Monte Towe

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Monte Towe

Title Assistant coach
College NC State
Sport Basketball
Born September 27, 1953 (1953-09-27) (age 54)
Place of birth Converse, IN
Career highlights
Playing career
1972–1975 NC State
Position Point guard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1978–1980
1980–1989
1996–1999
1999–2001
2001–2006
2006–present
NC State (asst.)
Florida (asst.)
UNC-Asheville (asst.)
Santa Fe CC
New Orleans
NC State (asst.)

Monte Corwin Towe (born September 27, 1953, in Converse, Indiana) is an American basketball coach and retired player.

Towe attended Oak Hill High School in Converse, Indiana. He was the starting point guard on North Carolina State's 1974 NCAA championship team, and also played varsity baseball for NC State, earning All-ACC recognition in basketball and playing on conference championship teams in both sports. (One of his baseball and basketball teammates, Tim Stoddard, would go on to have success as a Major League Baseball pitcher.) In 1975, the 5'7" (1.7 m) Towe received the Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award as the year's best college player under 6 feet tall. Monte Towe and David Thompson are accredited with "inventing" the alley-oop. Because dunking was illegal at the time, Towe would throw the ball to Thompson while he was in-air and Thompson would gently drop the ball in the basket. Towe was drafted by the Atlanta Hawks in the fourth round of the 1975 NBA Draft, but instead signed with the Denver Nuggets of the ABA, for whom he played in 1976 and 1977. He played in the 1976 ABA All-Star game.

After his retirement as a player, Towe became an assistant coach under Norm Sloan, first at NC State (1979-80) and then at the University of Florida (1981-89). During the 1990s, he was coach and general manager of two teams in the Global Basketball Association; coach of a professional team in Venezuela (Marinos de Oriente); an assistant coach of the Sioux Falls Skyforce of the Continental Basketball Association under head coach Flip Saunders; coach of two junior college teams; and an assistant coach at the University of North Carolina at Asheville.

In 2000, Towe was named head basketball coach at the University of New Orleans. He compiled a 70-78 record over five seasons. In May 2006, he left UNO to become associate head coach at North Carolina State under new head coach Sidney Lowe.

Towe was inducted into the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002.

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