RIP Red Klotz
Posted: Wed Jul 23, 2014 11:16 am
I missed this one at the time, but this man is a coaching legend who holds a sports record that I feel certain will never be beaten.
Red Klotz was the long, long, longtime coach and owner of the Washington Generals (the team occasionally was called other names as well, including, in his honor, the New Jersey Reds), the team that usually provided the opposition for the Harlem Globetrotters. Since Klotz founded the team in 1952, the Generals beat the Globetrotters six times against over 14,000 losses. Their most memorable (and apparently last) win came in 1971 in Martin, TN, on a buzzer beater by Klotz himself, who also played point guard for the Generals for many years (the fans did not appreciate Klotz's heroics). The rather short Klotz frequently became the comic foil in Globetrotter routines, often being drenched with water and having his uniform shorts pulled down. The Globetrotters officially retired his jersey in 2011, joining such players as Curly Neal, Wilt Chamberlain, and Meadowlark Lemon, whose Trotter jerseys were also retired.
Before forming the Generals, Klotz played in the NBA and won a title with the Baltimore Bullets in 1948 (he is unofficially considered to be the shortest player ever to play on an NBA championship team).
Age 93.
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/11213 ... d-klotz-93
Red Klotz was the long, long, longtime coach and owner of the Washington Generals (the team occasionally was called other names as well, including, in his honor, the New Jersey Reds), the team that usually provided the opposition for the Harlem Globetrotters. Since Klotz founded the team in 1952, the Generals beat the Globetrotters six times against over 14,000 losses. Their most memorable (and apparently last) win came in 1971 in Martin, TN, on a buzzer beater by Klotz himself, who also played point guard for the Generals for many years (the fans did not appreciate Klotz's heroics). The rather short Klotz frequently became the comic foil in Globetrotter routines, often being drenched with water and having his uniform shorts pulled down. The Globetrotters officially retired his jersey in 2011, joining such players as Curly Neal, Wilt Chamberlain, and Meadowlark Lemon, whose Trotter jerseys were also retired.
Before forming the Generals, Klotz played in the NBA and won a title with the Baltimore Bullets in 1948 (he is unofficially considered to be the shortest player ever to play on an NBA championship team).
Age 93.
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/11213 ... d-klotz-93