As a prospect in 1950, Shue was lightly recruited by University of Maryland's newly hired coach Bud Millikan. However, he wanted to play for the more-established programs at Loyola or Georgetown. After getting turned down by Loyola and getting wait listed by Georgetown after two underwhelming tryouts, Shue opted to instead play for Maryland.[8] Shue did not receive a scholarship and instead worked odd jobs, including cleaning the basketball court (only receiving a scholarship his senior season).[8] Joining a program with Coach Millikan that had losing records in eight of its last 10 seasons, Shue later remarked:

When Bud took over the program, there really was no program. Boxing was more important than basketball. We had a terrific boxing team at the time and they would feature the boxing match [as the featured event] if we had a doubleheader.[9]

In his tenure with Maryland, Shue and Millikan led the school's team to new heights, including their first 20-plus win regular season (23 his senior year), their first appearance in national rankings (peaked at #13 in 1954), and entrance into the Atlantic Coast Conference.[8] While at Maryland, Shue joined Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity.

Shue left Maryland as its star player[10] and their first high-profile NBA prospect. He broke all of the school scoring records and made the All-ACC team.[11]

Professional

Following his collegiate graduation, Shue was drafted third overall in the 1954 NBA draft by the Philadelphia Warriors. After just six games with the Warriors Shue was sold to the New York Knicks,[12] after notifying then-owner Eddie Gottlieb that his paycheck was $10 short ($110.15 in 2022).[13]

After the 1955–56 season, Shue was traded to the Fort Wayne Pistons for Ron Sobie. In 1956–57 season he played his first full season for the Pistons.[3]

The franchise moved to Detroit the following season. Shue recalled the struggles during the opening game at the Detroit Olympia: "There were so many delays during the game because the floor was slippery from the ice below it, a problem that often happened. I didn’t like playing there because it was a large building with small crowds and you were always freezing your butt off."[14]

In Detroit, Shue blossomed as a player and became popular enough for the P.A. to develop the catchphrase "Two for Shue".[15] He started a streak of five All-Star Game appearances and five playoff berths.[3]

In 1959–60 season he recorded 22.8 pts/game (6th-most in the NBA) and 5.5 rebounds/game, leading the NBA in minutes (3,338) and finishing second in free throw percentage (.872) while earning All-NBA First Team honors. Eleven times during the season he played all 48 minutes.[15] The following year, he averaged 4.3 rebounds/game, 6.8 assists/game (4th in the NBA) and 22.6 points/game (10th-most in the NBA). He also marked his highest field goal percentage (.421) and was named to the All-NBA Second Team. The 1961–62 season was his last one as star player; he averaged 19.0 pts/game and 5.8 assists/game (5th in the NBA).[3]

In 1962, Shue was traded back to the New York Knicks for Darrall Imhoff and cash.[15][16] In 1963, Shue was traded along with Paul Hogue to the Baltimore Bullets for Bill McGill.[3]

Coaching and executive career

As Shue moved on from playing, he would begin an NBA coaching career which would last over 22 years. He developed a reputation for helping bad teams become competitive.[11] In 1986, the Los Angeles Times remarked, "Gene Shue has lost more games than any coach in NBA history, which is more of a testimony of Shue's coaching ability than a criticism. Anybody who can lose 768 games—he has won 757—and still be employed must be a good coach."[17]

Baltimore Bullets

In his first coaching stint, the then 35-year-old led the Baltimore Bullets and took over a 4-21 team mid-season leading them to a dismal 16–40 record in the 1966-67 season. Two seasons later, he led the franchise to the best record in the league, also the franchise's first winning season.[18] He oversaw the team's improvement with three 50-plus-win seasons and an Eastern Conference Championship in 1970–71.[19] He guided the Bullets to the NBA Finals in 1971, but got swept by the Milwaukee Bucks led by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Oscar Robertson.[4]

Shue's seven seasons in Baltimore were also noted for the Bullets' rivalry with the New York Knicks, in which both teams faced each other in the NBA playoffs for five straight years from 1969 to 1973. The Bullets lost to the Knicks four times in 1969 (0–4), 1970 (3–4), 1972 (2–4) and 1973 (1–4), winning only in 1971 (4–3).[20]

Shue announced his resignation on June 8, 1973. He was not comfortable with the franchise's move to the Washington, D.C. suburbs beginning with the 1973–74 campaign. He explained, "Living and coaching in Baltimore was a beautiful situation. Now it is just not the same. They think I am Baltimore‐oriented and I am. They are looking for somebody to fit better into the Washington scene."[21] He was replaced by K. C. Jones ten days later on June 18.[22]

Philadelphia 76ers

On June 15, 1973, a week after his departure from the Bullets, Shue signed a two‐year contract to succeed Kevin Loughery as head coach of the Philadelphia 76ers. He inherited a team whose 73 losses in the previous season is an NBA record.[23] Under his leadership, the team increased their total from 25 games, then 34, then 46, and 50 with an Eastern Conference Championship. For the 76ers' 50-win 1976–77 season, Shue led a talented team with raised expectations, that Turquoise Erving (wife of Julius Erving) would lament in March 1977, "I feel we have the talent to win, but I don't think they're playing much like a team. No one here respects Shue. How many guys want to win one for Shue? Not one. And sometimes not even for themselves."[24] Although reaching the Finals, they eventually lost to the Bill Walton–led Portland Trail Blazers in the NBA Finals, a devastating loss as Shue had spent much of the season dealing with in-fighting among the team's many stars.[25] Shue was fired six games into the following season on November 4, 1977, having clashed with new owner Fitz Dixon[26] despite raising the expectations to a championship.[19] The team went as far as start a "We Owe You One" advertising campaign in reaction to the loss.[25][27] Shue was succeeded by Billy Cunningham.[28]

San Diego and Los Angeles Clippers

The next season, Shue joined the newly relocated San Diego Clippers and surprised the league with a 43–39 record and a near-playoff berth.[29] He was fired the next season after an 11-game losing streak.[30]

