Jack Ramsay

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Jack Ramsay
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Jack Ramsay
This article refers to the basketball coach. For the Canadian politician, see Jack Ramsay (politician).

Dr. John T. Ramsay (born February 21, 1925 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States) is a former professional basketball coach in the National Basketball Association.

After coaching in the high school and minor-league ranks for the early postwar years, he became head coach at his alma mater, Saint Joseph's College, in 1955. In his first season, Ramsay would lead the Hawks to their first Big 5 crown and their first-ever postseason berth (in the NIT). Ramsay would remain there through 1966, leading the Hawks to six more Big 5 crowns and ten postseason appearances in all.

Immediately after leaving Saint Joseph's, he was hired as general manager of the Philadelphia 76ers, who won an NBA title in his first season in the front office. In 1968, he left the front office to take over as head coach of the Sixers. In his four seasons as coach, he led the team to three playoff appearances. After the 1971-72 season, he took the head coaching job with the Buffalo Braves. His tenure was almost a mirror image of his time with the Sixers—four seasons, three playoff berths.

His next coaching stop in the NBA was his most famous, with the Portland Trail Blazers. When he arrived in 1976, the Blazers had not made the playoffs or compiled a winning record in their six-year history. However, he arrived just as a young team, led by Bill Walton, started to gel, and also benefited from the ABA dispersal draft in the 1976 off-season, in which the Blazers picked up hard-nosed power forward Maurice Lucas. In his first season in Portland (77), Ramsay led the Blazers to their only NBA title to date. In his second season, the Blazers were 50-10 after 60 games and favored to repeat as champions before Walton, in the midst of a season in which he would be named the league MVP, broke his foot, the first of the numerous major injuries that radically shortened his career. Ramsay continued to coach the Blazers until 1986 with general success, although he was never able to approach the level of his first seasons there. He was also a coach in the 1978 All-Star Game. Ramsay coached the Indiana Pacers for the 1986-87 season before retiring. At that time, he was second on the all-time wins list for NBA coaches, trailing Red Auerbach.

Ramsay later spent nine years as a television color commentator for the [Philadelphia 76ers] and the Miami Heat, and continues to do commentary for ESPN on TV and radio.

Ramsay was enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame as a coach on May 11, 1992. He was named one of the 10 greatest coaches of all time in 1996. [1]

He has authored several highly rated books, including The Coach's Art (ISBN 0-917304-36-5) and Dr. Jack's Leadership Lessons Learned From a Lifetime in Basketball (ISBN 0-471-46929-7).

Ramsay is a 1942 graduate of Upper Darby High School (UDHS). He was inducted into the school's Wall of Fame in 1979. He received his bachelor's degree in social science from Saint Joseph's College in 1949, and his masters and doctorate degrees, both in education, from the University of Pennsylvania in 1952 and 1963, respectively.

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Preceded by:
Alex Hannum
Philadelphia 76ers Coach
1968–1972
Succeeded by:
Roy Rubin
Preceded by:
Johnny McCarthy
Buffalo Braves Coach
1972–1976
Succeeded by:
Tates Locke
Preceded by:
Lenny Wilkens
Portland Trail Blazers Coach
1976–1986
Succeeded by:
Mike Schuler
Preceded by:
George Irvine
Indiana Pacers Coach
1986–1988
Succeeded by:
Mel Daniels
National Basketball Association | Top Ten Coaches in NBA History

Red Auerbach | Chuck Daly | Bill Fitch | Red Holzman | Phil Jackson | John Kundla | Don Nelson | Jack Ramsay | Pat Riley | Lenny Wilkens