John Wooden Popular Books

John Wooden Biography & Facts

John Robert Wooden (October 14, 1910 – June 4, 2010) was an American basketball coach and player. Nicknamed the "Wizard of Westwood", he won ten National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) national championships in a 12-year period as head coach for the UCLA Bruins, including a record seven in a row. No other team has won more than four in a row in Division I college men's or women's basketball. Within this period, his teams won an NCAA men's basketball record 88 consecutive games. Wooden won the prestigious Henry Iba Award as national coach of the year a record seven times and won the Associated Press award five times. As a 5-foot-10-inch (1.78 m) guard with the Purdue Boilermakers, Wooden was the first college basketball player to be named an All-American three times, and the 1932 Purdue team on which he played as a senior was retroactively recognized as the pre-NCAA tournament national champion by the Helms Athletic Foundation and the Premo-Porretta Power Poll. He played professionally in the National Basketball League (NBL). Wooden was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a player (1960) and as a coach (1973), the first person ever enshrined in both categories. One of the most revered coaches in the history of sports, Wooden was beloved by his former players, among them Lew Alcindor (later Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) and Bill Walton. Wooden was renowned for his short, simple inspirational messages to his players (including his "Pyramid of Success") many of which were directed at how to be a success in life as well as in basketball. Wooden's 29-year coaching career and overwhelming critical acclaim for his leadership have created a legacy not only in sports but also extending to business, personal success, and organizational leadership. Early life and playing career John Robert Wooden was born on October 14, 1910, in Hall, Indiana, the son of Roxie (1887–1959) and Joshua Wooden (1882–1950), and moved with his family to a small farm in Centerton in 1918. He had three brothers: Maurice, Daniel, and William, and two sisters, one (unnamed) who died in infancy, and another, Harriet Cordelia, who died from diphtheria at the age of two. When he was a boy, Wooden's role model was Fuzzy Vandivier of the Franklin Wonder Five, a legendary team that dominated Indiana high school basketball from 1919 to 1922. After his family moved to the town of Martinsville when he was 14, Wooden led his high school team to a state tournament title in 1927. He was a three-time All-State selection. After graduating from high school in 1928, he attended Purdue University and was coached by Ward "Piggy" Lambert. The 1932 Purdue team on which he played as a senior was retroactively recognized as the pre-NCAA tournament national champion by the Helms Athletic Foundation and the Premo-Poretta Power Poll. John Wooden was named All-Big Ten and All-Midwestern (1930–32) while at Purdue, and he was the first player ever to be named a three-time consensus All-American. In 1932, he was awarded the Big Ten Medal of Honor, recognizing one student athlete from the graduating class of each Big Ten member school, for demonstrating joint athletic and academic excellence throughout their college career. He was also selected for membership in the Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Wooden is also an honorary member of Alpha Phi Omega National Service Fraternity. Wooden was nicknamed "The Indiana Rubber Man" for his suicidal dives on the hardcourt. He graduated from Purdue in 1932 with a degree in English. After college, Wooden spent several years playing professional basketball in the NBL with the Indianapolis Kautskys, Whiting Ciesar All-Americans, and Hammond Ciesar All-Americans, while he taught and coached in the high school ranks. During one 46-game stretch, he made 134 consecutive free throws. He was named to the All-NBL First Team for the 1937–38 season. During World War II in 1942, he joined the United States Navy. He served until 1946 and left the service as a lieutenant. Coaching career High school Wooden coached two years at Dayton High School in Dayton, Kentucky. His first year at Dayton, the 1932–33 season, marked the only time he had a losing record (6–11) as a coach. After Dayton, he returned to Indiana, where he taught English, coached basketball and served as the athletic director at South Bend Central High School until entering the Armed Forces. Wooden spent two years at Dayton and nine years at Central. His high school coaching record over 11 years was 218–42. Indiana State University After World War II, Wooden coached at Indiana State Teachers College, later renamed Indiana State University, in Terre Haute, Indiana, from 1946 to 1948, succeeding his high school coach, Glenn M. Curtis. In addition to his duties as basketball coach, Wooden also coached baseball and served as athletic director, all while teaching and completing his master's degree in education. In 1947, Wooden's basketball team won the Indiana Intercollegiate Conference title and received an invitation to the National Association of Intercollegiate Basketball (NAIB) National Tournament in Kansas City. Wooden refused the invitation, citing the NAIB's policy banning black players. One of Wooden's players, Clarence Walker, was a black man from East Chicago, Indiana. That same year, Wooden's alma mater Purdue University asked him to return to campus and serve as an assistant to then-head coach Mel Taube until Taube's contract expired, when Wooden would take over the program. Citing his loyalty to Taube, Wooden declined the offer, because this would have effectively made Taube a lame-duck coach. In 1948, Wooden again led Indiana State to the conference title. The NAIB had reversed its policy banning African-American players that year, and Wooden coached his team to the NAIB National Tournament final, losing to Louisville. This was the only championship game a Wooden-coached team ever lost. That year, Walker became the first African-American to play in any post-season intercollegiate basketball tournament. UCLA In the 1948–1949 season, Wooden was hired by the University of California, Los Angeles, to be the fourth basketball coach in the school's history. He succeeded Fred Cozens, Caddy Works, and Wilbur Johns; Johns became the school's athletic director. Wooden signed a three-year contract for $6,000 in the first year. Prior to being hired at UCLA, he had been pursued for the head coaching position at the University of Minnesota, and it was his and his wife's desire to remain in the Midwest, but inclement weather in Minnesota prevented Wooden from receiving the scheduled phone offer from the Golden Gophers. Thinking that they had lost interest, Wooden instead accepted the head coaching job with the Bruins. Officials from the University of Minnesota contacted Wooden immediately after he accepted the position at UCLA, but he declined their offer because he had already given his word to UCLA. Wooden had immed.... Discover the John Wooden popular books. Find the top 100 most popular John Wooden books.

Best Seller John Wooden Books of 2024

  • The Survival of the Bark Canoe synopsis, comments

    The Survival of the Bark Canoe

    John McPhee

    In Greenville, New Hampshire, a small town in the southern part of the state, Henri Vaillancourt makes birchbark canoes in the same manner and with the same tools that the Indians ...

  • Madness synopsis, comments

    Madness

    Mark Mehler & Charles Paikert

    The annual NCAA Basketball Tournament, which has become known as “March Madness” has emerged as a major sports event, matched only by the Super Bowl and the Olympics. In Madness, M...

  • Sasha McCoy, Freelancer synopsis, comments

    Sasha McCoy, Freelancer

    John Wooden

    THE PASTMisery. That’s what Sasha McCoy knew as a child. The streets were her first mother. Her birth mother was a coked out junkie who had no idea which john fathered her daughter...

  • UCLA Basketball Encyclopedia synopsis, comments

    UCLA Basketball Encyclopedia

    Spencer Stueve & Marques Johnson

    A complete history of a century of UCLA Basketball! Over the course of one hundred years, UCLA has proven to be arguably the top college basketball program of all time, but the ris...

  • The Sons of Westwood synopsis, comments

    The Sons of Westwood

    John Matthew Smith

    For more than a decade, the UCLA dynasty defined college basketball. In twelve seasons from 1964 to 1975, John Wooden’s teams won ten national titles, including seven consecutive c...

  • Welcome Back Zachary Brick synopsis, comments

    Welcome Back Zachary Brick

    John Wooden

    Detective Alaina Rivers never pictured her life ending this way. Yes, she was tenacious, and played hard in a man's world. Yes, she was a like a dog with a bonethat she couldn't le...

  • St. Louis Cardinals synopsis, comments

    St. Louis Cardinals

    Rob Rains & Keith Schildroth

    The St. Louis Cardinals are a team steeped in history and a winning tradition. For proof look no further than the epic 2011 World Series! The secret to their success? It’s those sp...

