Rick Huckabay

Richard David Huckabay, Sr (1945 – March 10, 2006) was an American basketball coach, best known for his years as head coach at Marshall University.

Huckabay was born in Chicago but later moved with his family to Louisiana where he played high school baseball and basketball. He attended Louisiana Tech University and played baseball. After graduating, he became a high school basketball coach in that state. He then became an assistant coach at the Louisiana State University under Dale Brown.

In 1983 he was hired at Marshall, where he compiled a 129–59 record, including three appearances in the NCAA Tournament and one in the NIT before resigning in 1989 amid an investigation into recruiting.[1]

Following Huckabay's resignation and a divorce, he chose not to seek another college job, but remained in the Huntington, West Virginia area where he held several high school coaching jobs in the city's Ohio suburbs, in order to remain near his two sons.

After his sons reached adulthood, he returned to Louisiana where he was coaching high school basketball when diagnosed with terminal cancer.

Huckabay was inducted posthumously into the Marshall University Athletic Hall of Fame in 2006

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Marshall Thundering Herd (Southern Conference) (1983–1989)
1983–84 Marshall 25–613–31stNCAA Division I First Round
1984–85 Marshall 21–1312–42ndNCAA Division I First Round
1985–86 Marshall 19–1110–6T–2nd
1986–87 Marshall 25–6*15–11stNCAA Division I First Round
1987–88 Marshall 24–814–21stNIT First Round
1988–89 Marshall 15–156–86th
Marshall: 129–59 (.686)70–24 (.745)
Total:129–59 (.686)

      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

* The NCAA vacated Marshall's loss in the NCAA Tournament.[2]

gollark: Do notation is just a nice way to write `>>=`s and lambdas.
gollark: A useful combinator:```haskells :: t1 -> (((t2 -> t2 -> t3 -> t4) -> t2 -> (t2 -> (t2 -> t2 -> t3 -> t4) -> t3) -> t4) -> t1 -> (IO a -> a) -> t5) -> t5s x k = k z x unsafePerformIO```
gollark: servant-generic:```This package has been merged into servant 0.14.1, please use that instead if available.```
gollark: *magic*
gollark: I think that it'd basically create the following lists:0 1 1 21 1 2 3 (shifted ahead by one)and then sum them to1 2 3 5

References

  1. "Rick Huckabay". Sports Reference. Retrieved October 1, 2010.
  2. Marshall University Infractions Report . ncaa.org. March 11, 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.