John McLendon

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John B. McLendon, Jr. (April 5, 1915 – October 8, 1999) is a former high school, collegiate, amateur and professional coach.

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Early Life

McLendon was born April 5, 1915 at Hiawatha, Kansas. He graduated from Sumner High School in Kansas City, Kansas in 1932. After a year at Kansas City Junior College, he transferred to the University of Kansas at Lawrence, where his passion for coaching was fueled by his advisor and inventor of basketball James Naismith. Although KU's color line prevented McLendon from playing on the varsity team, he acquired knowledge and skills under Dr. Naismith's tutelage. He completed his practicum as a coach at Lawrence Memorial High School.

College Coach

McLendon received a B.S. from the University of Kansas in 1936 - KU's first African American student to obtain a degree in physical education. After earning an M.A. in physical education from the University of Iowa in 1937, he accepted his first college position as assistant basketball coach at North Carolina College (later North Carolina Central University). As its head coach from 1940-52, McLendon led his team to victory in eight Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) tournaments, winning four consecutive CIAA tournaments (1949-1952). Among the players he coached at North Carolina was Harold Hunter, the first African American athlete to sign with the National Basketball Association (NBA).

From 1952 to 1954, McLendon coached at Hampton Institute (Hampton, Virginia), where he took the team to its best record in 26 years. In 1954 he joined the coaching staff of Tennessee A&I State University in Nashville. During his 1954 to 1959 tenure there, the Tennessee Tigers, led by Dick Barnett, broke new ground for African American athletes and set unprecedented college basketball records. The year 1954 marked the first time a black college was invited to play in a tournament of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA)- the Tip-Off Tournament held in Kansas City, Missouri. Newspapers of the day reported that it was also the first time that Negros were allowed to stay in the downtown Kansas City hotels. When the Tigers took the 1954 title, McLendon became the first African American coach to win an integrated national championship. His team went on to win the NAIA Division I Men's Tournament in 1957, 1958 and 1959, making him the first coach in history to win three consecutive NAIA championships.

In 1959, McLendon was the first African American coach selected to lead the National All-Star Team, which defeated the championship team of the professional National Industrial Basketball League (NIBL) in March of that year. He also coached the NAIA All-Stars in international play from 1961 to 1964 and 1967.

AAU to ABL Coach

McLendon left Tennessee in 1959 to become head coach of the NIBL's Cleveland Pipers. In 1960, he was the first coach to defeat the U.S. Olympic Team with an amateur team. In 1961, he was the first African American coach to win the AAU national championship. When the Pipers joined the American Basketball League (ABL), McLendon became the first African American head coach in a major professional league and led the Pipers to victory in the Eastern Division in 1962. That same year McLendon was fired by Pipers owner George Steinbrenner when he refused to tell a player that he had been traded to another team--that night's opponent.

He returned to college basketball in 1963 as head coach at Kentucky State University.

In 1964, McLendon became the first African American coach appointed to the U.S. Olympic Committee. Beginning in 1966, he served as a scout for the Olympic and Pan American Games and, in 1968, he coached the USA's Olympic team.

In 1966, he went to Cleveland State, becoming the first African American head coach of a predominantly-white university. In 1969 he led the basketball team to their best record in the school's history.

ABA and Olympic Coach

In 1969, McLendon was hired by the Denver Rockets and became the first African American head coach in the American Basketball Association. After a brief stint with the Rockets, McLendon ended his 25-year professional coaching career with a winning percentage of .760 and a lifetime career average of 523 victories and 165 losses. He served as an assistant coach for the USA's Olympic team in 1972 and remained a scout for the Olympic and Pan American Games to 1976.

During the 1980s, McLendon was an international promotional representative for Converse Rubber and conducted basketball clinics around the globe. He was an innovator in many facets of the game, including the fast break, zone press, and four-corners offense. He authored two books: Fast Break Basketball: Fine Points and Fundamentals and The Fast Break Game.

Professional Honors

He died October 8, 1999, survived by his second wife, Joanna, a daughter and two stepchildren. A son, John B. McLendon III, preceded him in death.

In 1979, John McLendon was enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a contributor. The first African American college coach to be so honored, McLendon was cited as "the acknowledged leader of the emergence of Black colleges into the varied national programs."

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