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词条 Mike Woodson
释义

  1. Playing career

     Early life and prep career  Indiana University 

  2. NBA

      New York Knicks    New Jersey Nets    Kansas City/Sacramento Kings    End of career  

  3. Coaching career

     Assistant coach (1996–2004)  Atlanta Hawks (2004–2010)  New York Knicks (2011–2014)  Los Angeles Clippers (2014–2018) 

  4. Personal life

  5. Head coaching record

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Infobox basketball biography
| name = Mike Woodson
| image = Mike_Woodson.jpg
| width = 200
| caption = Woodson coaching the Hawks in the 2008 NBA playoffs.
| league = NBA
| team =
| position = Assistant coach
| height_ft = 6
| height_in = 5
| weight_lb = 195
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|mf=yes|1958|3|24}}
| birth_place = Indianapolis, Indiana
| nationality = American
| high_school = Broad Ripple
(Indianapolis, Indiana)
| college = Indiana (1976–1980)
| draft_year = 1980
| draft_round = 1
| draft_pick = 12
| draft_team = New York Knicks
| career_start = 1980
| career_end = 1990
| career_position = Guard / Forward
| career_number = 44, 42, 2
| coach_start = 1996
| years1 = {{nbay|1980|start}}–{{nbay|1981|start}}
| team1 = New York Knicks
| years2 = {{nbay|1981|end}}
| team2 = New Jersey Nets
| years3 = {{nbay|1981|end}}–{{nbay|1985|end}}
| team3 = Kansas City / Sacramento Kings
| years4 = {{nbay|1986|start}}–{{nbay|1987|end}}
| team4 = Los Angeles Clippers
| years5 = {{nbay|1988|start}}–{{nbay|1990|start}}
| team5 = Houston Rockets
| years6 = {{nbay|1990|end}}
| team6 = Cleveland Cavaliers
| cyears1 = {{nbay|1996|start}}–{{nbay|1998|end}}
| cteam1 = Milwaukee Bucks (assistant)
| cyears2 = {{nbay|1999|start}}–{{nbay|2000|end}}
| cteam2 = Cleveland Cavaliers (assistant)
| cyears3 = {{nbay|2001|start}}–{{nbay|2002|end}}
| cteam3 = Philadelphia 76ers (assistant)
| cyears4 = {{nbay|2003|start}}–{{nbay|2003|end}}
| cteam4 = Detroit Pistons (assistant)
| cyears5 = {{nbay|2004|start}}–{{nbay|2009|end}}
| cteam5 = Atlanta Hawks
| cyears6 = {{nbay|2011|full=y}}
| cteam6 = New York Knicks (assistant)
| cyears7 = {{nbay|2011|end}}–{{nbay|2013|end}}
| cteam7 = New York Knicks
| cyears8 = {{nbay|2014|start}}–{{nbay|2017|end}}
| cteam8 = Los Angeles Clippers (assistant)
| highlights =As player:
  • Second-team All-American – NABC (1980)
As assistant coach:
  • NBA champion ({{nbafy|2004}})

| stats_league = NBA
| stat1label = Points
| stat1value = 10,981 (14.0 ppg)
| stat2label = Rebounds
| stat2value = 1,838 (2.3 rpg)
| stat3label = Assists
| stat3value = 1,822 (2.3 apg)
| bbr = woodsmi01
| medal_templates ={{MedalCountry | {{flagu|United States}} }}{{MedalSport|Men's basketball}}{{MedalCompetition|Pan American Games}}{{MedalGold |1979 San Juan | Team competition}}
}}

Michael Dean Woodson (born March 24, 1958) is a former American basketball player and coach who last worked as an assistant coach for the Los Angeles Clippers of the NBA. He was previously best known as a head coach for the Atlanta Hawks and New York Knicks.

Playing career

Early life and prep career

Growing up in Indiana, Woodson felt the Hoosier Hysteria that permeated the state helped prepare him for a career in basketball. He said, "Every yard had courts, little basketball hoops in the yard. If you didn't have it, you had neighbors two doors down that had it. You had parks in every area of town where you could go get a pickup game. Had rec centers where you could go play. It was a place to go learn your craft."[1] He was also able to practice with a large number of talented basketball players in the Indianapolis area, including professionals such as George McGinnis, Roger Brown, and Rick Mount. According to Woodson, playing in Indiana meant "you had to be able to pass, and shoot, and dribble, and play without the basketball, you know, the motion offense. That was Indiana basketball. And Bob Knight is the one who really instilled a lot of the fundamentals and how high school coaches taught their teams."[1]

Indiana University

Woodson elected to play college basketball for Bob Knight and the Indiana University Hoosiers. During one recruiting visit by Knight where Woodson's high school coach, his mother, and his pastor were all present, Knight got into a heated exchange because Woodson's high school coach was not convinced Woodson would fit into Indiana's system.[1] However, according to Woodson, "I wanted to go somewhere where I could play, and where I knew I could get a great education, and my family didn't have to travel far to see me. So it was perfect. And I thought I was playing for the best coach in the country at that time."[1]

In Woodson's junior year, the 1978–79 season, he was the leading scorer on the Hoosier team that won the 1979 NIT Tournament. The 1979–80 Hoosiers, led by Woodson and Isiah Thomas, won the Big Ten championship and advanced to the 1980 Sweet Sixteen. Woodson finished his career at Indiana with 2,062 points.

