| Wins against Kentucky - 3 | Losses against Kentucky - 2 |
Alma Mater: Ohio State [1950]
Hometown: Zanesville, OH
Date Born: December 3, 1924
Date Died: January 6, 2002
Overall Record: 297-158 [18 Seasons]
Date | Matchup | UK Result | Score | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
3/16/1968 | Kentucky vs. Ohio State | L | 81 - 82 | NCAA Mideast Regional Finals (at Lexington, KY) |
3/17/1962 | Kentucky vs. Ohio State | L | 64 - 74 | NCAA Mideast Regional Finals (at Iowa City, IA) |
3/18/1961 | Kentucky vs. Ohio State | L | 74 - 87 | NCAA Mideast Regional Finals (at Louisville, KY) |
12/28/1959 | Ohio State at Kentucky | W | 96 - 93 | - |
12/19/1958 | Ohio State at Kentucky | W | 95 - 76 | UKIT |
Obituary - Zanesville (OH) Times Recorder (January 7, 2002)
Zanesville native, Ohio State legend Fred Taylor Dies
Coach led Buckeyes to National Title
by Rusty Miller (AP Sports Writer)
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Fred Taylor, who coached an Ohio State team that featured Jerry Lucas, John Havlicek and a seldom-used sub named Bobby Knight to the 1960 NCAA championship, died Sunday at 77.
Taylor died at Mill Run Gardens & Care Center, daughter Nikki Kelley said. He had lived in the suburban nursing facility since a brain aneurysm in 1996. A year later, he had a heart attack.
Many of his former players visited him over the years, including Knight, the longtime Indiana coach now at Texas Tech.
"Fred Taylor was an absolute giant in coach," Knight said, choking back tears. "You could have no way played for a better coach in college from whom you learned more and in now way could have had a better friend.
"What's my team? My team is an extension of his team."
Havlicek credited his Hall of Fame career with the Boston Celtics to Taylor's teaching.
"I don't think I would have gotten anywhere without his tutelage," Havlicek said. "My career was based on what I learned from Fred Taylor He shaped me tremendously."
Twice the national college coach of the year, Taylor led his alma mater to seven Big Ten titles during his 18 years as coach. In 1960, '61 and '62 he guided Ohio State to the national title game.
"Fred never lost his love for Ohio State and the many young people he had the privilege to coach and teach," said Taylor's wife of 54 years, Eileen. "One of his greatest joys in life was to see them become outstanding men."
Taylor's last public appearance came in 1998 at the final game played in St. John Arena. He received a long standing ovation as he was pushed to center court in a wheelchair.
Ohio State named a room in its new arena after Taylor. The street running to the building is Fred Taylor Drive.
Taylor's .778 winning percentage in NCAA tournament games is the eighth highest, and his teams were 14-4 in the tournament. His career record was 297-158 when he retired after the 1975-76 season - before turning 50.
Taylor starred on the 1950 Big Ten basketball championship team at Ohio State. He became the Buckeye's freshmen coach in 1954 and regular coach in 1958.
He won the NCAA title in 1960 and took teams to the championship game the next two years - a feat matched only by UCLA's John Wooden, Cincinnati's Ed Jucker and Duke's Mike Krzyzewski.
Ohio State defeated California 75-55 in San Francisco for the 1960 title, but lost the championship game the next two years to Cincinnati. The Bearcats beat Ohio State 70-65 in overtime in 1961 and 71-59 in 1962.
All five starters on the 1960 team went on to the NBA: Jerry Lucas, John Havlicek, Larry Siegfried, Mel Nowell and Joe Roberts.
"I had a love affair with those kids," Taylor said. "They weren't very sound defensively at the start of the season. As they progressed, they could play pretty thorny defense."
His 1968 team finished third in the tournament. Two other times, Ohio State teams coached by Taylor were denied a spot in the NCAA tournament because the Big Ten allowed only one team to advance. The team with the most recent tournament appearance was eliminated.
Ohio State won its last Big Ten title under Taylor in 1971 and finished second in 1972. He was voted college coach of the year in 1961 and 1962.
Taylor was the coach during a 1972 game against Minnesota in which Luke Witte was knocked to the floor and stomped by the Gophers' Corky Taylor and Ron Behagen. Other Buckeyes were chased from the floor, with objects throw at them.
Taylor and Behagen were suspended for the remainder of the season. But Taylor was bitter the Big Ten did not take stronger action and his administration did not push for stiffer penalties.
"I just didn't have as much enthusiasm after 1972," he said.
Several of his former players - Don DeVoe, Jim Cleamons and Knight - went on to become successful coaches.
Knight said Taylor's teams were "always a working model for me. They played good defense, they ran the fast-break when they had it and they were well disciplined."
Knight and Havlicek presented Taylor for induction into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1986.
Taylor later worked as an NBC commentator and was an assistant coach on the 1979 U.S. basketball team that won the gold medal at the Pan American Games. He was manager of The Golf Club in New Albany from 1979 until his illness in 1996.
In addition to his wife, Taylor is survived by daughters Janna Roewer, Krista Zimmerman, Nikki Kelley and Sharla Peponis and 12 grandchildren.
Funeral arrangements are incomplete.