Second stints

Shue finally agreed to head coach the Washington Bullets when he signed a three-year contract to succeed Dick Motta on May 27, 1980.[31] He would coach in Washington for six seasons.[17]

His final head coaching assignment began on May 21, 1987, when he signed a three-year contract to return to the Clippers, which had relocated to Los Angeles three years earlier. He succeeded Don Chaney and inherited a Clippers team which had an NBA-worst 12–70 record in an injury-riddled 1986–87 and had failed to qualify for the playoffs for eleven consecutive seasons.[32] With the Clippers beginning 1988–89 at 10–28 and in the midst of an eleven-game losing streak, Shue was fired on January 19, 1989, and assistant Don Casey was promoted to replace him. The Charlotte Hornets and Miami Heat, that season's expansion entries, both earned their first-ever victories at the expense of the Clippers which had the same win total as the former at the time of the coaching change. Shue's record in 1+12 years in Los Angeles was 27–93.[33]

Shue finished his coaching career with a regular-season record of 784–861 while going 30–47 in the playoffs.[34] His 784 wins are the 16th-most in NBA history and his 861 losses are the sixth-most in NBA history.[35] He won NBA Coach of the Year in 1968 and 1981,[36] and was one of only eleven league coaches to win the award in multiple seasons at the time of his death.[37] He was the Eastern Conference Coach for two All-Star Games, in 1969 and 1977.[38][39]

After his final coaching position, Shue opted to move to California to become vice president of a mortgage business and work for a bank, while also serving as an analyst for ESPN on Continental Basketball Association games.[40] He would soon be chosen as the GM for the 76ers.[41][42] He was infamously the target of Charles Barkley, who called Shue "a clown" as part of Barkley's effort to force a trade,[43] and rumored tampering from executives from other teams.[44]

Legacy

As a player

Shue's dynamic guard play was influential for the newly formed NBA. He was known as a "gunner" who also played superb defense.[15] His flair for dribbling and weaving was not the norm of the time, but would later become so for point guards.[45] He had an ability to drive to the basket and use acrobatics to score or pass.[46] His twisting layup wowed competitors, Elgin Baylor describing it as "tricky".[47] He was one of the few players of his time to have a jump shot instead of a set shot (a habit from his grammar school's low ceiling),[48] and to emphasize transitional offense.[2] He invented the "spin move", the 360-degree spin with the ball switching hands.[48] An advocate for skill-based play, he once posited that "a basketball team composed of little men up to 6 feet 5 inches could beat a team of tall men 6 feet 5 inches and over."[49]

As a coach

Throughout his coaching career, Shue was known for his mix of fundamental basketball and unconventional strategies, many of which went against the norms of the time, but were sometimes adopted in future generations. His infamous playbooks were both celebrated for their innovation and maligned for their heftiness.[50][51][52][53] In 1988, Gerald Henderson declared, "Gene Shue's teams always control the tempo."[54] NBA.com stated that Shue was one of the only coaches that embraced set plays for the then-controversial three-point shots when the line was first introduced, stating that Shue "gave the shot the green light and red carpet."[55] At times, he had his team's center bring up the ball.[56] George McGinnis in describing the merits of Shue's coaching philosophy, said, "He has a lot of plays that use my individual talent and a lot of plays for the team."[57] Earl Monroe noted Shue's ability to get star players, like Monroe himself, to adapt their flashy skills to sound, fundamental team play (noting the perceived racial segregation in styles of play of the time).[58] Spencer Haywood described Shue's ability to instill confidence "My guy was Gene Shue, and still is Gene Shue, who had the faith in me to say, "Take this team, and let's go."[59] Bill Walton wrote in his autobiography that Shue "was awesome, always so positive, upbeat, imaginative, and extremely creative."[60]

In 1980, Sports Illustrated suggested that Shue "might be the reigning expert on the rehabilitation of players, judging from his penchant for taking in the league's rejects and wayward souls."[61] In 2009, Fox Sports listed him as one of ten great players who became great coaches, noting that Shue "specialized in improving the fortunes of bad ball clubs, which is the only reason why he lost so many games."[62] Although his lifelong tendency to seek out challenging situations to turn around resulted in fewer wins, trophies, and accolades as both a player and a coach; in 1987, he remarked, "I think when you come into any losing situation, the first thing you have to bring with you is a positive attitude, one that your players can begin to believe in. Not that I ignore problems. I'm both optimistic and realistic. I have always been honest. I don't try to kid people."[63] In 1989, the Los Angeles Times stated, "Gene Shue has proven to be one of the best coaches the NBA has ever had."[64]

Post-career honors

Shue was inducted into University of Maryland's Hall of Fame in 1991.[65] He was first on a ballot as a coach for the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 1994, but was not elected. He was nominated again the following year but again the bid was an unsuccessful one.[66] He was re-introduced in the Contributor category, where he was nominated, but not inducted, in 2011,[67] 2012,[68] and 2013.[69]

Shue's basketball career included over 40 years in the NBA, although split as player, coach, and executive.[7] Bleacher Report listed him first on their list of coaches not in the Hall of Fame (but factored in his playing career).[70]

Personal life

Shue married twice, both ending in divorce.[4] His first wife was Dottie Shue, resulting in 3 children: Susan Shue, Linda Shue and Gregory Shue. After his divorce to Dottie, he was married to Sandy Shue. In 1985, when asked about the effect of basketball on home life, Sandy Shue remarked, "People think he's got the most violent temper. They say, 'He must be an absolute bear to live with.' When we first began dating I really didn't like it. If he lost a basketball game he wouldn't speak to anyone, even me. Now he pretends like things are okay, but he still stays awake all night."[71]

He was the godfather of Danny Ferry (the son of Bob Ferry, whom Shue played alongside and coached),[72][73] who would similarly become an NBA player and executive.[74][75]

Shue was in a domestic partnership with Patti Amis Massey from 2009 until the time of his death. They lived together in Marina Del Rey, California.[4] Shue died on April 3, 2022, at his home in Marina Del Rey, aged 90. He had suffered from melanoma prior to his death.[4]

