Al Skinner

Last updated
Al Skinner
Skinner night.jpg
Left to right: Al Skinner, Jack Leaman, and Julius Erving at the ceremony to retire Skinner's UMass jersey
Personal information
Born (1952-06-16) June 16, 1952 (age 71)
Mount Vernon, New York, U.S.
Listed height6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
Listed weight190 lb (86 kg)
Career information
High schoolMalverne (Malverne, New York)
College UMass (1971–1974)
NBA draft 1974: 9th round, 160th overall pick
Selected by the Boston Celtics
Playing career1974–1981
Position Shooting guard
Number30, 35
Coaching career1982–2019
Career history
As player:
1974–1977 New York/New Jersey Nets
1977–1978 Detroit Pistons
1978–1979 New Jersey Nets
19791980 Philadelphia 76ers
1980–1981 Joventut Badalona
As coach:
1982–1984 Marist (assistant)
1984–1988 Rhode Island (assistant)
1988–1997Rhode Island
1997–2010 Boston College
2013–2015 Bryant (assistant)
2015–2019 Kennesaw State
Career highlights and awards
As player:

As coach:

Stats   OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg at NBA.com
Stats   OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg at Basketball-Reference.com

Albert Lee Skinner Jr. (born June 16, 1952) is an American men's college basketball head coach and a former collegiate and professional basketball player. He was formerly the head coach of the Boston College Eagles men's basketball team and was then an assistant at Bryant University before becoming the head coach of Kennesaw State University in 2015.

Contents

Playing career

College

Skinner played at the University of Massachusetts. While on the freshman team in the 1970–71 season, the varsity team was led by Julius Erving, in what would be Erving's final season in college. (Skinner and Erving would later play together professionally.) Skinner was also a teammate of Rick Pitino.

Skinner scored 1,235 points in his three years on the varsity squad. He led the team in rebounding each of those three years, and in scoring in his junior and senior seasons. As a senior, he averaged a double-double with 18.8 points and 11.0 rebounds. That scoring average also led the Yankee Conference. He recorded the first triple-double in UMass history, with 28 points, 18 rebounds and 10 assists against St. Peter's on Dec. 28, 1973 in Springfield MA. [1]

Skinner was a three-time Yankee Conference First Team selection. He led UMass to two straight YC titles in the 1972–73 and 1973–74 seasons. As a senior in 1973–74, he was the team captain and an All-America honorable mention selection.

His jersey number 30 was retired in a ceremony at UMass on Feb. 18, 2004. [2]

Professional

Skinner was drafted by the Boston Celtics in the 1974 NBA draft (16th pick of the 9th round, or 160th overall pick). [3] He never ended up playing with Boston. Instead, he joined the New York Nets in the ABA, where he reunited with Julius Erving. The pair helped the Nets win the ABA title in 1975–76.

In his total ABA/NBA career, he spent time with the Nets (1974–77, 1978–79), Pistons (1977–78) and 76ers (1979–80). [4]

An odd footnote to Skinner's career is that he is the only player in NBA history to earn a DNP for both teams in the same game. In a game against the Philadelphia 76ers on November 8, 1978, Skinner's Nets lost in overtime. However, the result was protested by New Jersey due to a total of six technical fouls being called on Bernard King and coach Kevin Loughery by referee Richie Powers, with both men receiving three each. Per the rules, only two technical fouls could be called against any individual player or coach; as such, the protest was upheld and the game was ordered to be replayed from the point where King and Loughery were ejected. Before this could happen, the Nets and 76ers made a trade where Skinner and Eric Money were swapped for Harvey Catchings and Ralph Simpson; this mean that, when the teams returned to finish the protested game on March 23, 1979, the four players were noted in the stat sheets for both teams with Skinner not playing for the 76ers in the return contest. [5]

Coaching career

Marist and Rhode Island

After retiring from his playing career, Skinner entered the college coaching ranks. He served as an assistant coach at Marist from 1982 to 1984, and then at the University of Rhode Island from 1984 to 1988.

He was named head coach at URI beginning with the 1988–89 season, replacing Tom Penders. Skinner coached the Rams for nine seasons, during which he won the Atlantic 10 Coach of the Year award for the 1991–92 season. He is also credited for recruiting many of the players of the Rams' 1997–98 team – Cuttino Mobley and Tyson Wheeler – which reached the Elite Eight of the 1998 NCAA tournament.

During Skinner's tenure, the Rams were selected to two NITs and two NCAA Tournaments. He was inducted into URI's Athletic Hall of Fame in 2000. [6]

Boston College

On April 17, 1997, Skinner was hired to lead Boston College after Jim O'Brien left for Ohio State. Nearly all of the Eagles' prominent players followed O'Brien to Ohio State, leaving Skinner with a depleted roster. As a result, the Eagles struggled for Skinner's first three seasons in Chestnut Hill, winning only 12 games in Big East play and 32 overall.

After the Eagles struggled in Skinner's first three seasons in Chestnut Hill, he guided the 2000–01 team to the Big East regular season title with a 13–3 record—their first regular season title in 18 years. The Eagles went on to win the Big East tournament, and earned a #3 seed in the NCAA tournament. He was named the season's Coach of the Year both Nationally and in the Big East.

In the 2004–05 season, the Eagles became the first Big East team in history to start a season 20–0. The Eagles were ranked #4 in the AP Poll at the time, and even reached as high as #3 later in the season. Though they won the conference regular season title, the Eagles fell in the Quarter-Finals of the Big East tournament. As a #4 seed in the 2005 NCAA tournament, they were upset by #12 seed Milwaukee. Skinner was named Big East Coach of the Year in 2004–05.

