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Moe Iba

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Name
  
Moe Iba


Role
  
Basketball Coach

Moe Iba ecximagesamazoncomimagesI416ts4sgLjpg

Education
  
Oklahoma State University–Stillwater

Similar People
  
Evan Jones, James Gartner, Josh Pastner

Moe iba goes crazy at barnhill arena


Henry "Moe" Iba Jr. (born May 31, 1939) is an American basketball coach. He coached the University of Memphis from 1966 to 1970, the University of Nebraska–Lincoln from 1980 to 1986, and Texas Christian University from 1987 to 1994.

Contents

Iba graduated from Oklahoma State University in 1962. His father was Henry Iba, the legendary Oklahoma State coach who developed the motion offense.

Texas Western

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During the 1965-66 basketball season, Iba was an assistant coach for Don Haskins at Texas Western. Texas Western won the NCAA Men's Basketball Championship.

This achievement was depicted in the film Glory Road and Iba was portrayed on screen by Evan Jones.

Career coaching

After college he got his first job as the freshman coach at Texas Western under Don Haskins. He was at Texas Western until 1966. After the '66 season, Moe was hired to coach Memphis State University replacing Dean Ehlers. A great recruiter, he recruited Larry Finch and Ronnie Robinson, two local Memphis legends to come to Memphis State. He was, however, let go after a 6-20 season in '69-'70 and never got to coach them on a collegiate level, but left his mark on the city when Gene Bartow took those recruits and added a few others and went to the NCAA finals in 1973. After leaving Memphis State, Moe got a position as an assistant coach at Nebraska and stayed in that position for 8 years. He was named acting head coach when Joe Cipriano became ill with cancer. He replaced Cipriano in 1980 and was head coach at Nebraska until 1986. Iba's teams there achieved 3 NITs and one NCAA bid, the only NCAA appearance in the school's history to that date. He was an assistant at Drake in 1986-1987 and was then hired at the head coach at TCU where he stayed until 1994.

Career record

  • Texas Christian (1987–1994) 96-108 (.471)
  • Nebraska (1980–1986) 106-71 (.599)
  • Memphis State (1966–1970) 37-65 (.363)
  • Overall: 3 teams, 17 seasons, 239-244 (.495)

    References

    Moe Iba Wikipedia