Tates Locke

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Born(1937-02-26)February 26, 1937
Batesville, Indiana, U.S.
DiedMay 15, 2024(2024-05-15) (aged 87)
Jacksonville, Florida, U.S.
1957–1959Ohio Wesleyan
1959–1960Ohio Wesleyan (assistant)
Tates Locke
Locke at Clemson in 1975
Biographical details
Born(1937-02-26)February 26, 1937
Batesville, Indiana, U.S.
DiedMay 15, 2024(2024-05-15) (aged 87)
Jacksonville, Florida, U.S.
Playing career
1957–1959Ohio Wesleyan
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1959–1960Ohio Wesleyan (assistant)
1960–1963Army (assistant)
1963–1965Army
1965–1966Miami (OH) (freshmen)
1966–1970Miami (OH)
1970–1975Clemson
1975–1976Buffalo Braves (assistant)
1976–1977Buffalo Braves
1978–1981Jacksonville
1981–1983UNLV (assistant)
1987–1989Indiana (assistant)
1989–1994Indiana State
Head coaching record
Overall255–254 (college)
16–30 (NBA)
Tournaments1–3 (NCAA University Division / Division I)
6–4 (NIT)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
MAC regular season (1969)
Sun Belt tournament (1979)
Awards
Sun Belt Coach of the Year (1980)
MVC Coach of the Year (1991)

Taylor "Tates" Locke (February 25, 1937 – May 15, 2024) was an American basketball coach. He was described by Rick Telander in the March 8, 1982, issue of Sports Illustrated as being "as high-strung, aggressive and gung-ho over college coaching as anyone has ever been."[1] He died in Jacksonville, Florida, on May 15, 2024, at the age of 87.[2]

Locke coached for West Point, where he hired Bob Knight as an assistant coach. Knight replaced Locke when Locke left West Point. After West Point, Locke moved on to Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, winning a MAC title in 1968–69.

Locke resigned from his Miami post to replace Bobby Roberts as head coach at Clemson University on March 18, 1970.[3] After a season in which the Tigers had its best record in eight years at 1711 and shared second place with North Carolina and North Carolina State in the Atlantic Coast Conference, he announced his resignation on March 20, 1975, amid a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) investigation into alleged violations involving offering money to recruit Moses Malone and furnishing cars to five Tigers players including Tree Rollins, Skip Wise and Stan Rome.[4][5] Locke was succeeded by Bill Foster on April 9.[6] Clemson's men's basketball program was placed on three years probation on October 7.[7]

Locke's only experience at the professional level was made possible by Jack Ramsay who brought him to the Buffalo Braves as an assistant coach and chief scout beginning in 197576. When Ramsay's contract wasn't renewed the day after the Braves were eliminated by the Boston Celtics from the playoffs, Locke was promoted and signed a two-year contract to succeed him as the franchise's fourth head coach three days later on May 6, 1976. He vowed to build "one hell of an aggressive basketball team."[8]

Once the 197677 season started, the Braves traded Bob McAdoo and Tom McMillen to the New York Knicks and Moses Malone to the Houston Rockets. Locke was also at odds with Ernie DiGregorio and John Shumate. With the Braves at 1630, 13+12 games behind the Atlantic Division-leading Philadelphia 76ers and in the midst of a five-match losing streak, he was fired and replaced on an interim basis by general manager Bob MacKinnon on January 25, 1977.[9]

He succeeded Don Beasley as head coach at Jacksonville University on March 23, 1978.[10] He took the Dolphins to an NCAA berth and NIT berth.

After assistant stints at UNLV and Indiana, Locke would accept the head coach vacancy at Indiana State University. In his first season, he doubled the win total of his predecessor; in his second season, the Sycamores finished the season at 14-14 (.500) and Locke would be named MVC Coach of the Year. Though achieving modest success, he resigned under pressure after five seasons. He later worked as a scout and assistant general manager for the Portland Trail Blazers.

Locke co-authored with Bob Ibach Caught in the Net, a 1982 book about his transgressions as a college basketball head coach, primarily during his time at Clemson.[1] The book inspired the 1994 film Blue Chips.[11]

Head coaching record

References

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