Denzil E. Crum Net Worth

Denzil E. Crum Net Worth is
$1.2 Million

Denzil E. Crum Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

Denzil E. "Denny" Crum (born March 2, 1937) is a former American men's college basketball coach at the University of Louisville in Kentucky from 1971 to 2001, compiling a 675–295 record. He guided the Cardinals to two NCAA championships (1980, 1986) and six Final Fours. Honored in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame since 1994, Crum is one of the major figures in the history of sports in Kentucky and in college basketball in general.As the head coach at U of L, Crum is widely credited with pioneering the now-common strategy of scheduling tough non-conference match-ups early in the season in order to prepare his teams for March's NCAA tournament, where one defeat ends the season. Crum's prolific post-season play and calm demeanor earned him the monikers "Mr. March" and his most well-known nickname, "Cool Hand Luke."

Date Of BirthMarch 2, 1937
Place Of BirthSan Fernando, California, United States
Height6' 2" (1.88 m)
Star SignPisces
#Fact
1Gold medal, USA World University Games (1977). Pizza Hut All-Star Game Coach (1980). NABC All-Star Game Coach (1981, 1987). Silver medal, USA Pan-American Games Team (1987).
2Head coach for Los Angeles Pierce College (1964-1968) and the University of Louisville (1971-2001). NCAA championship teams (1980, 1986). NCAA Final Four teams (1972, 1975, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1986). National Coach of the Year three times (1980, 1983, 1986). Named Metro Conference Coach of the Year three times (1979, 1980, 1983). The Sporting News Coach of the Year (1986). Playboy Coach of the Year (1986). Basketball Weekly Man of the Year (1986). Basketball Weekly Coach of the Year (1980). Enshrined in UCLA Hall of Fame (1990).
3UCLA, graduate assistant coach/freshman coach (1958-1960). Los Angeles (CA) Pierce College, assistant coach (1962-1964). UCLA, assistant coach (1968-1971).
4Played for Pierce Junior College (1954-1956) and UCLA (1956-1958). All-Southern California Junior College honors. Named conference Player of the Year (1955). Earned UCLA's Irv Pohlmeyer Trophy as UCLA's best first-year player (1956-1957). Earned the Bruin Bench Award as the team's most improved player (1957-1958).
5Enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, as a coach, in 1994.
6Longtime college basketball coach.

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Four Square Miles to GloryDocumentary post-productionHimself
The Rivalry: Red v Blue2013DocumentaryHimself
ESPN 25: Who's #1?2007TV Series documentaryHimself
Quite Frankly with Stephen A. Smith2006TV SeriesHimself
ESPN SportsCentury2000-2004TV Series documentaryHimself
He Got Game1998Himself

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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