What was his major issue with UK? He happened just slightly ahead of my following. I remember his quote "If two people fell in a hole, one would be a UK fan".
Jock Sutherland (basketball)
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Charles "Jock" Sutherland (born March 14, 1928) is a
basketball coach from
Lexington, Kentucky, who was inducted into the Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame.
[1]
Biography[edit]
Jock Sutherland was born and grew up in the shadows of the
University of Kentucky's Alumni Gym and
Memorial Coliseum. From an early age basketball was his first love. As a youngster he sneaked into the gym to watch Kentucky basketball practices under the legendary coach
Adolph Rupp. He played high school basketball at Lafayette (Lexington, KY) for Coach Ralph Carlisle, and as a senior was the team's leading scorer. With Carlisle's encouragement he developed an ambition to become a high school coach.
During Sutherland's high school coaching career he took teams from three different schools to
Kentucky's state high school basketball tournament (the Sweet Sixteen):
Gallatin County in 1959,
Harrison County in 1966, and Lexington Lafayette in 1979.
After his Lafayette team won the state tournament in 1979 Sutherland retired from coaching, and for twenty years worked as a color man and analyst for University of Louisville basketball broadcasts on WHAS Radio in Louisville. He remains a longtime Cardinal favorite in retirement.
As an Alabama assistant coach under
C. M. Newton, he was a groundbreaker in the integration of college sports in 1969 when he recruited
Wendell Hudson, the first black to participate in varsity sports for the
University of Alabama.
In 1958
Reader's Digest designated Sutherland "The Quickest Thinking Coach in America."
In 1999 Sutherland was inducted into the Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame.