- Dave Gavitt
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David "Dave" Gavitt (October 26, 1937, Westerly, Rhode Island – September 16, 2011[1]) was a American college basketball coach and athletic director at Providence College in Providence, Rhode Island. He was also well known as the first commissioner of the Big East Conference and as part of the committee which created the 1992 Olympic Basketball "Dream Team."
Contents
Coaching career
Gavitt graduated from Dartmouth College in 1959, where he was a member of the 1959-1960 varsity basketball team, the last Dartmouth basketball team to win the Ivy League championship. He spent two years as an assistant basketball coach at Worcester Academy before becoming an assistant coach at Providence under the legendary Joe Mullaney in 1962. He left in 1966 to become and then head coach at his alma mater before taking over for Mullaney at Providence in 1969.
Under his ten-year tenure, the Friars advanced to the postseason eight straight years (1971–78; five NCAA appearances, 1972-'74, '77-'78, and three NIT appearances, 1971, '75, 76). In 1973, Gavitt's team made it to the Final Four for the first time in school history. He also served as director of athletics at PC from 1971 to 1982, and was at that position when the school's women's athletics programs were started as a result of Title IX.
The Big East, USA Basketball and beyond
In 1979, Gavitt, along with several other college athletics administrators, helped to form the Big East Conference as a means to better compete with the major schools in the country. He became the conference's first commissioner, from 1979 to 1990.[2] Under his direction, the Big East steadily expanded and was an almost immediate success, as several schools became basketball powerhouses (culminating in the 1985 Final Four, in which three schools from the conference - Georgetown, Saint John's, and eventual champion Villanova - were present).
During his tenure, six of the conference's schools (Georgetown, Villanova, Saint John's, Providence, Seton Hall and Syracuse) participated in the Final Four, and all nine teams made it to the NCAA tournament at least once. His contributions, in fact, are memorialized in the Dave Gavitt Trophy, given to the winner of the Big East's men's basketball tournament, which he was responsible for not only creating, but its annual use of Madison Square Garden. Also, from 1982 to 1984, he was chairman of the NCAA Division I Basketball Committee. It was under his guidance that the tournament expanded to sixty-four teams, in order to provide better opportunity for small conference teams to participate. He was also responsible for the playing of Final Four games in larger venues such as domed stadiums, and the first full contract with a television network to provide universal coverage of the tournament, further adding to the tournament's popularity and prestige.
Gavitt has also been involved in Olympic basketball. In 1980, he was selected as the head coach of the Olympic basketball team, only to lose out on the opportunity due to the boycott of the Moscow games by the United States. He would also go on to serve on the Olympic governing body, including a presidency from 1988 to 1992. It was during his tenure that he developed the concept of the "Dream Team," an Olympic basketball team composed of the NBA's best.
Besides these responsibilities, Gavitt was CEO of the Boston Celtics from 1990 to 1994, President of the NCAA Foundation from 1995 to 1997, and Chairman of the Board of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame until 2003. He is a member of the Providence College Athletic Hall of Fame (1984), National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics Hall of Fame (2000), and the International Scholar-Athlete Hall of Fame (2000). Gavitt was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame on September 8, 2006. He became the third former member of the Friar athletic program (after John Thompson and Lenny Wilkens), and the first native of Rhode Island to be enshrined. The court at the Dunkin' Donuts Center, Friar's home court, in Providence, Rhode Island is named after him.
Head coaching record
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason Dartmouth Big Green (Ivy League) (1967–1969) 1967–1968 Dartmouth 8–18 6–8 T–4th 1968–1969 Dartmouth 10–15 4–10 6th Dartmouth: 18–33 10–18 Providence Friars (Independent) (1969–1979) 1969–1970 Providence 14–11 1970–1971 Providence 20–8 NIT Quarterfinal 1971–1972 Providence 21–6 NCAA 1st Round 1972–1973 Providence 27–4 NCAA Final Four/NCAA National 3rd Place 1973–1974 Providence 28–4 NCAA Sweet 16/NCAA East Regional 3rd Place 1974–1975 Providence 20–11 NIT Runner-up 1975–1976 Providence 21–11 NIT Semifinal/3rd Place 1976–1977 Providence 24–5 NCAA 1st Round 1977–1978 Providence 24–8 NCAA 1st Round 1978–1979 Providence 10–16 Providence: 209–84 Total: 209–84 National Champion Conference Regular Season Champion Conference Tournament Champion
Conference Regular Season & Conference Tournament Champion Conference Division ChampionDeath
Gavitt died Friday, September 16, 2011 after a long battle with an unconfirmed illness. He died in a hospital near his hometown of Rumford, R.I. He was 73.[3]
References
- ^ O'Connell, Jim (September 17, 2011). "Hall of Famer Dave Gavitt Dies at 73". ABC News. Associated Press, ESPN. http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/hall-famer-dave-gavitt-dies-73-14544075. Retrieved September 18, 2011.
