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Jud Heathcote

American basketball player and coach


American basketball player and coach

FieldValue
nameJud Heathcote
birth_date
birth_placeHarvey, North Dakota, U.S.
death_date
death_placeSpokane, Washington, U.S.
player_years11946–1949
player_team1Washington State
coach_years11950–1964
coach_team1West Valley HS (WA)
coach_years21964–1971
coach_team2Washington State (assistant)
coach_years31971–1976
coach_team3Montana
coach_years41976–1995
coach_team4Michigan State
overall_record419–274 (college)
championshipsNCAA Division I tournament (1979)
2 Big Sky regular season (1975, 1976)
3 Big Ten regular season (1978, 1979, 1990)
awardsNABC Coach of the Year (1990)
Sporting News Coach of the Year Award (1995)
Big Sky Coach of the Year (1975)
2× Big Ten Coach of the Year (1978, 1986)
CBBASKHOF_year2009

2 Big Sky regular season (1975, 1976) 3 Big Ten regular season (1978, 1979, 1990) Sporting News Coach of the Year Award (1995) Big Sky Coach of the Year (1975) 2× Big Ten Coach of the Year (1978, 1986) George Melvin "Jud" Heathcote (May 27, 1927 – August 28, 2017) was an American basketball player and coach. He was a college basketball head coach for 24 seasons: five at the University of Montana (1971–1976) and nineteen at Michigan State University (1976–1995). Heathcote coached Magic Johnson during his two years at Michigan State, concluding with the 1979 national championship season. He also coached the University of Montana to a national handball championship in 1974.

Early years

Born in Harvey, North Dakota, to Marion Grant Heathcote and Fawn (Walsh), Heathcote's father was a coach, but died in a 1930 diphtheria epidemic. His mother was a teacher and moved to live with her parents in Manchester, Washington, west of Seattle.

Heathcote developed into a fine three-sport athlete at South Kitsap High School in Port Orchard, and after a year in the Navy V-5 program as World War II ended, he enrolled at Washington State College in Pullman and played basketball for the Cougars under head coach Jack Friel.

Coaching career

At age 44, Montana was the first for Heathcote as head coach of a college varsity program. Out of college, he coached for fourteen seasons at West Valley High School in Spokane, Washington, then at alma mater Washington State for seven years under Marv Harshman; five as freshman coach and two as frosh-varsity coach.

Montana had little historic success in the sport,}}

Heathcote was hired by Joseph Kearney at Michigan State in April 1976 and began the most successful phase of his coaching career. In his third season in East Lansing, he guided the Spartans to the NCAA championship. Led on the court by sophomore Magic Johnson, MSU defeated the Larry Bird-led Indiana State Sycamores in the title game in Salt Lake City.

In his nineteen years at Michigan State, the Spartans made nine NCAA tournament appearances and three National Invitation Tournament (NIT) appearances. As a coach, Heathcote was particularly noted for his excellent defensive strategies on the court and was second to none in blocking the opposing team from penetrating to the hoop. Heathcote retired after the 1994–95 season, having won 418 games and lost 275, for a .603 winning percentage. He was succeeded by Tom Izzo, a thirteen-year assistant coach and associate head coach for Heathcote's final five seasons.

Retirement

After retiring from coaching, Heathcote returned to Spokane, where he lived until his death. He played handball until well into his seventies, and continued to play recreational golf. While Heathcote continued to follow Michigan State during the college season, his primary basketball interest in his final years was the local Gonzaga University; he attended all Bulldogs home games, and had a monthly lunch with head coach Mark Few.

On August 28, 2017, Heathcote died at the age of 90. "Michigan State has lost one of its icons today," current MSU basketball coach Tom Izzo said in a statement. "And yet, nothing can erase his impact on the program, the players he coached and the coaches he mentored. Spartan basketball is what it is today because of Jud Heathcote."

Head coaching record

College

*Due to forfeits related to NCAA sanctions to Minnesota for improper selling of tickets, MSU's official record for the 1976–77 season is 12–15, 9–9 though they finished the season 10–17, 7–11. ^Due to NCAA sanctions against Wisconsin for providing improper benefits for players, MSU's official record for the 1981–82 season is 12–16, 7–11 though they finished the season 11–17, 6–12. The official record for the 1983–84 seasonal is 16–12, 9–9 though they finished the season 15–13, 8–10

References

  • Autobiography: {{cite book | author-link = Jud Heathcote | url-access = registration

References

  1. Blanchette, John. (August 28, 2017). "Spokane's Jud Heathcote, longtime coach at Michigan State, dies at 90". Spokesman-Review.
  2. (August 29, 2017). "The heart of Grizzly basketball goes quiet". University of Montana Athletics.
  3. Keith, Larry. (April 2, 1979). "They caged the Bird".
  4. (May 27, 1964). "Cougars hire Jud". Spokesman-Review.
  5. (April 1, 1971). "Montana hires WSU's Heathcote as new Grizzly basketball coach". Spokesman-Review.
  6. (April 1, 1971). "Team to run - Heathcote". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  7. (May 27, 1964). "Heathcote named basketball assistant at Washington State". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  8. Cawood, Neil. (March 21, 1975). "It's UCLA - despite Eric Hays' heroics". Eugene Register-Guard.
  9. (March 21, 1975). "Gritty Montana's rally falls short as UCLA struggle to 67-64 win". Spokesman-Review.
  10. (March 21, 1975). "Bruins slip past Montana, 67-64". Lewiston Morning-Tribune.
  11. (April 6, 1976). "MSU tabs Rogers, Heathcote". Spokesman-Review.
  12. (April 6, 1976). "Heathcote gets MSU job". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  13. Medcalf, Myron. (May 29, 2014). "What happens after coaching?". ESPN.com.
  14. Larry Lage. (2017-08-28). "Former Michigan State coach Jud Heathcote dies at 90". abcnews.go.com.
  15. "Ex-Michigan State coach Heathcote dies at 90". ESPN.com.
  16. "Former Michigan State basketball coach Jud Heathcote dies at age 90". Detroit Free Press.
  17. Fury, Shawn. (2010-01-05). "Shawn's Blog: Who was the best college team that never existed?".
  18. "NCAA punishes Yoder, Wisconsin basketball (July 18, 1986)".
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