  • State Tennessee v. John Henry Wooden synopsis, comments

    State Tennessee v. John Henry Wooden

    The Supreme Court of Texas

    The defendant was convicted of second degree burglary, aggravated rape, aggravated assault and aggravated sexual battery. He was sentenced to not less than six (6) nor more than fi...

  • For Better For Worse, For Richer For Poorer synopsis, comments

    For Better For Worse, For Richer For Poorer

    Damian Horner & Siobhan Horner

    A hilarious, true story of lifechange, no going back, 40th birthdays and midlife crisis. Follow the adventures of a husband and wife (plus two small children) as they take a barge ...

  • Back from the Dead synopsis, comments

    Back from the Dead

    Bill Walton

    “An elegiac yet exuberant new memoir” (The New York Times Book Review)Bill Walton’s New York Times bestselling memoir about his recovery from debilitating physical injury and how l...

  • John Wooden synopsis, comments

    John Wooden

    Steve Bisheff & Bill Walton

    Even today, 33 years after retiring from coaching basketball at UCLA, John Wooden remains America's coach. JOHN WOODEN: AN AMERICAN TREASURE is the definitive book on his extraordi...

  • Tales from the Indiana High School Basketball Locker Room synopsis, comments

    Tales from the Indiana High School Basketball Locker Room

    Washburn Jeff & SMITH BEN

    It’s often said that while Dr. James Naismith invented basketball in Massachusetts, the sport was raised and ultimately came of age in the high schools of Indiana, the state where ...

  • Kingdom on Fire synopsis, comments

    Kingdom on Fire

    Scott Howard-Cooper

    In the tradition of Blood in the Garden and ThreeRing Circus comes a bold narrative history of the iconic UCLA Bruins championship teams led by legendary coach John Woodenan incred...

  • Parts Are Parts synopsis, comments

    Parts Are Parts

    John Wooden

    Once you have them by the balls, their hearts and minds will follow.Cryogenic freezer units with body parts of some of Hollywood’s finest entertainers, the infamous Jet Pack Eight,...

  • Lead Any Team to Win synopsis, comments

    Lead Any Team to Win

    Jason Selk, Tom Bartow & Matthew Rudy

    "One of the ten best leadership books so far this year." Bloomberg Following up the popular peak performance book Organize Tomorrow Today, a new plan to motivate, set priorities a...

  • Baseball Dads synopsis, comments

    Baseball Dads

    Wayne Stewart

    Baseball Dads is a heartwarming collection of notable major league players’ favorite baseballrelated memories about how their relationships with their fathers shaped them, not only...

  • Quotable Wooden synopsis, comments

    Quotable Wooden

    John Reger

    John Wooden was arguably the greatest college basketball coach of all time, a teacher as well as mentor whose handiwork produced a dynasty bridging the 1960s and 1970s. Quotable Wo...

  • John Wooden synopsis, comments

    John Wooden

    Steve Bisheff

    Even today, 29 years after retiring from coaching basketball at UCLA, John Wooden remains America's Coach. John Wooden: An American Treasure is the definitive book on his extraordi...

  • John Wooden synopsis, comments

    John Wooden

    Fritz Knapp

    As part of the acclaimed Sports Virtues series, John Wooden: Discipline discusses the struggles and triumphs of John Wooden's life. As with each story in the Sports Virtues series,...

  • Tales from the Indiana High School Basketball Locker Room synopsis, comments

    Tales from the Indiana High School Basketball Locker Room

    Jeff Washburn & Ben Smith

    It is often said that while Dr. James Naismith invented basketball in Massachusetts, the sport was raised and ultimately came of age in the high schools of Indiana, the state where...

  • Beyond Success synopsis, comments

    Beyond Success

    Brian D. Biro

    Building upon the fundamental principles devised by Coach John Wooden, Brian D. Biro presents an accessible system for leadership development. With anecdotes, excercises, and Woode...

  • St. Louis Cardinals synopsis, comments

    St. Louis Cardinals

    Rob Rains & Keith Schildroth

    The St. Louis Cardinals are a team steeped in history and a winning tradition. For proof look no further than the epic 2011 World Series! The secret to their success? It’s those sp...