- ^ Sarah Maslin Nir (September 17, 2011). "Dave Gavitt, the Big East’s Founder, Dies at 73". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/18/sports/ncaabasketball/dave-gavitt-the-big-easts-founder-dies-at-73.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&ref=deathsobituaries&adxnnlx=1316347225-meOtGfclrJRPis3Xx35n4w#&wtoeid=growl1_r1_v5.
- ^ ap, ap. [Hall of Famer Dave Gavitt dies at 73 Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/basketball/ncaa/09/17/gavitt.dies.ap/index.html#ixzz1YQbWLYIH "Hall of Fame Dave Gavitt Dies at 73"]. si.com. si.com. Hall of Famer Dave Gavitt dies at 73 Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/basketball/ncaa/09/17/gavitt.dies.ap/index.html#ixzz1YQbWLYIH. Retrieved 19 September 2011.
External links
- "Dave Gavitt To Be Inducted Into The Basketball Hall of Fame" (from Friars.com)
- "Gavitt, Auriemma Named Members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame" (from BigEast.org)
- 2005-2006 Providence College Men's Basketball Media Guide. Attleboro, MA: Colonial Lithograph Inc., 2005.
Dartmouth Big Green men's basketball head coaches No coach (1900–1906) • Henry Lane (1906–1909) • Benjamin Lang (1909–1910) • Tom Keady (1910–1911) • Francis Brady (1911–1912) • James Mullen (1912–1913) • C. A. Reed (1913–1914) • P. W. Loudon (1914–1916) • J. A. Pelletier (1916–1917) • Mysterious Walker (1917–1918) • No team (1918–1919) • George Zahn (1919–1924) • Leonard Wachter (1924–1928) • Albert Stark (1928–1936) • Osborne Cowles (1936–1943) • Earl Brown (1943–1944) • Osborne Cowles (1944–1946) • Elmer A. Lampe (1946–1950) • Doggie Julian (1950–1967) • Dave Gavitt (1967–1969) • George Blaney (1969–1972) • Tom O'Connor (1972–1974) • Marcus Jackson (1974–1975) • Gary Walters (1975–1979) • Tim Cohane (1979–1983) • Reggie Minton (1983–1984) • Paul Cormier (1984–1991) • Dave Faucher (1991–2004) • Terry Dunn (2004–2010) • Mark Graupe # (2010) • Paul Cormier (2010– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.
Providence Friars men's basketball head coaches No coach (1920–1921) • William Donovan & Joseph McGee (1921–1922) • No team (1922–1926) • Archie Golembeski (1926–1927) • Al McClellan (1927–1938) • Edward Crotty (1938–1943) • No team (1943–1944) • Edward Crotty (1944–1946) • Lawrence Drew (1946–1949) • James Cuddy (1949–1955) • Joe Mullaney (1955–1969) • Dave Gavitt (1969–1979) • Gary Walters (1979–1981) • Joe Mullaney (1981–1985) • Rick Pitino (1985–1987) • Gordon Chiesa (1987–1988) • Rick Barnes (1988–1994) • Pete Gillen (1994–1998) • Tim Welsh (1998–2008) • Keno Davis (2008–2011) • Ed Cooley (2011– )
Big East Conference commissioners Dave Gavitt (1979–1990) • Mike Tranghese (1990–2009) • John Marinatto (2009– )
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2006 Players Coaches Contributors Dave GavittCategories:- 1937 births
- 2011 deaths
- American basketball players
- Basketball players from Rhode Island
- Big East Conference commissioners
- College men's basketball head coaches in the United States
- Dartmouth Big Green baseball players
- Dartmouth Big Green men's basketball coaches
- Dartmouth Big Green men's basketball players
- High school basketball coaches in the United States
- Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductees
- National Basketball Association executives
- National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame inductees
- People from Westerly, Rhode Island
- Providence Friars men's basketball coaches
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