sport.wikisort.org - AthleteJohn David "Honey" Russell (May 31, 1902 – November 15, 1973) was an American basketball player and coach who was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1964. He turned professional after his sophomore year of high school, and for the next 28 years he played for numerous early 20th century pro teams, including many in the American Basketball League. His career included over 3,200 pro games (a number that would take a modern NBA player 30–40 years to equal). He was the first coach of the NBA's Boston Celtics (1946–1948).[1]
American professional basketball player and coach
Honey Russell |
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Born | (1902-05-31)May 31, 1902 Brooklyn, New York |
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Died | November 15, 1973(1973-11-15) (aged 71) Livingston, New Jersey |
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Nationality | American |
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Listed height | 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) |
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Listed weight | 175 lb (79 kg) |
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High school | Alexander Hamilton (Brooklyn, New York) |
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1920–1921 | Plymouth Shawnees |
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1920–1922 | Easthampton Hampers |
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1921–1923 | Brooklyn Pros |
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1921–1922 | Mohawk Indians |
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1921–1923 | Albany Senators |
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1922–1923 | Northampton Hampers |
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1923–1924 | Yonkers Leaguers |
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1923–1925 | Cleveland Rosenblooms |
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1924–1925 | Original Celtics |
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1925–1927 | Cleveland Rosenblums |
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1925–1926 | Lou Gehrig All Stars |
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1926–1930 | Chicago Bruins |
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1928–1929 | Rochester Centrals |
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1930–1931 | Paterson Crescents |
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1930–1931 | Bridgeton Moose |
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1930–1931 | Carbondale |
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1931–1932 | Bridgeton |
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1931–1933 | Brooklyn Americans |
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1932–1933 | Trenton Bengals |
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1932–1933 | Brooklyn Jewels |
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1932–1934 | Dunmore |
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1933–1934 | Trenton Moose |
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1934–1935 | Newark / New Britain Mules |
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1934–1935 | Nanticoke |
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1934–1936 | Freeland |
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1934–1935 | Albany |
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1935–1939 | New York Jewels |
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1936–1937 | Hazleton |
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1937–1938 | Allentown |
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1937–1938 | Wilkes-Barre |
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1937–1938 | New York Hokoahs |
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1937–1938 | New York Kate Smith Celtics |
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1938–1939 | Allentown-Hamburg |
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1938–1939 | Tunkhannock |
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1938–1940 | New York Yankees |
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1939–1940 | Wilkes-Barre Barons |
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1939–1940 | Hamburg |
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1939–1940 | Washington Brewers |
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1942–1943 | Wilmington Clippers |
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1942–1944 | Camden / Brooklyn Indians |
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1944–1945 | New York Westchesters |
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1944–1945 | Jersey Reds |
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1927–1930 | Chicago Bruins |
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1934–1935 | Newark / New Britain Mules |
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1934–1935 | Albany |
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1936–1937 | New York Jewels |
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1936–1943 | Seton Hall |
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1937–1938 | New York Kate Smith Celtics |
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1939–1940 | Wilkes-Barre Barons |
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1942–1944 | Camden / Brooklyn Indians |
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1944–1945 | New York Westchesters |
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1945–1946 | Trenton |
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1945–1946 | Manhattan |
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1946–1948 | Boston Celtics |
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1948–1950 | Schenectady Packers |
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1949–1960 | Seton Hall |
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As player:
- 2× ABL champion (1926, 1939)
- 4× ABL All-Star (1926–1929)
As coach:
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Stats at Basketball-Reference.com |
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Basketball Hall of Fame as player |
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Russell coached basketball at Seton Hall University from 1936 to 1943 and again from 1949 to 1960. His teams won 294 games and lost 137. In 1940 and 1941, Seton Hall ran its winning streak to 43 games, a national record at the time. The 1952–53 team won the National Invitation Tournament at Madison Square Garden in New York City. That team won 31 games, including 27 in a row, while only losing 2 games.