NBA career statistics

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

Regular season

Year Team GP MPG FG% FT% RPG APG PPG
1954–55 Philadelphia 6 10.8 .200 .833 1.7 1.8 1.8
1954–55 New York 56 15.8 .354 .750 2.6 1.4 4.4
1955–56 New York 72 24.3 .384 .764 2.9 2.5 9.2
1956–57 Fort Wayne 72 34.3 .385 .763 5.8 3.3 10.9
1957–58 Detroit 63 37.0 .384 .844 5.3 2.7 15.6
1958–59 Detroit 72 38.1 .388 .803 4.7 3.2 17.6
1959–60 Detroit 75 44.5 .413 .872 5.5 3.9 22.8
1960–61 Detroit 78 43.1 .421 .856 4.3 6.8 22.6
1961–62 Detroit 80 39.3 .408 .810 4.7 5.8 19.0
1962–63 New York 78 29.3 .396 .689 2.4 3.3 11.7
1963–64 Baltimore 47 20.5 .293 .590 2.0 3.2 4.2
Career 699 33.4 .396 .806 4.1 3.7 14.4
All-Star 5 26.0 .569 .667 4.0 3.8 13.2

Playoffs

Year Team GP MPG FG% FT% RPG APG PPG
1955 New York 3 16.3 .471 .857 4.0 1.3 7.3
1957 Fort Wayne 2 39.5 .519 1.000 3.5 4.0 16.0
1958 Detroit 7 40.1 .366 .930 6.6 4.7 18.6
1959 Detroit 3 39.3 .467 .818 4.7 3.3 27.7
1960 Detroit 2 44.5 .395 .900 6.0 3.0 24.0
1961 Detroit 5 37.2 .486 .793 2.4 4.4 18.6
1962 Detroit 10 36.9 .411 .771 3.0 4.9 16.1
Career 32 36.6 .424 .842 4.2 4.1 17.8
Source:[3]

Head coaching record

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
Baltimore 1966–67 56 16 40 .286 5th in Eastern
Baltimore 1967–68 82 36 46 .439 6th in Eastern
Baltimore 1968–69 82 57 25 .695 1st in Eastern 4 0 4 .000 Lost in Conf. Semifinals
Baltimore 1969–70 82 50 32 .610 3rd in Eastern 7 3 4 .429 Lost in Conf. Semifinals
Baltimore 1970–71 82 42 40 .512 1st in Central 18 8 10 .444 Lost in NBA Finals
Baltimore 1971–72 82 38 44 .463 1st in Central 6 2 4 .333 Lost in Conf. Semifinals
Baltimore 1972–73 82 52 30 .634 1st in Central 5 1 4 .200 Lost in Conf. Semifinals
Philadelphia 1973–74 82 25 57 .321 4th in Atlantic
Philadelphia 1974–75 82 34 48 .415 4th in Atlantic
Philadelphia 1975–76 82 46 36 .561 2nd in Atlantic 3 1 2 .333 Lost in First Round
Philadelphia 1976–77 82 50 32 .610 1st in Atlantic 19 10 9 .526 Lost in NBA Finals
Philadelphia 1977–78 6 2 4 .333 (fired)
San Diego 1978–79 82 43 39 .524 5th in Pacific
San Diego 1979–80 82 35 47 .427 5th in Pacific
Washington 1980–81 82 39 43 .476 4th in Atlantic
Washington 1981–82 82 43 39 .524 4th in Atlantic 7 3 4 .429 Lost in Conf. Semifinals
Washington 1982–83 82 42 40 .512 5th in Atlantic
Washington 1983–84 82 35 47 .427 5th in Atlantic 4 1 3 .250 Lost in First Round
Washington 1984–85 82 40 42 .488 4th in Atlantic 4 1 3 .250 Lost in First Round
Washington 1985–86 69 32 37 .464 (fired)
Los Angeles 1987–88 82 17 65 .207 6th in Pacific
Los Angeles 1988–89 38 10 28 .263 (fired)
Career 1,645 784 861 .477 77 30 47 .390
Source:[36]