NBA

New York Knicks

Woodson was selected 12th overall by the New York Knicks in the 1980 NBA draft and played in the league from 1980 until 1991. He spent two years in New York, before being traded to the New Jersey Nets.

New Jersey Nets

After playing seven games with the Nets, he was again traded to the Kansas City Kings.

Kansas City/Sacramento Kings

He enjoyed great success with the Kings, leading the team with 18.2 points per contest during a 1983 playoff run. He averaged 12.2 points over his career with the Kings (moving with the team to Sacramento).

End of career

After success with that franchise, he finished his career by moving between several teams, making contributions in New Jersey, Los Angeles (with the Clippers), Houston, and Cleveland.

Coaching career

Assistant coach (1996–2004)

Woodson served three seasons as an assistant coach with the Milwaukee Bucks (1996–97 through 1998–99), Cleveland Cavaliers (1999–2000 through 2000–01), Philadelphia 76ers (2001–02 through 2002–03) and Detroit Pistons (2003–04). With the Pistons during the 2003–04 season he helped win an NBA Championship under head coach Larry Brown. Woodson was known for getting the most of defensive players, allowing teams coached by him and Brown to limit opponents to just under 42% shooting.

Atlanta Hawks (2004–2010)

For the 2004–05 season, Woodson took over as a head coach of the Atlanta Hawks, a position previously held by Terry Stotts. During his tenure with the Hawks from 2004–05 through 2009–10 he compiled a 206-286 (.419) record. In 2007–08, he led the Hawks to the playoffs for the first time in eight years. This would be the first of three consecutive playoff appearances. He led the Hawks into the Eastern Conference Semifinals in his last two seasons, compiling an overall Playoff mark of 11–18 (.379). The Hawks increased their win total in each of Woodson's six seasons in Atlanta, going from 13–69 in 2004–05 to 53–29 in 2009–10.

Woodson's 206 career wins are fourth-best in Hawks franchise history, trailing only Richie Guerin (327), Mike Fratello (324) and Hall of Famer Lenny Wilkens (310). However, after the Hawks lost their second round playoff series with the Orlando Magic 0-4 in 2010, general manager Rick Sund announced that the team would not attempt to re-sign Woodson, whose contract expired on May 17, 2010.[2]

New York Knicks (2011–2014)

On August 29, 2011, the New York Knicks announced that Mike Woodson was hired as an assistant coach under head coach Mike D'Antoni. On March 14, 2012, Woodson was named interim head coach after D'Antoni's resignation.[3] In his debut as interim head coach that night, the Knicks crushed the Portland Trailblazers by a score of 121 to 79. Woodson was named the full-time head coach of the Knicks on May 25, 2012.[4] The Knicks ended the season strong under Mike Woodson, going 18–6 for an overall season record of 36–30, though they would lose 4–1 against the Miami Heat.

In the 2012–13 season the Knicks under Woodson compiled a record of 54–28 and secured the second seed in the Eastern Conference. They reached the Eastern Conference Semifinals, where they lost to the Indiana Pacers in six games.

The Knicks struggled to a 3–13 start in the 2013–2014 season and the team never fully recovered, finishing with a record of 37–45, and missing the playoffs for the first time in four seasons.

On April 21, 2014, Woodson was fired from the New York Knicks head coaching position along with his entire coaching staff after two and a half seasons.[5]

Los Angeles Clippers (2014–2018)

On September 29, 2014, the Los Angeles Clippers officially announced that Woodson had been hired as an assistant coach.[6] He would hold that position with the Clippers throughout the next four years, missing out on the playoffs in only his last season there. Woodson would later announce his resignation from his position with the Clippers on May 15, 2018.[7][8]

On May 22, 2018, a week after his removal from the Clippers, it was rumored that the Phoenix Suns were planning to hire Woodson as an assistant coach under new head coach Igor Kokoškov.[9] However, no announcement by the Suns was made.

