Personal information | |
---|---|
Born | Penn Hills, Pennsylvania, U.S. | May 12, 1951
Listed height | 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) |
Listed weight | 185 lb (84 kg) |
Career information | |
High school | Penn Hills (Penn Hills, Pennsylvania) |
College | North Carolina (1970–1973) |
NBA draft | 1973: 4th round, 66th overall pick |
Selected by the New York Knicks | |
Playing career | 1973–1978 |
Position | Point guard |
Number | 22 |
Coaching career | 1978–2016 |
Career history | |
As player: | |
1973–1978 | San Antonio Spurs |
As coach: | |
1978–1980 | San Antonio Spurs (assistant) |
1980–1983 | Montana Golden Nuggets |
1984–1986 | Cleveland Cavaliers |
1986–1988 | Golden State Warriors |
1988–1989 | Albany Patroons |
1989–1990 | Real Madrid |
1990–1991 | Albany Patroons |
1991–1992 | Real Madrid |
1992–1998 | Seattle SuperSonics |
1998–2003 | Milwaukee Bucks |
2005–2013 | Denver Nuggets |
2015–2016 | Sacramento Kings |
Career highlights and awards | |
As player:
As coach:
| |
Career ABA/NBA playing statistics | |
Points | 1,703 (6.5 ppg) |
Rebounds | 369 (1.4 rpg) |
Assists | 795 (3.0 apg) |
Stats at NBA.com | |
Stats at Basketball Reference | |
Career coaching record | |
NBA | 1175–824 (.588) |
Basketball Hall of Fame as coach |
George Matthew Karl (born May 12, 1951) is an American former professional basketball coach and player. After spending five years as a player for the San Antonio Spurs, he became an assistant with the team before being appointed as a head coach in 1980 with the Montana Golden Nuggets of the Continental Basketball Association (CBA). Three years later, Karl became one of the youngest National Basketball Association (NBA) head coaches in history when he was named coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers at age 33. By the time his coaching career came to an end in 2016, Karl coached nine different teams in three different leagues (CBA, NBA, Liga ACB), which included being named Coach of the Year three combined times (twice in the CBA and once in the NBA) with one championship roster in the FIBA Saporta Cup. He is one of nine coaches in NBA history to have won 1,000 NBA games (which included twelve seasons with fifty or more wins) and was named NBA Coach of the Year for the 2012–13 season. While he never won an NBA championship, Karl made the postseason 22 times with five different teams, which included a trip to the 1996 NBA Finals with the Seattle SuperSonics.
Karl was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2022.[1]