References

  1. ^ "Former NBA great Gene Shue dies at 90". National Post. April 4, 2022.
  2. ^ a b "2,000 Games Later, Shue Wearing Well". November 15, 1983 – via www.washingtonpost.com.
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  4. ^ a b c d e Goldstein, Richard (April 4, 2022). "Gene Shue, All-Star and Longtime N.B.A. Coach, Dies at 90". The New York Times. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  5. ^ Klingaman, Mike (March 15, 2019). "From 1968 to 1969, the Baltimore Bullets went from worst to first". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved September 9, 2019.
  6. ^ Klingaman, Mike (December 3, 2009). "Catching Up With ... former Bullet Gene Shue". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved September 9, 2019.
  7. ^ a b Tanton, Bill. "City celebrates with Jeannette". Daily News.
  8. ^ a b c Ungrady, Dave (October 14, 2014). Tales from the Maryland Terrapins: A Collection of the Greatest Terrapin Stories Ever Told. ISBN 978-1-61321-746-7.
  9. ^ Markus, Don; Williams, Gary (November 2016). 100 Things Maryland Fans Should Know & do Before They die. ISBN 978-1-63319-662-9.
  10. ^ "Bud Millikan with Gene Shue, ca. 1953–1967 – Digital Collections @ the University of Maryland". digital.lib.umd.edu.
  11. ^ a b Klingaman, Mike. "Catching Up With ... former Bullet Gene Shue". baltimoresun.com.
  12. ^ Benson, Michael (September 27, 2007). Everything You Wanted to Know About the New York Knicks: A Who's Who of Everyone Who Ever Played on or Coached the NBA's Most Celebrated Team. ISBN 978-1-4617-3478-9.
  13. ^ Rhoden, William C. (June 17, 2019). "Davis trade shows how much power players hold in today's free agency". Andscape. Retrieved September 9, 2019.
  14. ^ Dow, Bill (March 15, 2011). "Remembering the Pistons' First Game in Detroit". Vintage Detroit Collection Blog.
  15. ^ a b c d Addy, Steve; Karzen, Jeffrey F. (2002). The Detroit Pistons: More Than Four Decades of Motor City Memories. ISBN 978-1-58261-553-0.
  16. ^ "With Detroit Pistons, It's Often Hard to Tell Fact From Fiction". Los Angeles Times. June 6, 1988.
  17. ^ a b "The NBA : Shue's Firing Is Raising Some Questions". Los Angeles Times. March 25, 1986.
  18. ^ "From 1968 to 1969, the Baltimore Bullets went from worst to first".
  19. ^ a b "Filling These Shoes Shouldn't Be Tough, Just Uncomfortable". Los Angeles Times. October 4, 1987.
  20. ^ Koppett, Leonard. "Knicks Will Open Playoffs Tonight", The New York Times, Friday, March 30, 1973.] Retrieved March 16, 2022.
  21. ^ McGowen, Deane. "People in Sports: Shue Steps Out," The New York Times, Saturday, June 9, 1973. Retrieved November 30, 2020
  22. ^ Rogers, Thomas. "K. C. Jones Named Coach Of N.B.A.'s Capital Bullets", The New York Times, June 19, 1973. Retrieved November 30, 2020
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  24. ^ Erving, Turquoise (March 13, 1977). "The Regrets of a player's Wife". The New York Times.
  25. ^ a b Fitzpatrick, Frank. "The best that never won: Even with Dr. J and George McGinnis, the 1976–77 Sixers were too turbulent to win a title". inquirer.com.
  26. ^ Harris, Curtis. "The Most Controversial Midseason Coaching Changes in NBA History". Bleacher Report.
  27. ^ "Philadelphia 76ers getting set to pay 'IOUs'?". Christian Science Monitor. April 30, 1980.
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  29. ^ "LOOKING BACK: 1978–79 CLIPPERS, THE FIRST SEASON IN SAN DIEGO". Los Angeles Clippers.
  30. ^ "CLIPPERS FIRE SHUE, NAME CASEY". The Washington Post.
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  32. ^ "Clippers Hire Shue as Coach," The Washington Post, Friday, May 22, 1987. Retrieved December 3, 2020
  33. ^ "Clippers Fire Shue, Name Casey," The Washington Post, Friday, May 22, 1987. Retrieved December 4, 2020
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  50. ^ Columnist, Stan Hochman, Daily News. "Doctor J's career has been a work of art". inquirer.com.
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  65. ^ "Gene Shue (1991) – Hall of Fame". University of Maryland Athletics.
  66. ^ Litsky, Frank (February 7, 1995). "PRO BASKETBALL; Abdul-Jabbar Hits Again: Elected to Basketball Hall". The New York Times.
  67. ^ Information, USF Sports. "Stanford grad Azzi nominated for Naismith Hall of Fame". www.paloaltoonline.com.
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  70. ^ Nix, J. W. "NBA Rankings: The Five Best Coaches Not in the Hall of Fame". Bleacher Report.
  71. ^ "Gene Shue: Forever a Competitor". December 11, 1985 – via www.washingtonpost.com.
  72. ^ "Bullpen Is Baffled by Throwin' Voice". Los Angeles Times. August 12, 1989.
  73. ^ "The Court Jester : Ferry's the Name, Practical Jokes Are Just Part of His Game". Los Angeles Times. December 20, 1988.
  74. ^ "Danny Ferry Stats". Basketball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  75. ^ "Danny Ferry NBA & ABA Basketball Executive Record". Basketball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved April 4, 2022.

External links

  • BasketballReference.com: Gene Shue (as coach)
  • BasketballReference.com: Gene Shue (as player)
  • Video footage of Gene Shue as coach

