This topic contains 6 replies, has 6 voices, and was last updated by Platypus 13 years, 10 months ago.
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- Posted on: Fri, 06/04/2010 - 4:25pm #16653
Johnny KilroyParticipantLOS ANGELES — Former UCLA basketball coach and Hall of Famer John Wooden died of natural causes on Friday at age 99, the school announced.
Little had been released regarding his condition.
Earlier in the day, former UCLA and Los Angeles Lakers star Jamaal Wilkes told The Associated Press that he visited Wooden in his hospital room twice this week and they chatted briefly.
Wilkes said Wooden recognized him and that the coach’s mind remains “sharp as a tack,” although he said the 99-year-old Wooden’s body is “very, very frail.”
During his second visit on Wednesday night, Wilkes asked Wooden if he recognized him.
“His glasses fogged up and he had to clean his glasses,” Wilkes said. “He looked at me and said, ‘I remember you, now go sit down.”
Wilkes teamed with Bill Walton to help UCLA win NCAA titles in 1972 and ’73. He was part of UCLA’s record 88-game winning streak under Wooden.
Besides his grown son and daughter and other family members, Wilkes said Wooden has had several visitors since being admitted to Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center on May 26, including Walton.
UCLA officials said Friday afternoon that Wooden was resting comfortably and was surrounded by family. The university’s statement said the family wanted to thank Wooden’s fans for their thoughts and prayers.
A few hundred students gathered around the Bruin Bear statue near Pauley Pavilion on the UCLA campus Friday, performing the university’s eight-clap chant and shouting Wooden’s name. He frequently attended men’s basketball games until a couple years ago.
The university had said that the former coaching great was being treated for dehydration.
“I got the sense that it’s an overall physical decline,” Wilkes said while attending an event for an NBA charity.
“His mind and his spirit is very lucid and sharp. He was sharp as a tack, still got the sense of humor. People don’t realize how funny he is, but his body is very, very weak, very frail.”
Wilkes said he recognized what he called “that little glint” in Wooden’s pale blue eyes. He was in the room with Wooden’s son, James, when Wooden asked to be shaved.
“His son made the comment that when he got shaved he was getting ready to see Nellie,” Wilkes said, referring to Wooden’s late wife who died of cancer in 1975.
Like many of Wooden’s players, Wilkes, now 57, has stayed in regular contact with his former coach through the years. He said they rarely discussed basketball and mostly talked about their lives.
“He’s such a tough survivor and you want to keep wishing and hoping that he’s going to live forever, but we all know he’s not,” Wilkes had said. “The realization that this may actually be it hasn’t really hit me yet. I’m so overwhelmed with what’s happening.”
Wilkes, however, said Wooden seemed at peace with himself, and that the coach’s pastor was another visitor.
“He’s OK with it. It’s the rest of us that have to,” Wilkes said, his voice trailing off. “It’s hard.”
Wooden led the Bruins to 10 NCAA championships — at one time winning seven in a row — during a 27-year run that ended with his team cutting down the nets one last time in 1975.
The Bruins won 88 consecutive games from 1971-74 and 38 consecutive NCAA tournament games from 1964-74, both records.
0 - Posted on: Fri, 06/04/2010 - 4:37pm #326909
the I in winParticipantHe lived a great life, he had lot of really close friends. You hate to see him go but he lived a very long time, longer than most of us will.
0 - Posted on: Fri, 06/04/2010 - 5:25pm #326938
mds0549ParticipantMaybe the greatest coach ever in any sport. Many people don’t know that he was scheduled to go to Minnesota to take the Gophers head coach job but a snowstorm delayed him and during the delay he got the UCLA job. That snowstorm changed college sports history.
0 - Posted on: Fri, 06/04/2010 - 5:26pm #326939
Tongue-Out-Like-23ParticipantNot only the greatest coach ever… But he was also one of the great players of his time… and he was one of the greatest men of the last centuries..
0 - Posted on: Fri, 06/04/2010 - 5:33pm #326942
PlatypusParticipantReal classy guy that will be missed. is the definition for what a coach should be, Helped so many great players reach there potential
0 - Posted on: Fri, 06/04/2010 - 5:41pm #326948
Bryant24ParticipantNot just the best basketball coach in basketball history best coach of any sport of all time
R.I.P John Wooden the Wizard of Westwood0 - Posted on: Sat, 06/05/2010 - 2:08am #327056
PlatypusParticipantMost people dont know this but he never scouted other teams, he thought that if his team played there game that the other team didn’t matter
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