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UCLA Coach John Wooden urges on his team during the semifinals of the NCAA Tournament on 20 Mar 1970, College Park, Maryland.

by Sean Gregory, Time

Maybe Vince Lombardi was more majestic, and Red Aurebach a more colorful figure. Perhaps Bear Bryant was more revered. But John Wooden, the former UCLA basketball coach who died, at 99, in Los Angeles on Friday night, could lay claim to his own honorific. No great coach in history was more beloved, and no beloved coach was greater, than the Wizard of Westwood.

At UCLA, Wooden won 10 national basketball championships, a run that included seven straight titles from 1967 to 1973. During one stretch, Wooden's team won 88 straight games, a record that will never be matched. But it says mountains about the man that despite the outlandish numbers, Wooden's character transcended his accomplishments. "Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are," Wooden once said, "while your reputation is merely what others think you are." Wooden lived up to his own exhortations, as he was, through the end of his life, a dignified man whose selflessness, and pure affection for his players, shaped the lives of so many people he encountered.

Despite his legendary status, Wooden lived in a modest condo in Encino, Calfornia, where he would write monthly love letters to his wife of 53 years, Nellie, a childhood sweetheart who passed away in 1985. His wife's death was his greatest loss, and served as the clearest window into his character. To honor her memory, Wooden would only sleep on his half of the bed, and on his pillow. "Every picture on the walls are the ones Nellie chose, the one she wanted up," Wooden said. "I've changed nothing, except add pictures of the great-grand children she never had a chance to see."

Wooden grew up in basketball-crazed Martinsville, Indiana, a town of 4,800 people whose high school basketball gym housed 5,200. He was an All-American at Purdue University, and the National Player of the Year in 1932. After spending 11 seasons coaching high school basketball in Kentucky and Indiana, Wooden enlisted in the Navy, where he gained the rank of lieutenant during World War II. After a two-year stint as the basketball and baseball coaches at Indiana State Teachers College, now Indiana State University, Wooden moved west, to UCLA, in 1948.

There, the Wizard of Westwood sat calmly on the sideline, the program wrapped perfectly in his hand, and coached some of the greatest college basketball talents of all time. Players like Lew Alcindor (later Kareem Abdul Jabbar), Gail Goodrich, Jamal Wilkes and Bill Walton thrived under his patient presence. He offered succinct, spot-on pearls of wisdom — "be quick but don't hurry" was one of his favorites and demonstrated to the thousands of other coaches who idolized him the importance of an organized, purposeful practice. "I don't think I was a fine game coach," Wooden told UCLA Magazine in 2000. "I don't think I was a great strategy guy. I think I was a good practice coach. I could tell you right now what we did every practice I had at UCLA — every day, every minute. It's all on paper."

Wooden coached the Bruins for 28 years, and retired after winning his 10th title, in 1975. "What changed my life was going to UCLA for four years and living with John Wooden," Walton once said. "At practice, he was a tiger, always on edge, always barking at us, pacing, pacing. By the time the game came around, we couldn't wait to play. He was a masterful psychologist." In 1948 Wooden completed his famous "Pyramid of Success," which detailed the building blocks, traits like industriousness, friendship, loyalty, cooperation and enthusiasm, which he felt were necessary to reach the top block, competitive greatness. "Your heart must be in your work," Wooden wrote. "Stimulate others." Wooden was the first person to be inducted into the basketball Hall of Fame as both a player and coach.

Even as he longed for his departed wife, Wooden embraced the twilight of his remarkable life. "Fear of leaving does not bind me," Wooden told ESPN in a 2009 interview, reciting a poem written by one of his former players, Swen Nater. "And departure does not hold a single care. Peace does comfort as I ponder, a reunion in the yonder, with my dearest one who's waiting for me there." Rest in peace, Coach. Your greatest teammate awaits.

http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,1994583,00.html

Filed: Other Country: Canada
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Posted (edited)

THE greatest of them all. John Wooden was a role model as a coach but even more so as a man. His kind only comes but once in a lifetime, he will be sorely missed. RIP, Coach. (F)

Edited by IR5FORMUMSIE

IR5

2007-07-27 – Case complete at NVC waiting on the world or at least MTL.

2007-12-19 - INTERVIEW AT MTL, SPLIT DECISION.

2007-12-24-Mom's I-551 arrives, Pop's still in purgatory (AP)

2008-03-11-AP all done, Pop is approved!!!!

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