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Eugene William Shue December 18 1931 April 3 2022 was an American professional basketball player and coach in the National Basketball Association NBA 1 Shue was one of the top guards of the early days of the NBA and an influential figure in the development of basketball He is credited with having invented the spin move while being an early harbinger of other plays and strategies Gene ShueShue at Maryland in 1954Personal informationBorn 1931 12 18 December 18 1931Baltimore Maryland U S DiedApril 3 2022 2022 04 03 aged 90 Marina del Rey California U SNationalityAmericanListed height6 ft 2 in 1 88 m Listed weight170 lb 77 kg Career informationHigh schoolTowson Catholic Towson Maryland CollegeMaryland 1951 1954 NBA draft1954 Round 1 Pick 3rd overallSelected by the Philadelphia WarriorsPlaying career1954 1964PositionPoint guard Shooting guardNumber4 6 7 21 12Coaching career1966 1989Career historyAs player 1954Philadelphia Warriors1954 1956New York Knicks1956 1962Fort Wayne Detroit Pistons1962 1963New York Knicks1963 1964Baltimore BulletsAs coach 1966 1973Baltimore Bullets1973 1977Philadelphia 76ers1978 1980San Diego Clippers1980 1986Washington Bullets1987 1989Los Angeles ClippersCareer highlights and awards5 NBA All Star 1958 1962 All NBA First Team 1960 All NBA Second Team 1961 First team All ACC 1954 As coach 2 NBA Coach of the Year 1969 1982 2 NBA All Star Game head coach 1969 1977 Career playing statisticsPoints10 068 14 4 ppg Rebounds2 855 4 1 rpg Assists2 608 3 7 apg Stats at NBA comStats at Basketball Reference comCareer coaching recordNBA784 861 477 Shue was an NBA All Star five consecutive times 1958 62 After his successful playing career he became a long serving coach twice winning NBA Coach of the Year Throughout his career as player coach and executive Shue was a specialist at taking over faltering teams 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Playing career 2 1 College 2 2 Professional 3 Coaching and executive career 3 1 Baltimore Bullets 3 2 Philadelphia 76ers 3 3 San Diego and Los Angeles Clippers 3 4 Second stints 4 Legacy 4 1 As a player 4 2 As a coach 4 3 Post career honors 5 Personal life 6 NBA career statistics 6 1 Regular season 6 2 Playoffs 7 Head coaching record 8 References 9 External linksEarly life EditShue was born in Baltimore on December 18 1931 3 4 He grew up in the city s Govans neighborhood and attended Towson Catholic High School 5 His family lived on welfare and he did not own a basketball as a child 6 He grew up a fan of the Baltimore Bullets and Buddy Jeannette recollecting in 1994 When I was a kid growing up in Govans and Buddy was the leader of the Bullets I was such a fan of his Those were the early days of TV We kids used to stand outside J V Stout s electronics store on York Road and watch through the window on little black and white TVs 7 Playing career EditCollege Edit As a prospect in 1950 Shue was lightly recruited by University of Maryland s newly hired coach Bud Millikan However he wanted to play for the more established programs at Loyola or Georgetown After getting turned down by Loyola and getting wait listed by Georgetown after two underwhelming tryouts Shue opted to instead play for Maryland 8 Shue did not receive a scholarship and instead worked odd jobs including cleaning the basketball court only receiving a scholarship his senior season 8 Joining a program with Coach Millikan that had losing records in eight of its last 10 seasons Shue later remarked When Bud took over the program there really was no program Boxing was more important than basketball We had a terrific boxing team at the time and they would feature the boxing match as the featured event if we had a doubleheader 9 In his tenure with Maryland Shue and Millikan led the school s team to new heights including their first 20 plus win regular season 23 his senior year their first appearance in national rankings peaked at 13 in 1954 and entrance into the Atlantic Coast Conference 8 While at Maryland Shue joined Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity Shue left Maryland as its star player 10 and their first high profile NBA prospect He broke all of the school scoring records and made the All ACC team 11 Professional Edit Following his collegiate graduation Shue was drafted third overall in the 1954 NBA draft by the Philadelphia Warriors After just six games with the Warriors Shue was sold to the New York Knicks 12 after notifying then owner Eddie Gottlieb that his paycheck was 10 short 110 15 in 2022 13 After the 1955 56 season Shue was traded to the Fort Wayne Pistons for Ron Sobie In 1956 57 season he played his first full season for the Pistons 3 The franchise moved to Detroit the following season Shue recalled the struggles during the opening game at the Detroit Olympia There were so many delays during the game because the floor was slippery from the ice below it a problem that often happened I didn t like playing there because it was a large building with small crowds and you were always freezing your butt off 14 In Detroit Shue blossomed as a player and became popular enough for the P A to develop the catchphrase Two for Shue 15 He started a streak of five All Star Game appearances and five playoff berths 3 In 1959 60 season he recorded 22 8 pts game 6th most in the NBA and 5 5 rebounds game leading the NBA in minutes 3 338 and finishing second in free throw percentage 872 while earning All NBA First Team honors Eleven times during the season he played all 48 minutes 15 The following year he averaged 4 3 rebounds game 6 8 assists game 4th in the NBA and 22 6 points game 10th most in the NBA He also marked his highest field goal percentage 421 and was named to the All NBA Second Team The 1961 62 season was his last one as star player he averaged 19 0 pts game and 5 8 assists game 5th in the NBA 3 In 1962 Shue was traded back to the New York Knicks for Darrall Imhoff and cash 15 16 In 1963 Shue was traded along with Paul Hogue to the Baltimore Bullets for Bill McGill 3 Coaching and executive career EditAs Shue moved on from playing he would begin an NBA coaching career which would last over 22 years He developed a reputation for helping bad teams become competitive 11 In 1986 the Los Angeles Times remarked Gene Shue has lost more games than any coach in NBA history which is more of a testimony of Shue s coaching ability than a criticism Anybody who can lose 768 games he has won 757 and still be employed must be a good coach 17 Baltimore Bullets Edit In his first coaching stint the then 35 year old led the