Jerry Tarkanian Net Worth, Biography, Age, Weight, Height

Jerry Tarkanian Net Worth

Jerry Tarkanian makes how much a year? For this question we spent 21 hours on research (Wikipedia, Youtube, we read books in libraries, etc) to review the post.

The main source of income: Actors
Total Net Worth at the moment 2024 year – is about $58,8 Million.

Youtube

Biography

Jerry Tarkanian information Birth date: August 8, 1930 Death date: 2015-02-11 Birth place: Euclid, Ohio, USA Profession:Actor

Height, Weight:

How tall is Jerry Tarkanian – 1,88m.
How much weight is Jerry Tarkanian – 82kg

Pictures

Jerry Tarkanian Net Worth
Jerry Tarkanian Net Worth
Jerry Tarkanian Net Worth
Jerry Tarkanian Net Worth

Wiki

Biography,Early lifeTarkanian in his senior season (1954–55) playing on the Fresno State mens basketball team.Tarkanian, the son of Armenian immigrants, was born in Euclid, Ohio in 1930. His mother, Rose, was a refugee of the Armenian Genocide during World War I. Tarkanians maternal grandfather, Mickael, was an Ottoman government official who was beheaded by Turkish authorities. Mickaels son was also decapitated by the same authorities. Fearing for their lives, Rose and the rest of her siblings eventually escaped the Ottoman Empire and settled in Lebanon where Rose met George Tarkanian, an escapee of the Armenian Genocide. The couple married and moved to the United States. However, Jerrys father died when he was 13. By this time, Jerry showed his interest in sports, but his stepfather disapproved of his involvement with sports, while his mother encouraged him to pursue it. He initially attended Pasadena City College in California and played basketball at the college in the 1950–51 season. Tarkanian then transferred to Fresno State College, where he played basketball for the Bulldogs in the 1954–55 season as a backup guard. After graduating from Fresno State College in 1955, he earned a masters degree in educational management from the University of Redlands.[11]Early coaching careerHe began his coaching career with five years of California high school basketball, starting with San Joaquin Memorial High School in Fresno.[11][12] He then moved to Antelope Valley High School in Lancaster (1958) and Redlands High School (1959–1960).[11] He then moved on to the junior college level at Riverside City College from 1961 to 1966 and Pasadena City College from 1966 to 1968. He coached teams to a record four straight California junior college championships — three at Riverside, one at Pasadena.[11][13]Long Beach State and UNLVTarkanian moved to Division I basketball as coach at Long Beach State from 1968 to 1973, where he was among the first coaches to shun an unwritten rule that at least three of the five starting players had to be white. He also pioneered the use of junior college athletes.[13] University of Nevada, Reno history professor Richard O. Davies wrote in his book, The Maverick Spirit, that Tarkanians recruiting practice drew complaints that he was running a renegade program built upon less than stellar students.[14] When the 49ers made the 1970 NCAA Mens Division I Basketball Tournament, Tarkanian boasted that his team consisted almost entirely of junior college transfers. Long Beach State reached four straight NCAA tournaments, and established itself as a regional power.[13] Though the schools were separated by just 30 miles (48 km),[15] John Wooden of UCLA refused to schedule a regular season game with them.[16] At the peak of Woodens dynasty, the schools met in the 1971 West Regional final. Long Beach led at the half by 12, but UCLA prevailed 57–55 en route to their fifth straight national championship.[13][15] Wary of continuing in UCLAs shadow, Tarkanian accepted an offer to coach at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas in 1973.Prior to his arrival, UNLV was dubbed “Tumbleweed Tech” by locals, and their basketball program had no winning track record and minimal fan support. However, he achieved much success there, coaching the Runnin Rebels from 1973 to 1992. In fact, it was Tarkanians idea to call the team the Runnin Rebels. His teams were known for an up-tempo style, stifling defense, and going on long runs that turned close games into blowouts. He took his UNLV teams to four Final Fours. In the first, in 1977 (only seven years after the program joined Division I), the Rebels lost to North Carolina in the semifinals. The Rebels averaged 109 points per game that season in an era before the shot clock or the three-point shot. However, Carolina controlled the tempo with coach Dean Smiths famous four corners offense.[13] Ten years later in the Final Four, UNLV was defeated by Bob Knights Indiana Hoosiers, the eventual national champion. Finally, in the 1990 NCAA Mens Division I Basketball Tournament Tarkanian led UNLV to the championship, prevailing 103–73 against Duke while setting a record for margin of victory in a championship game. That season the team was heavily monitored by the NCAA, which visited their campus 11 times, and suspended 10 players at various times.[13] The 1990–91 team appeared poised to repeat as champions after running their record to 34–0 while winning by an average margin of 27.3 points. However, a rematch against Duke in the national semifinals saw the Blue Devils prevail 79–77 after the Rebels Anderson Hunt missed a 22-foot shot at the buzzer.