Personal life

Woodson and his wife Terri have two daughters, Alexis and Mariah, and both are volleyball players.[10]

Head coaching record

{{NBA coach statistics legend}}{{NBA coach statistics start}}
|-
| align="left" |Atlanta
| align="left" |{{nbay|2004}}
|82||13||69||.159|| align="center" |5th in Southeast||—||—||—||—
| align="center" |Missed Playoffs
|-
| align="left" |Atlanta
| align="left" |{{nbay|2005}}
|82||26||56||.317|| align="center" |5th in Southeast||—||—||—||—
| align="center" |Missed Playoffs
|-
| align="left" |Atlanta
| align="left" |{{nbay|2006}}
|82||30||52||.366|| align="center" |5th in Southeast||—||—||—||—
| align="center" |Missed Playoffs
|-
| align="left" |Atlanta
| align="left" |{{nbay|2007}}
|82||37||45||.451|| align="center" |3rd in Southeast||7||3||4||.429
| align="center" |Lost in First Round
|-
| align="left" |Atlanta
| align="left" |{{nbay|2008}}
|82||47||35||.580|| align="center" |2nd in Southeast||11||4||7||.364
| align="center" |Lost in Conf. Semifinals
|-
| align="left" |Atlanta
| align="left" |{{nbay|2009}}
|82||53||29||.646|| align="center" |2nd in Southeast||11||4||7||.364
| align="center" |Lost in Conf. Semifinals
|-
| align="left" |New York
| align="left" |{{nbay|2011}}
|24||18||6||.750|| align="center" |2nd in Atlantic||5||1||4||.200
| align="center" |Lost in First Round
|-
| align="left" |New York
| align="left" |{{nbay|2012}}
|82||54||28||{{Winning percentage|54|28}}|| align="center" |1st in Atlantic||12||6||6||.500
| align="center" |Lost in Conf. Semifinals
|-
| align="left" |New York
| align="left" |{{nbay|2013}}
|82||37||45||{{Winning percentage|37|45}}|| align="center" |3rd in Atlantic||—||—||—||—
| align="center" |Missed Playoffs
|-class="sortbottom"
| align="left" |Career
| ||680||315||365||{{Winning percentage|315|365}}|| ||46||18||28||{{Winning percentage|18|28}}{{s-end}}

References

1. ^{{cite news|last=Serby|first=Steve|title=Serby's Q & A with ... Mike Woodson|url=http://www.nypost.com/p/sports/knicks/serby_with_mike_woodson_0vk48bq1X0UXohxf4yBqzH/|accessdate=8 May 2012|newspaper=New York Post|date=21 March 2012}}
2. ^Bloomberg.com: "Atlanta Hawks Fire Coach Mike Woodson After NBA Playoff Sweep by Orlando" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140422232152/http://mobile.bloomberg.com/news/2010-05-14/atlanta-hawks-fire-coach-mike-woodson-after-playoff-loss-nba-com-reports |date=2014-04-22 }} Retrieved May 14, 2010
3. ^Yahoo! Sports [https://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=Ak5CK1bIEbFqtXqlO3MVu6c5nYcB?slug=aw-wojnarowski_mike_dantoni_knicks_resigns_031412 "Mike D’Antoni resigns as Knicks coach"] Retrieved March 12, 2012.
4. ^ESPN New York "Knicks extend coach Mike Woodson" Retrieved May 25, 2012.
5. ^ESPN "Knicks Fire Entire Coaching Staff" Retrieved April 21, 2014.
6. ^ESPN   Retrieved September 29, 2014.
7. ^https://twitter.com/wojespn/status/996389296608292866
8. ^http://arizonasports.com/story/1535639/suns-adding-former-knicks-coach-mike-woodson-to-igor-kokoskovs-staff/
9. ^{{cite web |url=https://basketball.realgm.com/wiretap/249956/Suns-To-Hire-Mike-Woodson-As-Assistant-Coach |title=Suns To Hire Mike Woodson As Assistant Coach |website=basketball.realgm.com |date=May 22, 2018}}
10. ^NBA Coaching Bio

External links

  • NBA.com: Mike Woodson coach file
  • [https://www.basketball-reference.com/coaches/woodsmi01c.html Basketball-Reference.com: Mike Woodson (stats as a coach)]
  • [https://www.basketball-reference.com/players/w/woodsmi01.html Basketball-Reference.com: Mike Woodson (stats as a player)]
{{navboxes|list={{Atlanta Hawks coach navbox}}{{New York Knicks coach navbox}}{{United States Men Basketball Squad 1979 Pan American Games}}{{Detroit Pistons 2003–04 NBA champions}}{{1980 NBA Draft}}
}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Woodson, Mike}}

30 : 1958 births|Living people|African-American basketball coaches|African-American basketball players|All-American college men's basketball players|Atlanta Hawks head coaches|Basketball players at the 1979 Pan American Games|Basketball players from Indiana|Cleveland Cavaliers assistant coaches|Cleveland Cavaliers players|Detroit Pistons assistant coaches|Houston Rockets players|Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball players|Kansas City Kings players|Los Angeles Clippers assistant coaches|Los Angeles Clippers players|Milwaukee Bucks assistant coaches|New Jersey Nets players|New York Knicks assistant coaches|New York Knicks draft picks|New York Knicks head coaches|New York Knicks players|Pan American Games gold medalists for the United States|Pan American Games medalists in basketball|Philadelphia 76ers assistant coaches|Sacramento Kings players|Shooting guards|Sportspeople from Indianapolis|Basketball coaches from Indiana|American men's basketball players

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