Baltimore Bullets and took over a 4 21 team mid season leading them to a dismal 16 40 record in the 1966 67 season Two seasons later he led the franchise to the best record in the league also the franchise s first winning season 18 He oversaw the team s improvement with three 50 plus win seasons and an Eastern Conference Championship in 1970 71 19 He guided the Bullets to the NBA Finals in 1971 but got swept by the Milwaukee Bucks led by Kareem Abdul Jabbar and Oscar Robertson 4 Shue s seven seasons in Baltimore were also noted for the Bullets rivalry with the New York Knicks in which both teams faced each other in the NBA playoffs for five straight years from 1969 to 1973 The Bullets lost to the Knicks four times in 1969 0 4 1970 3 4 1972 2 4 and 1973 1 4 winning only in 1971 4 3 20 Shue announced his resignation on June 8 1973 He was not comfortable with the franchise s move to the Washington D C suburbs beginning with the 1973 74 campaign He explained Living and coaching in Baltimore was a beautiful situation Now it is just not the same They think I am Baltimore oriented and I am They are looking for somebody to fit better into the Washington scene 21 He was replaced by K C Jones ten days later on June 18 22 Philadelphia 76ers Edit On June 15 1973 a week after his departure from the Bullets Shue signed a two year contract to succeed Kevin Loughery as head coach of the Philadelphia 76ers He inherited a team whose 73 losses in the previous season is an NBA record 23 Under his leadership the team increased their total from 25 games then 34 then 46 and 50 with an Eastern Conference Championship For the 76ers 50 win 1976 77 season Shue led a talented team with raised expectations that Turquoise Erving wife of Julius Erving would lament in March 1977 I feel we have the talent to win but I don t think they re playing much like a team No one here respects Shue How many guys want to win one for Shue Not one And sometimes not even for themselves 24 Although reaching the Finals they eventually lost to the Bill Walton led Portland Trail Blazers in the NBA Finals a devastating loss as Shue had spent much of the season dealing with in fighting among the team s many stars 25 Shue was fired six games into the following season on November 4 1977 having clashed with new owner Fitz Dixon 26 despite raising the expectations to a championship 19 The team went as far as start a We Owe You One advertising campaign in reaction to the loss 25 27 Shue was succeeded by Billy Cunningham 28 San Diego and Los Angeles Clippers Edit The next season Shue joined the newly relocated San Diego Clippers and surprised the league with a 43 39 record and a near playoff berth 29 He was fired the next season after an 11 game losing streak 30 Second stints Edit Shue finally agreed to head coach the Washington Bullets when he signed a three year contract to succeed Dick Motta on May 27 1980 31 He would coach in Washington for six seasons 17 His final head coaching assignment began on May 21 1987 when he signed a three year contract to return to the Clippers which had relocated to Los Angeles three years earlier He succeeded Don Chaney and inherited a Clippers team which had an NBA worst 12 70 record in an injury riddled 1986 87 and had failed to qualify for the playoffs for eleven consecutive seasons 32 With the Clippers beginning 1988 89 at 10 28 and in the midst of an eleven game losing streak Shue was fired on January 19 1989 and assistant Don Casey was promoted to replace him The Charlotte Hornets and Miami Heat that season s expansion entries both earned their first ever victories at the expense of the Clippers which had the same win total as the former at the time of the coaching change Shue s record in 1 1 2 years in Los Angeles was 27 93 33 Shue finished his coaching career with a regular season record of 784 861 while going 30 47 in the playoffs 34 His 784 wins are the 16th most in NBA history and his 861 losses are the sixth most in NBA history 35 He won NBA Coach of the Year in 1968 and 1981 36 and was one of only eleven league coaches to win the award in multiple seasons at the time of his death 37 He was the Eastern Conference Coach for two All Star Games in 1969 and 1977 38 39 After his final coaching position Shue opted to move to California to become vice president of a mortgage business and work for a bank while also serving as an analyst for ESPN on Continental Basketball Association games 40 He would soon be chosen as the GM for the 76ers 41 42 He was infamously the target of Charles Barkley who called Shue a clown as part of Barkley s effort to force a trade 43 and rumored tampering from executives from other teams 44 Legacy EditAs a player Edit Shue s dynamic guard play was influential for the newly formed NBA He was known as a gunner who also played superb defense 15 His flair for dribbling and weaving was not the norm of the time but would later become so for point guards 45 He had an ability to drive to the basket and use acrobatics to score or pass 46 His twisting layup wowed competitors Elgin Baylor describing it as tricky 47 He was one of the few players of his time to have a jump shot instead of a set shot a habit from his grammar school s low ceiling 48 and to emphasize transitional offense 2 He invented the spin move the 360 degree spin with the ball switching hands 48 An advocate for skill based play he once posited that a basketball team composed of little men up to 6 feet 5 inches could beat a team of tall men 6 feet 5 inches and over 49 As a coach Edit Throughout his coaching career Shue was known for his mix of fundamental basketball and unconventional strategies many of which went against the norms of the time but were sometimes adopted in future generations His infamous playbooks were both celebrated for their innovation and maligned for their heftiness 50 51 52 53 In 1988 Gerald Henderson declared Gene Shue s teams always control the tempo 54 NBA com stated that Shue was one of the only coaches that embraced set plays for the then controversial three point shots when the line was first introduced stating that Shue gave the shot the green light and red carpet 55 At times he had his team s center bring up the ball 56 George McGinnis in describing the merits of Shue s coaching philosophy said He has a lot of plays that use my individual talent and a lot of plays for the team 57 Earl Monroe noted Shue s ability to get star players like Monroe himself to adapt their flashy skills to sound fundamental team play noting the perceived racial segregation in styles of play of the time 58 Spencer Haywood described Shue