[13]Tarkanian had been under more or less constant scrutiny from the NCAA for most of his career, but managed to weather the pressure until he signed Lloyd Daniels, a talented, but troubled shooting guard from New York City. In 1987—just months before he was due to come to campus—Daniels was caught buying crack cocaine from an undercover policeman. While Tarkanian had been known for taking in troubled players, this was too much even for him, and he announced shortly afterward that Daniels would never play for UNLV. Not long after Daniels arrest, it emerged hed been led to UNLV by Richard Perry, a prominent gambler who had been convicted twice for sports bribery.[17]Perrys involvement triggered yet another NCAA investigation, which resulted in the NCAA initially banning the Rebels from the 1991 NCAA Tournament, only months after they won the 1990 title. However, the NCAA later agreed to a compromise which deferred the sanctions until 1992, allowing UNLV to defend its title. Months after UNLVs 1991 semifinal loss to Duke, the Las Vegas Review-Journal published a picture showing three of Tarkanians players in a hot tub with Perry. The picture had been taken in 1989, only months after Tarkanian claimed that he had warned his players to stay away from Perry. On June 7, 1991, Tarkanian announce he would resign after coaching one more season. Already banned from any postseason play, Tarkanian guided the 1991–92 team to a 26–2 season. He won his final game 65–53 over Utah State.[14]NBA and return to collegeTarkanian was offered the Los Angeles Lakers head coaching job in 1977, but declined, continuing to coach college basketball. Tarkanian was signed to coach the San Antonio Spurs in 1992, not long after leaving UNLV. However, he disagreed with Spurs owner Red McCombs over the need for experience at point guard. The Spurs had lost Rod Strickland to free agency in the offseason (he signed with Portland), leaving the Spurs without a point guard with significant NBA experience. The Spurs had signed Vinny Del Negro, a combo-guard from the Italian League, to replace Strickland. They also signed NBA journeyman Avery Johnson, formerly of the Houston Rockets, to a one-year contract. Tarkanian felt that the Spurs wouldnt be competitive without an experienced point guard, but McCombs disagreed. As a result, Tarkanian was fired after only 20 games with a 9–11 record. He received a $1.3 million settlement, which he used to fund a lawsuit against the NCAA.[14]Fresno StateHe returned to college coaching at alma mater, California State University, Fresno, from 1995–2002 and led them to six consecutive 20-win seasons. Tarkanian led the Bulldogs to five NIT tournaments and two NCAA appearances. He retired from coaching in 2002 with 778 career Division I wins. Following his retirement, Fresno State was placed on probation by the NCAA for violations committed by its mens basketball team under Tarkanians watch. The Fresno Bee reported in 2003 that some Fresno State basketball players had coursework completed for them during the years 1999 to 2001.[18]Tarkanian and the NCAATarkanian spent most of his career as a Division I coach in a battle with the NCAA. While at Long Beach, he wrote a newspaper column charging that the NCAA ignored improprieties at powerful schools while it pursued smaller, more defensless institutions.[19] After he left Long Beach State, its basketball program was slapped with probation for recruiting violations which occurred under his watch.Just months before the 1976–1977 season, the NCAA placed UNLV on two years probation for questionable practices. Although the alleged violations dated back to 1971—before Tarkanian became coach—the NCAA pressured UNLV into suspending Tarkanian as coach for two years. Tarkanian sued, claiming the suspension violated his right to due process. In October 1977, a Nevada judge issued an injunction that reinstated Tarkanian as coach.[14] The case eventually made it all the way to the Supreme Court of the United States, which ruled in 1988 that the NCAA had the right to discipline its member schools, reversing the 1977 injunction.[20] [21]In the decade between the original suspension and the Supreme Court ruling, it was revealed that the NCAAs enforcement process was stacked heavily in the NCAAs favor — so heavily, in fact, that it created a perception that there was no due process. The enforcement staff was allowed to build cases on hearsay, and shared few of their findings with the targeted school. The resulting negative publicity led the NCAA to institute a clearer separation between the enforcement staff and the infractions committee, as well as a system for appeals. Also, hearsay evidence was no longer admissible in infractions cases.[22]After being fired from the Spurs, Tarkanian sued the NCAA, claiming it had harassed him for over two decades. The harassment, Tarkanian claimed, started when he wrote a newspaper column alleging that the NCAA was more willing to punish less-prominent schools than big-name schools. Although the NCAA did not admit harassing Tarkanian, it settled out of court in 1998, paying him $2.5 million.[14]

Summary

Wikipedia Source: Jerry Tarkanian

Leave a Comment