Bob Donewald Jr.

Bob Donewald Jr. (born c. 1968) is an American basketball coach.[1] He was an NBA assistant with the New Orleans Hornets and Cleveland Cavaliers from 2001 to 2004, and an ABA (American Basketball Association) head coach from 2004-2005. He is the son of Bob Donewald Sr., a retired American college basketball head coach.[2]

Bob Donewald Jr.
Personal information
Bornc. 1968 (age 5152)
NationalityAmerican
Career information
CollegeWestern Michigan
PositionHead coach
Coaching career1994–present
Career history
As coach:
1994–1996Morehead State (assistant)
1996–1998Leicester Riders
1998–1999Derby Storm
1999–2001Greater London Leopards
2001–2002Charlotte Hornets (assistant)
2002–2003New Orleans Hornets (assistant)
2003–2004Cleveland Cavaliers (assistant)
2005–2006Objetivo São Carlos
2006–2007Ukrainian National Team
2007–2008UAB (assistant)
2009–2011Shanghai Sharks
2010–2012Chinese National Team
2011Xinjiang Flying Tigers
2014–2016Iowa Energy
2016–2017Jilin Northeast Tigers
2019Lokomotiv Kuban

Early career

Prior to his time with the Hornets, Donewald spent five years as a head coach and general manager in the British Basketball League (BBL), leading his teams to the finals of the championship series on three occasions. He started his time in England as the head coach and general manager of the Leicester Riders (1996–98). Previously known as perennial losers, Donewald was able to take the franchise to finals of the National Cup in 1998. The next season (1998–99), he became head coach of the Derby Storm and coached the team to the finals of the uni-ball Trophy. After taking the reins for the Greater London Leopards in 1999–2000, Donewald led the Leopards to a 24–10 record and the finals of the National Cup during the 2000-01 season.

Donewald began his coaching career as a student assistant coach at Western Michigan from 1989-93. He also has experience as an assistant coach at Morehead State from 1994-96.

Coach of Chinese National Team

In 2009, after Yao Ming took control of the Shanghai Sharks, a Chinese Basketball Association team, he chose Donewald as the coach of the team. And in the following 2009–10 season, the team ranked 4th in the league and entered Playoffs for the first time since 2006-07 season. At last, they lost to Guangdong Southern Tigers in the Semifinal. But Donewald was great appraised in China for his coaching.

As a result of the good performance of Shanghai Sharks in this season, Donewald was chosen as the coach of Chinese National Basketball Team to replace his predecessor Guo Shiqiang on April 30, 2010, and thus left Shanghai Sharks. He became the third coach of the team who is not a Chinese after Del Harris and Jonas Kazlauskas.

After he became the coach of the Chinese National Team, China got expected results in the world, and continued its dominance in Asia. The Chinese National Basketball Team ranked 14th in the 2010 FIBA World Championship,[3] and won the championship in the 2010 Asian Games as well as the 2011 FIBA Asia Championship.

On June 29, 2011, Donewald became the coach of Xinjiang Flying Tigers, another Chinese Basketball Association team, besides his role in the Chinese National Team. But he was fired on December 19 that year because of his conflict with the manager of the team.

gollark: Possibly crashing insecure cars could work.
gollark: r/wosh
gollark: thatisthejoke.jpeg
gollark: The S in IoT stands for security.
gollark: It's cheap mass-manufactured consumer goods which are mostly horrendously insecure.

References

  1. Iowa Energy announce coaching update
  2. http://www.nba.com/grizzlies/news/iowa-energy-new-head-coach
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-09-08. Retrieved 2015-09-03.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.