s ability to instill confidence My guy was Gene Shue and still is Gene Shue who had the faith in me to say Take this team and let s go 59 Bill Walton wrote in his autobiography that Shue was awesome always so positive upbeat imaginative and extremely creative 60 In 1980 Sports Illustrated suggested that Shue might be the reigning expert on the rehabilitation of players judging from his penchant for taking in the league s rejects and wayward souls 61 In 2009 Fox Sports listed him as one of ten great players who became great coaches noting that Shue specialized in improving the fortunes of bad ball clubs which is the only reason why he lost so many games 62 Although his lifelong tendency to seek out challenging situations to turn around resulted in fewer wins trophies and accolades as both a player and a coach in 1987 he remarked I think when you come into any losing situation the first thing you have to bring with you is a positive attitude one that your players can begin to believe in Not that I ignore problems I m both optimistic and realistic I have always been honest I don t try to kid people 63 In 1989 the Los Angeles Times stated Gene Shue has proven to be one of the best coaches the NBA has ever had 64 Post career honors Edit Shue was inducted into University of Maryland s Hall of Fame in 1991 65 He was first on a ballot as a coach for the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 1994 but was not elected He was nominated again the following year but again the bid was an unsuccessful one 66 He was re introduced in the Contributor category where he was nominated but not inducted in 2011 67 2012 68 and 2013 69 Shue s basketball career included over 40 years in the NBA although split as player coach and executive 7 Bleacher Report listed him first on their list of coaches not in the Hall of Fame but factored in his playing career 70 Personal life EditShue married twice both ending in divorce 4 His first wife was Dottie Shue resulting in 3 children Susan Shue Linda Shue and Gregory Shue After his divorce to Dottie he was married to Sandy Shue In 1985 when asked about the effect of basketball on home life Sandy Shue remarked People think he s got the most violent temper They say He must be an absolute bear to live with When we first began dating I really didn t like it If he lost a basketball game he wouldn t speak to anyone even me Now he pretends like things are okay but he still stays awake all night 71 He was the godfather of Danny Ferry the son of Bob Ferry whom Shue played alongside and coached 72 73 who would similarly become an NBA player and executive 74 75 Shue was in a domestic partnership with Patti Amis Massey from 2009 until the time of his death They lived together in Marina Del Rey California 4 Shue died on April 3 2022 at his home in Marina Del Rey aged 90 He had suffered from melanoma prior to his death 4 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 highRegular season Edit Year Team GP MPG FG FT RPG APG PPG1954 55 Philadelphia 6 10 8 200 833 1 7 1 8 1 81954 55 New York 56 15 8 354 750 2 6 1 4 4 41955 56 New York 72 24 3 384 764 2 9 2 5 9 21956 57 Fort Wayne 72 34 3 385 763 5 8 3 3 10 91957 58 Detroit 63 37 0 384 844 5 3 2 7 15 61958 59 Detroit 72 38 1 388 803 4 7 3 2 17 61959 60 Detroit 75 44 5 413 872 5 5 3 9 22 81960 61 Detroit 78 43 1 421 856 4 3 6 8 22 61961 62 Detroit 80 39 3 408 810 4 7 5 8 19 01962 63 New York 78 29 3 396 689 2 4 3 3 11 71963 64 Baltimore 47 20 5 293 590 2 0 3 2 4 2Career 699 33 4 396 806 4 1 3 7 14 4All Star 5 26 0 569 667 4 0 3 8 13 2Playoffs Edit Year Team GP MPG FG FT RPG APG PPG1955 New York 3 16 3 471 857 4 0 1 3 7 31957 Fort Wayne 2 39 5 519 1 000 3 5 4 0 16 01958 Detroit 7 40 1 366 930 6 6 4 7 18 61959 Detroit 3 39 3 467 818 4 7 3 3 27 71960 Detroit 2 44 5 395 900 6 0 3 0 24 01961 Detroit 5 37 2 486 793 2 4 4 4 18 61962 Detroit 10 36 9 411 771 3 0 4 9 16 1Career 32 36 6 424 842 4 2 4 1 17 8Source 3 Head 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 ResultBaltimore 1966 67 56 16 40 286 5th in Eastern Baltimore 1967 68 82 36 46 439 6th in Eastern Baltimore 1968 69 82 57 25 695 1st in Eastern 4 0 4 000 Lost in Conf SemifinalsBaltimore 1969 70 82 50 32 610 3rd in Eastern 7 3 4 429 Lost in Conf SemifinalsBaltimore 1970 71 82 42 40 512 1st in Central 18 8 10 444 Lost in NBA FinalsBaltimore 1971 72 82 38 44 463 1st in Central 6 2 4 333 Lost in Conf SemifinalsBaltimore 1972 73 82 52 30 634 1st in Central 5 1 4 200 Lost in Conf SemifinalsPhiladelphia 1973 74 82 25 57 321 4th in Atlantic Philadelphia 1974 75 82 34 48 415 4th in Atlantic Philadelphia 1975 76 82 46 36 561 2nd in Atlantic 3 1 2 333 Lost in First RoundPhiladelphia 1976 77 82 50 32 610 1st in Atlantic 19 10 9 526 Lost in NBA FinalsPhiladelphia 1977 78 6 2 4 333 fired San Diego 1978 79 82 43 39 524 5th in Pacific San Diego 1979 80 82 35 47 427 5th in Pacific Washington 1980 81 82 39 43 476 4th in Atlantic Washington 1981 82 82 43 39 524 4th in Atlantic 7 3 4 429 Lost in Conf SemifinalsWashington 1982 83 82 42 40 512 5th in Atlantic Washington 1983 84 82 35 47 427 5th in Atlantic 4 1 3 250 Lost in First RoundWashington 1984 85 82 40 42 488 4th in Atlantic 4 1 3 250 Lost in First RoundWashington 1985 86 69 32 37 464 fired Los Angeles 1987 88 82 17 65 207 6th in Pacific Los Angeles 1988 89 38 10 28 263 fired Career 1 645 784 861 477 77 30 47 390Source 36 References Edit Former NBA great Gene Shue dies at 90 National Post April 4 2022 a b 2 000 Games Later Shue Wearing Well November 15 1983 via www washingtonpost com a b c d e f Gene Shue Stats Basketball Reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved April 4 2022 a b c d e Goldstein Richard April 4 2022 Gene Shue All Star and Longtime N B A Coach Dies at 90 The New York Times Retrieved April 4 2022 Klingaman Mike March 15 2019 From 1968 to 1969 the Baltimore Bullets went from worst to first baltimoresun com Retrieved September 9 2019 Klingaman Mike December 3 2009 Catching Up With former Bullet Gene Shue baltimoresun com Retrieved September 9 2019 a b Tanton Bill City celebrates with Jeannette Daily News a b c Ungrady Dave October 14 2014 Tales from the Maryland Terrapins A Collection of the Greatest Terrapin Stories Ever Told ISBN 978 1 61321 746 7 Markus Don Williams Gary November 2016 100 Things Maryland Fans Should Know amp do Before They die ISBN 978 1 63319 662 9 Bud Millikan with Gene Shue ca 1953 1967 Digital Collections the University of Maryland digital lib umd edu a b Klingaman Mike Catching Up With former Bullet Gene Shue baltimoresun com Benson Michael September 27 2007 Everything You Wanted to Know