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Bill Garrett (basketball) - Wikipedia William Leon Garrett (April 4, 1929 – August 7, 1974) was a basketball player, coach, educator, and a college administrator who is best known as the first African American to regularly play on a Big Ten Conference varsity basketball team
Mr. Basketball Bill Garrett, coach at Crispus Attucks High School Throughout his career, Bill Garrett continuously broke down barriers in Indiana basketball As the first African American to play for a Big Ten Conference basketball team, Garrett paved the way for others to follow in his footsteps
Bill Garrett Biography- Death, Rename, Wife, Married, Children NBA The late athlete, Bill Garrett, was a basketball player, coach, educator, and college administrator He was famous for being the first African American to play regularly on the Big Ten Conference Varsity basketball team
Bill Garrett - Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame Indiana coach of the year…after 10 years as coach and 2 as athletic director, moved to college ranks, including stint as assistant dean at IUPUI…beloved not only at Attucks, but at his hometown of Shelbyville where the gymnasium is named in his memory…died of a heart attack at age 45
Bill Garrett – The Indiana History Blog The Indiana Sportswriters and Broadcasters Association named Garrett Coach of the Year soon after the tournament Garrett coached Attucks for ten years before assuming the position of athletic director at the school in 1968 In 1974, he was inducted into the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame
BILL GARRETT - Indiana Historical Society Indiana University basketball star Bill Garrett goes in for a layup during a February 27, 1950, game with Big Ten rival Illinois IU won the game 80–66, to finish the year with a 17–5 record
Bill Garrett (1984) - Indiana University Athletics Hall of Fame . . . Basketball 1949-51 first black basketball player in the Big Ten as a 6'2" center led IU to a 19-3 record and No 2 national ranking in 1951 IU Most Valuable Player, All-Big Ten and All-American in 1951 season led IU in scoring and rebounding three years led Shelbyville to the Indiana state basketball championship in 1947 and coached In