Stan Albeck

Stan Albeck
Personal information
Born (1931-05-17) May 17, 1931
Chenoa, Illinois
Nationality American
Career information
High school Chenoa (Chenoa, Illinois)
College Bradley (1950–1952, 1954–1955)
NBA draft 1955 / Undrafted
Coaching career 1956–2002
Career history
As coach:
1956–1957 Adrian
1957–1968 Northern Michigan
1968–1970 University of Denver
1970–1973 Denver Rockets (asst.)
1970–1971 Denver Rockets (interim HC)
1972–1974 San Diego Conquistadors (asst.)
1974–1976 Kentucky Colonels (asst.)
19761979 Los Angeles Lakers (asst.)
1979–1980 Cleveland Cavaliers
19801983 San Antonio Spurs
19831985 New Jersey Nets
1985–1986 Chicago Bulls
1986–1991 Bradley
1995–1996 New Jersey Nets (asst.)
19972000 Atlanta Hawks (asst.)
20002002 Toronto Raptors (asst.)
Career highlights and awards

Charkes Stanley Albeck (born May 17, 1931) is a former professional basketball coach. Albeck has coached for several teams in the American Basketball Association (ABA) and National Basketball Association (NBA), including the Denver Rockets, the San Diego Conquistadors, (often subbing for an absent Wilt Chamberlain), the Cleveland Cavaliers, the San Antonio Spurs, the New Jersey Nets, and the Chicago Bulls.

Albeck graduated from Chenoa High School in Chenoa, Illinois and received his bachelor's degree at Bradley University in 1955 and his masters at Michigan State University in 1957.[1] He married Phyllis L. Mann in 1952 and they have five children.

He began his coaching at Adrian College in Adrian, Michigan.[1]

Albeck's next head coaching job was at Northern Michigan University.

Albeck was head coach at the University of Denver from 1968-1970.

He was the head coach of the Denver Rockets during most of the 1970–1971 season. The Rockets had begun the season under head coach Joe Belmont, but Belmont was fired after the team lost 10 of its first 13 games. Albeck replaced Belmont as the Rockets' head coach.[2] The Rockets went 27–44 under Albeck to finish the season with a record of 30 wins and 54 losses. They tied the Texas Chaparrals for fourth place in the Western Division (28 games behind the Indiana Pacers) and on April 1, 1971 lost a one-game playoff to the Chaparrals, 115–109, to determine who would advance into the ABA Western Division semifinals.[3] During the season Denver's average home attendance dropped to 4,139 fans per game from 6,281 the year before.[2] One week after the playoff loss, on April 8, 1971, Albeck was replaced by Alex Hannum as Denver's head coach. Hannum resigned as coach of the San Diego Rockets to become the Rockets' head coach, general manager and president. Albeck then became player personnel director for the Rockets.[4]

During the 1972–1973 season Albeck was an assistant coach for the San Diego Conquistadors under head coach K.C. Jones. Albeck also served as director of player personnel for the Conquistadors. During most of the 1973-74 he served under 'Ques' head coach Wilt Chamberlain. Chamberlain missed a few games, during which Albeck filled in as the Conquistadors' head coach, winning all of them.[5]

Albeck was an assistant coach for the Kentucky Colonels during the 1974–1975 season in which the team won the 1975 ABA Championship.[6] Albeck returned as an assistant coach with the Colonels during their final season in 1975–1976.[7]

He was assistant coach of the Los Angeles Lakers, 1976-1979.

Albeck was head coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers, 1979–1980.

He was the San Antonio Spurs' head coach for three seasons, from 1980 to 1983.

After the Spurs job, Albeck was the head coach of the New Jersey Nets from 1983 to 1985.

Next, Albeck was head coach of the Chicago Bulls, 1985–1986. His exit from Chicago raised eyebrows around the NBA as his replacement, Doug Collins, had been hired by General Manager Jerry Krause just 2 months beforehand as a scout. The hire of Collins was kept a secret from Albeck.

From 1986 through 1991 Albeck was head coach for Bradley University, his alma mater. He is a member of the Sigma Chi Fraternity, as well as a Significant Sig and a member of their Significant Sig Hall of Fame.

His all time coaching percentages is .535 for his 7 years as a head coach in the NBA.

After serving as an assistant coach for the Atlanta Hawks, Albeck was as an assistant coach for the Toronto Raptors in 2001 when he suffered a debilitating stroke, which left him partially paralyzed. He has been in rehabilitation since then.

Head coaching record

NBA

Legend
Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W–L % Win-loss %
Post season PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW–L % Playoff win-loss %
Team Year G W L WL% Finish PG PW PL PWL% Result
CLE 1979–80 823745.4514th in Central Missed Playoffs
SAS 1980–81 825230.6341st in Midwest734.429 Lost in Conf. Semifinals
SAS 1981–82 824834.5851st in Midwest945444 Lost in Conf. Finals
SAS 1982–83 825329.6461st in Midwest1165.545 Lost in Conf. Finals
NJN 1983–84 824537.5494th in Atlantic1156.455 Lost in Conf. Semifinals
NJN 1984–85 824240.5123rd in Atlantic303.000 Lost in First Round
CHI 1985–86 823052.3664th in Central303.000 Lost in First Round
Career 574307267.535 441826.409

References

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