Russell also was a scout in professional baseball, working for the Atlanta Braves, Montreal Expos and Chicago White Sox.[2] Of the many players he signed, 23 made it to the major leagues, including the Joe and Frank Torre, Don McMahon, and Earl Williams.
Head coaching record
NCAA
Statistics overview
Season |
Team |
Overall |
Conference |
Standing |
Postseason
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Seton Hall Pirates (Independent) (1936–1943)
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1936–37 |
Seton Hall
| 5–10 | | |
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1937–38 |
Seton Hall
| 10–8 | | |
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1938–39 |
Seton Hall
| 15–7 | | |
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1939–40 |
Seton Hall
| 19–0 | | |
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1940–41 |
Seton Hall
| 20–2 | | | NIT Third-place game
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1941–42 |
Seton Hall
| 16–3 | | |
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1942–43 |
Seton Hall
| 16–2 | | |
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Manhattan Jaspers (Metropolitan New York Conference) (1945–1946)
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1945–46 |
Manhattan
| 15–8 | 2–4 | 5th |
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Manhattan: |
15–8 (.652) | 2–4 (.333) |
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Seton Hall Pirates (Independent) (1949–1960)
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1949–50 |
Seton Hall
| 11–15 | | |
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1950–51 |
Seton Hall
| 24–7 | | | NIT Third-place game
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1951–52 |
Seton Hall
| 25–3 | | | NIT First round
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1952–53 |
Seton Hall
| 31–2 | | | NIT Champions
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1953–54 |
Seton Hall
| 13–10 | | |
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1954–55 |
Seton Hall
| 17–9 | | | NIT First round
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1955–56 |
Seton Hall
| 20–5 | | | NIT Quarterfinals
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1956–57 |
Seton Hall
| 17–10 | | | NIT First round
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1957–58 |
Seton Hall
| 7–19 | | |
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1958–59 |
Seton Hall
| 13–10 | | |
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1959–60 |
Seton Hall
| 16–7 | | |
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Seton Hall: |
295–129 (.696) | |
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Total: | 310–137 (.694) |
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National champion
Postseason invitational champion
Conference regular season champion
Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
Division regular season champion
Division regular season and conference tournament champion
Conference tournament champion |
BAA
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
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Boston |
1946–47 |
60 | 22 | 38 | .367 | 5th in Eastern | — | — | — | — | Missed playoffs |
Boston |
1947–48 |
58 | 20 | 38 | .345 | 3rd in Eastern | 3 | 1 | 2 | .333 | Lost in Quarterfinals |
Total |
118 | 42 | 76 | .356 | | 3 | 1 | 2 | .333 | |
References
External links
Links to related articles |
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Chicago Bruins head coaches |
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Seton Hall Pirates men's basketball head coaches |
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Manhattan Jaspers head basketball coaches |
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Boston Celtics head coaches |
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# denotes interim head coach
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Cleveland Rosenblums 1925–26 ABL champions |
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Brooklyn Jewels 1932–33 MBL champions |
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- Bass
- Begovich
- Gerson
- Kinsbrunner
- Posnack
- Russell
- Schuckman
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Trenton Moose 1932–33 EBL champions |
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New York Jewels 1938–39 ABL champions |
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Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 1964 |
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Players | |
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Coaches | |
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Contributors | |
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Members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame |
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Players | |
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Coaches | |
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Contributors | |
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Referees | |
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Teams |
- 1956–57 Tennessee A&I State Team
- 1957–58 Tennessee A&I State Team
- 1958–59 Tennessee A&I State Team
- 1960 United States Olympic Team
- 1992 United States Olympic Team
- All-American Red Heads
- Buffalo Germans
- The First Team
- Harlem Globetrotters
- Immaculata College
- New York Renaissance
- Original Celtics
- Texas Western
- Wayland Baptist Women's Teams (1948–1982)
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Authority control  |
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General | |
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National libraries | |
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Other | |
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