William Reinhart
William J. Reinhart (August 2, 1896 – February 14, 1971) was an American college basketball, football, and baseball coach at the George Washington University, the University of Oregon, and the United States Merchant Marine Academy. From 1923 to 1935, he served as the head basketball coach at Oregon. He is the school's second winningest coach with 180 victories. His record through 13 seasons at Oregon was 180–101. He suffered only one losing season. Largely due to his success, Oregon was forced to build McArthur Court to accommodate the large crowds that became fixtures for Ducks games on his watch.[1]
At George Washington, he compiled a 319–237 record in basketball, or .574 winning percentage, including a 23–3 season in 1953–54. His teams twice made the NCAA tournament, in 1954 and 1961, GW's only trips to the NCAA Tournament until Mike Jarvis's team in 1993.[2]
Players he coached at GW included NBA Hall of Famer Red Auerbach and former NBA players Joe Holup, Corky Devlin and Gene Guarilia[2] and at Oregon he coached Howard Hobson. Auerbach said Reinhart's coaching and fast break offenses were "15 years ahead of their time."[1]
He also was head football coach at George Washington and the Merchant Marine Academy, assistant football coach at Oregon, and head baseball coach at Oregon and GW.
He is a member of George Washington's athletic hall of fame, inducted in 1993.[2]
A collection of papers and memorabilia related to Reinhart is housed in the Special Collections Research Center of The George Washington University. The collection includes correspondence, photographs, certificates, and news clippings. The material ranges in date from 1920 to 1993.[3]
Head coaching record
College basketball
Season |
Team |
Overall |
Conference |
Standing |
Postseason
|
Oregon Ducks (Pacific Coast Conference) (1923–1935)
|
1923–24 |
Oregon |
15-5 | 4-4 | 3rd |
|
1924–25 |
Oregon |
15-5 | 7-2 | T-1st |
|
1925–26 |
Oregon |
18-4 | 10-0 | 1st |
|
1926–27 |
Oregon |
24-4 | 8-2 | 1st |
|
1927–28 |
Oregon |
18-3 | 8-2 | 2nd |
|
1928–29 |
Oregon |
10-8 | 3-7 | 5th |
|
1929–30 |
Oregon |
14-12 | 8-8 | 3rd |
|
1930–31 |
Oregon |
12-10 | 6-10 | 4th |
|
1931–32 |
Oregon |
13-11 | 7-9 | 4th |
|
1932–33 |
Oregon |
8-19 | 2-14 | 5th |
|
1933–34 |
Oregon |
17-8 | 9-7 | 2nd |
|
1934–35 |
Oregon |
16-12 | 7-9 | 3rd |
|
Oregon: |
180–101 (.641) | 79–74 (.516) |
|
George Washington Colonials (Independent) (1935–1941)
|
1935–36 |
George Washington |
16-3 | | |
|
1936–37 |
George Washington |
16-4 | | |
|
1937–38 |
George Washington |
13-4 | | |
|
1938–39 |
George Washington |
13-8 | | |
|
1939–40 |
George Washington |
13-6 | | |
|
1940–41 |
George Washington |
18-4 | | |
|
George Washington Colonials (Southern Conference) (1941–1942)
|
1941–42 |
George Washington |
11-9 | 8-3 | 2nd |
|
George Washington Colonials (Southern Conference) (1949–1966)
|
1949–50 |
George Washington |
17-8 | 12-4 | T-2nd |
|
1950–51 |
George Washington |
12-12 | 8-9 | 10th |
|
1951–52 |
George Washington |
15-9 | 12-6 | 5th |
|
1952–53 |
George Washington |
15-7 | 12-6 | 9th |
|
1953–54 |
George Washington |
23-3 | 10-0 | 1st | NCAA First Round
|
1954–55 |
George Washington |
24-6 | 8-2 | 2nd |
|
1955–56 |
George Washington |
19-7 | 10-2 | T-1st |
|
1956–57 |
George Washington |
3-21 | 3-9 | 9th |
|
1957–58 |
George Washington |
12-11 | 8-4 | 3rd |
|
1958–59 |
George Washington |
14-11 | 4-7 | 7th |
|
1959–60 |
George Washington |
15-11 | 7-5 | 5th |
|
1960–61 |
George Washington |
9-17 | 3-9 | 7th | NCAA First Round
|
1961–62 |
George Washington |
9-15 | 6-7 | 4th |
|
1962–63 |
George Washington |
8-15 | 6-6 | T-5th |
|
1963–64 |
George Washington |
11-15 | 5-7 | 6th |
|
1964–65 |
George Washington |
10-13 | 6-7 | 5th |
|
1965–66 |
George Washington |
3-18 | 3-9 | 9th |
|
George Washington: |
319–237 (.574) | 131–102 (.562) |
|
Total: | 499–338 (.596) | |
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
External links
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- No coach (1881–1883)
- No team (1884–1889)
- No coach (1890)
- No team (1891–1894)
- Unknown (1895)
- Graham Nichols (1896–1898)
- No team (1899–1901)
- Graham Nichols (1902)
- David Houston (1903)
- L. S. Rorke (1904)
- Charles A. Barnard (1905)
- A. B. Crowell (1906)
- Fred K. Nielsen (1907–1908)
- B. J. Dougherty (1909)
- Paul Magoffin (1910)
- No team (1911–1915)
- T. T. Sullivan (1916)
- No team (1917–1919)
- Bryan Morse (1920)
- William Quigley (1921–1923)
- Harry W. Crum (1924–1928)
- Jim Pixlee (1929–1937)
- William Reinhart (1938–1941)
- Johnny Baker (1942)
- No team (1943–1945)
- Skip Stahley (1946–1947)
- Bo Rowland (1948–1951)
- Bo Sherman (1952–1959)
- Bill Elias (1960)
- Jim Camp (1961–1966)
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- Unknown (1891)
- No team (1892–1893)
- J. S. Pendelton (1894)
- Unknown (1895)
- R. S. Barrett (1896)
- Unknown (1897–1902)
- Club team only (1903–1931)
- Edward K. Morris (1932–1934)
- Unknown (1935–1946)
- Vincent J. DeAngelis (1947)
- Unknown (1948–1949)
- William Reinhart (1950–1966)
- Steve Korcheck (1967–1971)
- Bill Smith (1972–1975)
- Mike Toomey (1976–1980)
- John Norris # (1980)
- Dennis Brant (1981–1982)
- Jim Goss (1983–1984)
- John Castleberry (1985–1991)
- Jay Murphy (1992–1996)
- Tom Walter (1997–2004)
- Steve Mrowka (2005–2012)
- Gregg Ritchie (2013– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.
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