Friday, March 11, 2016

Pop Gates

William Penn "Pop" Gates


Born:
August 30, 1917
Decatur, AL

Died:
December 1, 1999
New York, NY


Career
1937-38 Benjamin Franklin High School - New York (High School)
1937-38 New York Harlem Yankees (Independent)

1938-39 New York Rens (Independent)
1939-40 New York Rens (Independent)
1940-41 New York Rens (Independent)
1941-42 Washington Licthman Bears (Independent)
1941-42 Grumman Flyers (Independent)

1942-43 Washington Licthman Bears (Independent)
1942-43 New York Rens (Independent)
1942-43 Grumman Flyers (Independent)
1943-44 Washington Licthman Bears (Independent)
1943-44 New York Rens (Independent)
1943-44 Grumman Flyers (Independent)
1944-45 Washington Licthman Bears (Independent)
1944-45 Rochester (Independent)
1944-45 Long Island Grumman Hellcats (Independent)
1945-46 Washington Licthman Bears (Independent)
1945-46 New York Rens (Independent)
1945-46 Chicago Monarchs (Independent)
1945-46 Long Island Grumman Hellcats (Independent)
1946-47 Buffalo Bisons / Tri-Cities Blackhawks (NBL)
1947-48 New York Rens (Independent)
1948-49 New York Rens (Independent)
1948-49 Dayton Rens (NBL) Player / Head Coach
1949-50 Scranton Miners (ABL)
1950-51 Harlem Globetrotters (Independent)
1951-52 Harlem Globetrotters (Independent)
1951-52 New York Celtics (Independent)
1952-53 Harlem Globetrotters (Independent)
1953-54 Harlem Globetrotters (Independent)
1954-55 Harlem Globetrotters (Independent)
1955-56 Harlem Globetrotters (Independent)
1956-57 Harlem Globetrotters (Independent)

Gates grew up in Harlem, playing basketball and stickball. He attended Clark College in Georgia for one year, but did not play basketball there. He played on many professional teams that competed in the World Tournament, participating in all ten tournaments held. When he joined Buffalo / Tri-Cities in 1946-47, he was one of four black players in the league. There had been black players in the NBL in the past, but they were still under-represented. Following a nasty fight between Gates and Chick Meehan, racial tensions surfaced in the league, and by the end of the season, all four black players in the NBL (Gates, Bill Farrow, Dolly King and Willie King) were out of the league, and in the following season there were no black players. That ended in 1948-49 when the NBL re-integrated. Dayton took over for the faltering Detroit franchise, and Gates was became first black head coach in professional basketball when he took over the Dayton squad during the 1948-49 season.

Gates later became a police officer in New York City. He died of a heart failure in 1999.

Source:
A Biographical Directory of Professional Basketball Coaches by Jeff Marcus
Obituary, Cap Cod Times, December 5, 1999

Stats:
http://www.basketball-reference.com/nbl/players/g/gateswi01n.html
http://www.justsportsstats.com/basketballstatsindex.php?player_id=bakerbo01

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