Everything about Dave Cowens totally explained
David William Cowens (born
October 25 1948, in
Newport, Kentucky) is a retired American professional
basketball player and
NBA head coach. At 6'9", he played the
center position. He was inducted into the
Basketball Hall of Fame in 1991. He is currently an assistant coach for the
Detroit Pistons.
College career
Cowens played collegiate basketball at
Florida State University from
1967 to
1970. He scored 1,479 points in 78 games at Florida State, a 19.0 points per game, and ranks among Florida State's top 10 all-time scoring leaders.
He is the all-time Florida State leading rebounder with 1,340 rebounds (17.2 rebounds per game). He holds the team record for best seasonal rebound average (17.5 in the 1968-1969 season). He once grabbed 31 rebounds (second best all-time) against
LSU in the 1968-69 season.
He was named
The Sporting News All-America second team in 1970. His number now hangs in the rafters of the
Donald L. Tucker Center.
NBA career
Despite some critics who felt Cowens was too small to play center, Cowens was selected as the fourth overall pick by the
Boston Celtics during the
1970 NBA Draft, largely at the recommendation of former Celtics center
Bill Russell.
Personality
From time to time, perhaps as a way of counter-balancing his zealous commitment to the game of basketball and the Celtics, Cowens exhibited a few unconventional traits:
-In 1974, after the Celtics won the NBA championship over
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and the
Milwaukee Bucks, he slept on a park bench on Boston Common, purportedly after wandering throughout the neighborhoods adjacent to downtown Boston to celebrate the victory with Celtics fans and an entourage of admirers and devotees.
-During the early part of the 1977 season, Cowens took a leave of absence from the Celtics and worked as a cab driver. He explained that he just needed "to clear his head" and that he was "suffering from burnout."
Post-NBA career
He began his coaching career by serving as a combined player/coach for the
Boston Celtics during the 1978-79 season, but he quit coaching after the season, and returned as a full-time player before retiring in
1980. However, he was coaxed out of retirement by the
Milwaukee Bucks, who were then coached by his former Celtics teammate,
Don Nelson. The Celtics still held his rights at the time so the Bucks gave up
Quinn Buckner as compensation. Cowens played for the Bucks during the 1982-83 season before retiring for good.
He has also coached the Bay State Bombadiers of the
Continental Basketball Association in 1984-85. He returned to the NBA coaching ranks by serving as an assistant coach for the
San Antonio Spurs in 1994-96, and became head coach of the
Charlotte Hornets from 1996-99 and had a brief tenure as head coach with the
Golden State Warriors from 1999-2001 which only lasted 105 games.
In
1990, he was inducted into the
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
Jim Loscutoff asked that his jersey number (#18) not be retired so that a future Celtic could wear it - the number 18 was later retired in Cowens' honor.
On
May 25,
2005, he was named head coach of the newly-formed Chicago franchise in the
Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). The team, known as the
Chicago Sky, began play in
2006 at the
UIC Pavilion, located in the
University of Illinois at Chicago. After only winning five games in the 2006 season, however, Cowens left the Sky to join the coaching staff of the
Detroit Pistons on
September 12, 2006.
Further Information
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