Larry Farmer (basketball)

Larry Farmer
Sport(s) Basketball
Current position
Title Coach
Biographical details
Born 1951
Playing career
1971–1973 UCLA
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1981–1984
1985–1988
1998–2004
UCLA
Weber State University
Loyola University Chicago

Larry Farmer (born 1951) is an American college basketball coach currently an assistant coach for the Western Michigan Broncos men's basketball team. He was the head coach of the University of California, Los Angeles from 1981 to 1984, guiding them to a 61–23 record. In 1985, Farmer became the head coach for Weber State University and was the successor to Neil McCarthy. Farmer coached Weber for three seasons (1985–88) and compiled a record of 34–54.[1]

Larry Farmer also coached at Loyola University Chicago from 1998 to 2003. Farmer had a 30–51 record over his first three seasons before finally breaking through in 2001. In that year, Farmer compiled a 17–13 record, 9–7 in the Horizon League. Farmer took the Ramblers to the brink of the NCAA Tournament before losing a heartbreaker to rival University of Illinois Chicago. Farmer did not have much success after that and struggled through his last two seasons with the Ramblers.

Farmer has served as an assistant coach at the University of Hawaii under Bob Nash.

Farmer played at UCLA during the early 1970s under legendary coach John Wooden. He was a teammate of Bill Walton during the era when the Bruins won seven consecutive NCAA men's titles. He played for UCLA teams that went 89–1 (.989), the best winning percentage in NCAA men's basketball history, making him and teammate Larry Hollyfield as the only players with such a record.[2]

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