The 2005–06 Eagles finished with a 28–8 record, which stands as the most wins in a single season in BC history. They also advanced to the Sweet 16, tying the second-deepest NCAA run for an Eagle team. During the season, Skinner also became the all-time winningest coach in BC history, surpassing O'Brien's 168 wins.

Through the 2009–10 season, Skinner led Boston College to seven NCAA Tournaments, and one NIT.

On March 30, 2010, Skinner was fired as head coach at Boston College following only his second losing season of the millennium. [7]

Almost a year to the day after his firing, Skinner took part in a phone interview with Boston Globe sportswriter Mark Blaudschun. Ending a year of self-imposed silence about what transpired at Boston College, Skinner defended his record, stating, "I ran a good program, I graduated my kids. Everybody has problems, but we addressed them and handled them in a matter that satisfied every one." Skinner continued the interview by saying that he felt that, had he been at BC during the 2010–11 season, the Eagles would have been more of a factor in the national picture. "I know the potential we had", he said. "We would have had a dog in this fight, and that we don’t bothers me." His remarks, and the fact that his interview ran on the front page of the Sports section of The Boston Globe, demonstrated the ongoing controversy regarding his firing in March 2010. [8]

Bryant

In 2013, Skinner joined the staff of his former assistant coach, Tim O'Shea, as an assistant coach at Bryant University, and his first coaching job since being let go at Boston College.

Kennesaw State

On April 26, 2015, Skinner was named the sixth head coach in school history at Kennesaw State, replacing Jimmy Lallathin. [9]

On February 21, 2019, Skinner announced his resignation from Kennesaw State effective at the end of the season. [10]

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Rhode Island Rams (Atlantic 10 Conference)(1988–1997)
1988–89 Rhode Island 13–159–95th
1989–90 Rhode Island 15–1311–74th
1990–91 Rhode Island 11–176–129th
1991–92 Rhode Island 22–109–74th NIT Quarterfinal
1992–93 Rhode Island 19–118–65th NCAA Division I Round of 32
1993–94 Rhode Island 11–167–96th
1994–95 Rhode Island 7–202–149th
1995–96 Rhode Island 20–148–84th (East) NIT Quarterfinal
1996–97 Rhode Island 20–1012–42nd (East) NCAA Division I Round of 64
Rhode Island:138–12672–76
Boston College Eagles (Big East Conference)(1997–2005)
1997–98 Boston College 15–166–126th (BE 6)
1998–99 Boston College 6–213–1513th
1999–00 Boston College 11–193–1313th
2000–01 Boston College 27–513–31st (East) NCAA Division I Round of 32
2001–02 Boston College 20–128–84th (East) NCAA Division I Round of 64
2002–03 Boston College 19–1210–61st (East) NIT First Round
2003–04 Boston College 24–1010–65th NCAA Division I Round of 32
2004–05 Boston College 25–513–31st NCAA Division I Round of 32
Boston College Eagles (Atlantic Coast Conference)(2005–2010)
2005–06 Boston College 28–811–53rd NCAA Division I Sweet 16
2006–07 Boston College 21–1210–64th NCAA Division I Round of 32
2007–08 Boston College 14–174–1211th
2008–09 Boston College 22–129–76th NCAA Division I Round of 64
2009–10 Boston College 15–166–108th
Boston College:247–165106–106
Kennesaw State Owls (ASUN Conference)(2015–2019)
2015–16 Kennesaw State 11–207–7T–5th
2016–17 Kennesaw State 14–187–7T–4th
2017–18 Kennesaw State 10–206–86th
2018–19 Kennesaw State 6–263–13T–8th
Kennesaw State:41–8423–35
Total:426–375

      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

Two teams, same game

During the 1978–79 season, Skinner was traded by the New Jersey Nets to the Philadelphia 76ers along with Eric Money for Harvey Catchings and Ralph Simpson. The trade occurred while a protest filed by the Nets against the referees of an earlier game against the 76ers, which New Jersey had actually won, where head coach Kevin Loughery was called for three technical fouls. The rules only allowed two to be called, and the league granted the Nets' appeal. Therefore, the game was considered suspended at the point of the illegal technical foul call and the game would be restarted and finished from there when the two teams met again, by which time the trade had occurred. The players involved in the trade were allowed to suit up for their new teams when the suspended game resumed, and everyone but Skinner, who had not dressed for the original game either, got to play.

Notes

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References

  1. "Lasme Has First Triple-Double Since 1973 to Lead UMass to 63-49 Win over St. Francis - University of Massachusetts Official Athletic Site". Archived from the original on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2010-03-21.
  2. "UMass Retires al Skinner's Jersey - University of Massachusetts Official Athletic Site". Archived from the original on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2010-03-21.
  3. "1974 NBA Draft on Basketballreference.com". Archived from the original on 2010-05-23. Retrieved 2010-06-18.
  4. "Check Out the 2008-09 UMass Basketball Media Guide - University of Massachusetts Official Athletic Site". Archived from the original on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2010-03-21.
  5. Powell, Shaun. "In 1978-79 season, deal like no other happened at NBA trade deadline". NBA.com.
  6. "University of Rhode Island Official Athletic Site". Archived from the original on 2010-12-31. Retrieved 2010-03-21.
  7. Blaudschun, Mark (2010-03-30). "BC fires Skinner". bostonglobe.com.
  8. Blaudschun, Mark (25 March 2011). "Skinner defends himself". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  9. Doug Roberson, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "Kennesaw State hires Skinner as basketball coach". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
  10. Wellham, David (February 21, 2019). "Kennesaw State coach Al Skinner stepping down". Atlanta Journal-Constitution . Retrieved February 21, 2019.
  11. "Al Skinner Show Invites Live Audience". Boston College. 2006-12-11. Archived from the original on 2007-01-24. Retrieved 2007-02-01.