Robert Morris (basketball)
      
Robert Morris| Personal information | 
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| Nationality | 
American | 
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| Career history | 
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| As coach: | 
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| 1946–1947 | 
Providence Steamrollers | 
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| 1947–1954 | 
Brown (NCAA) | 
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| Career highlights and awards | 
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-  East Stroudsburg University Hall of Fame (1987)
 
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Robert B. Morris was an American basketball head coach as well as former collegiate athlete. He served as the head coach for the Providence Steamrollers, a Basketball Association of America team, in 1946–47.[1] Morris then guided Brown University's men's basketball team from 1947 to 1954.[2] He accumulated a 28–32 record with Providence and overall 61–87 record with Brown.[1][2] While at Brown, one of his players was future College Football Hall of Fame coach Joe Paterno, who earned two varsity letters.[3][4]
As an athlete, Morris lettered in football, baseball, and track at East Stroudsburg University of Pennsylvania.[3] He was a member of a Penn Relays-winning track team and was later inducted into the school's athletic hall of fame in 1987.[3] Upon the conclusion of his coaching career he became a schoolteacher and high school coach at Pawtucket High School in Pawtucket, Rhode Island.[5]
Head coaching record
Professional
|  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 | 
 W–L% | 
Finish | 
 PG | 
 PW | 
 PL | 
 PW–L% | 
 Result
 | 
| PRO | 
1946–47 | 
 60 | 28 | 32 | .466 | 4th in Eastern | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 | 
Missed Playoffs | 
| Career | 
  | 60 | 28 | 32 | .466 |   | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |  | 
College
|  Season | 
 Team | 
 Overall | 
 Conference  | 
 Standing | 
 Postseason
 | 
|  Brown Bears (Independent) (1947–1953)
 | 
 
|  1947–48 | 
 Brown | 
               6–14  |    |   | 
 | 
 
|  1948–49 | 
 Brown | 
               13–8  |    |   | 
 | 
 
|  1949–50 | 
 Brown | 
               11–14  |    |   | 
 | 
 
|  1950–51 | 
 Brown | 
               8–11  |    |   | 
 | 
 
|  1951–52 | 
 Brown | 
               5–15  |    |   | 
 | 
 
|  1952–53 | 
 Brown | 
               4–14  |    |   | 
 | 
|  Brown Bears (EIBL) (1953–1954)
 | 
 
|  1953–54 | 
 Brown | 
               13–11  |  4–10  |  7th  | 
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|  Total:  |  61–87 (.412)  |   | 
   
|  
       National champion  
      Postseason invitational champion  
 
      Conference regular season champion   
      Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
 
      Division regular season champion
      Division regular season and conference tournament champion
 
      Conference tournament champion  | 
References
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Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach. 
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-  Ed Benjamin (1900–1901)
 
-  Charles Ray (1901–1902)
 
-  Paul DeWolf (1902–1903)
 
-  Henry Ahrens (1903–1904)
 
-  Paul DeWolf (1904–1905)
 
-  Oscar Rackle (1905–1906)
 
-  W. W. Reynolds (1906–1907)
 
-  J. Donald Pryor (1907–1909)
 
-  Walter White (1909–1910)
 
-  J. Russell McKay (1910–1912)
 
-  No team (1912–1918)
 
-  Louis Pieri (1918–1919)
 
-  Ed Freeman (1919–1920)
 
-  Florence Harvey (1920–1921)
 
-  Walter Snell (1921–1923)
 
-  Harold Evans (1923–1926)
 
-  Tuss McLaughry (1926–1929)
 
-  Rufus Bond (1929–1931)
 
-  Art Kahler (1931–1938)
 
-  George E. Allen (1938–1941)
 
-  Tippy Dye (1941–1942)
 
-  Rip Engle (1942–1946)
 
-  Weeb Ewbank (1946–1947)
 
-  Robert Morris (1947–1954)
 
-  L. Stanley Ward (1954–1969)
 
-  J. Gerald Alaimo (1969–1978)
 
-  Joe Mullaney (1978–1981)
 
-  Mike Cingiser (1981–1991)
 
-  Frank Dobbs (1991–1999)
 
-  Glen Miller (1999–2006)
 
-  Craig Robinson (2006–2008)
 
-  Jesse Agel (2008–2012)
 
-  Mike Martin (2012– )
  
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