About the New York Knicks A Who s Who of Everyone Who Ever Played on or Coached the NBA s Most Celebrated Team ISBN 978 1 4617 3478 9 Rhoden William C June 17 2019 Davis trade shows how much power players hold in today s free agency Andscape Retrieved September 9 2019 Dow Bill March 15 2011 Remembering the Pistons First Game in Detroit Vintage Detroit Collection Blog a b c d Addy Steve Karzen Jeffrey F 2002 The Detroit Pistons More Than Four Decades of Motor City Memories ISBN 978 1 58261 553 0 With Detroit Pistons It s Often Hard to Tell Fact From Fiction Los Angeles Times June 6 1988 a b The NBA Shue s Firing Is Raising Some Questions Los Angeles Times March 25 1986 From 1968 to 1969 the Baltimore Bullets went from worst to first a b Filling These Shoes Shouldn t Be Tough Just Uncomfortable Los Angeles Times October 4 1987 Koppett Leonard Knicks Will Open Playoffs Tonight The New York Times Friday March 30 1973 Retrieved March 16 2022 McGowen Deane People in Sports Shue Steps Out The New York Times Saturday June 9 1973 Retrieved November 30 2020 Rogers Thomas K C Jones Named Coach Of N B A s Capital Bullets The New York Times June 19 1973 Retrieved November 30 2020 Keese Parton People in Sports Shue to 76ers The New York Times Saturday June 16 1973 Retrieved December 1 2020 Erving Turquoise March 13 1977 The Regrets of a player s Wife The New York Times a b Fitzpatrick Frank The best that never won Even with Dr J and George McGinnis the 1976 77 Sixers were too turbulent to win a title inquirer com Harris Curtis The Most Controversial Midseason Coaching Changes in NBA History Bleacher Report Philadelphia 76ers getting set to pay IOUs Christian Science Monitor April 30 1980 Goldaper Sam Shue Ousted Cunningham Named N B A Rosters Cut The New York Times Saturday November 5 1977 Retrieved December 1 2020 LOOKING BACK 1978 79 CLIPPERS THE FIRST SEASON IN SAN DIEGO Los Angeles Clippers CLIPPERS FIRE SHUE NAME CASEY The Washington Post DuPree David Bullets Hire Shue to Replace Motta The Washington Post Wednesday May 28 1980 Retrieved December 4 2020 Clippers Hire Shue as Coach The Washington Post Friday May 22 1987 Retrieved December 3 2020 Clippers Fire Shue Name Casey The Washington Post Friday May 22 1987 Retrieved December 4 2020 Gene Shue Basketball Reference com NBA Coach Register Basketball Reference com a b Gene Shue Basketball Reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved April 4 2022 NBA amp ABA Coach of the Year Award Winners Basketball Reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved April 4 2022 1969 NBA All Star Game Box Score Basketball Reference com Sports Reference LLC January 14 1969 Retrieved April 4 2022 1977 NBA All Star Game Box Score Basketball Reference com Sports Reference LLC February 13 1977 Retrieved April 4 2022 Sentinel Orlando PHILADELPHIA 76ERS NAME SHUE GENERAL MANAGER OrlandoSentinel com THE SIDELINES Gene Shue Named GM of 76ers Los Angeles Times July 24 1990 Araton Harvey January 16 1992 ON PRO BASKETBALL Barkley Over Line Once Too Often The New York Times SPORTS PEOPLE PRO BASKETBALL Barkley Slams Sixers General Manager The New York Times April 14 1992 Barkowitz Ed Charles Barkley and the time he played a 76ers game hammered inquirer com The 15 Greatest White Point Guards in NBA History Complex Complex Networks Gene Shue University of Maryland basketball 1954 Digital Collections the University of Maryland digital lib umd edu Baylor Elgin Eisenstock Alan 2018 Hang Time My Life in Basketball ISBN 978 0 544 61705 6 a b Rosen Charley October 2014 Perfectly Awful The Philadelphia 76ers Horrendous and Hilarious 1972 1973 Season ISBN 978 0 8032 4862 5 Jemail Jimmy The Question Do you agree with Gene Shue of the Fort Wayne Pistons who says that a basketball team composed of little men up to 6 feet 5 inches could beat a team of tall men 6 feet 5 inches and over Vault Columnist Stan Hochman Daily News Doctor J s career has been a work of art inquirer com Hard Part of Learning Is Losing for the Clippers Shue Focuses on Improvement in Second Half of 108 91 Defeat at Cleveland Los Angeles Times November 10 1988 Bullets Learning to Be Patient While Teaching Bol the Offense Washington Post October 2 1985 Retrieved September 9 2019 Columnist Stan Hochman Daily News Doctor J s life an open book inquirer com Call DON BOSTROM The Morning 76ERS TOP HAPLESS CLIPPERS 117 103 PRO BASKETBALL themorningcall com Doubt disdain marked most NBA teams first forays into 3 point land NBA com NBA com Walton Bill March 21 2017 Back from the Dead ISBN 978 1 4767 1687 9 Kochman Thomas July 30 2013 Black and White Styles in Conflict ISBN 978 0 226 11225 1 Monroe Earl Troupe Quincy April 23 2013 Earl the Pearl My Story ISBN 978 1 60961 562 8 Trucks Rob Why I Thought About Murdering My NBA Coach And Why I Didn t Do It Deadspin Walton Bill 2017 Back from the Dead Simon and Schuster p 207 ISBN 978 1 4767 1687 9 McDermott Barry WELCOME BACK STRANGER Vault Aug 28 foxsports ET 2009 at 5 56p August 28 2009 Greatness doesn t carry over from court to bench FOX Sports Clippers are coach Gene Shue s latest NBA rehab project Benjamin and rookies keys to overhauling last season s worst team Christian Science Monitor December 8 1987 Firing Gene Shue Was Clippers Biggest Blunder Los Angeles Times January 28 1989 Gene Shue 1991 Hall of Fame University of Maryland Athletics Litsky Frank February 7 1995 PRO BASKETBALL Abdul Jabbar Hits Again Elected to Basketball Hall The New York Times Information USF Sports Stanford grad Azzi nominated for Naismith Hall of Fame www paloaltoonline com Reggie Miller gets second shot at Hall of Fame www sportingnews com Dick Motta again a Hall of Fame nominee The Salt Lake Tribune Nix J W NBA Rankings The Five Best Coaches Not in the Hall of Fame Bleacher Report Gene Shue Forever a Competitor December 11 1985 via www washingtonpost com Bullpen Is Baffled by Throwin Voice Los Angeles Times August 12 1989 The Court Jester Ferry s the Name Practical Jokes Are Just Part of His Game Los Angeles Times December 20 1988 Danny Ferry Stats Basketball Reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved April 4 2022 Danny Ferry NBA amp ABA Basketball Executive Record Basketball Reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved April 4 2022 External links EditBasketballReference com Gene Shue as coach BasketballReference com Gene Shue as player Video footage of Gene Shue as coach Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gene Shue amp oldid 1128673031, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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