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Among the
coaches at the
University of
Oregon, Howard
Hobson ranks as one
of the greatest for
his pioneering style
and for leading the
1939 “Tall Firs” to
the inaugural NCAA
men’s basketball
championship.
Born in 1903,
Hobson grew up in
Portland and
graduated from
Franklin High,
having led the
school to the state
basketball title in
1921. He moved to
the University of
Oregon and played
for the Ducks for
three seasons,
graduating in 1926.
Hobson moved into
coaching almost
immediately,
starting with the
boys basketball team
at Kelso High in
Kelso, Washington.
He took over the
program at
Portland’s Benson
High in 1930 and led
the Techmen to the
state semifinals in
1931 and ’32. Benson
lost to Astoria in
the third-place game
in ’31 and to
Astoria in the
semifinals in ’32.
Following the ’32
tournament, Hobson
moved to Southern
Oregon State College
where his teams were
56-13 in three
seasons. Following
the ’34-35 season,
which ended with a
trip to the national
AAU tournament, he
accepted the head
position at Oregon.
Hobson immediately
recruited Astoria
coach John Warren as
an assistant and the
two loaded their
roster with in-state
players, including
the top players from
Astoria’s 1935 state
championship team.
In addition to
basketball, Hobson
also coached the
Oregon baseball
team. On the court,
Hobson developed a
fast-paced style in
the era of the
center jump, which
followed every
basket. When the
center jump was
eliminated in 1937,
Oregon had an
immediate edge over
its opposition.
Hobson prepared
the Ducks for a run
at the first NCAA
title by organizing
an East Coast trip
early in the 1938-39
season. The trip was
a first for teams
from the West Coast
and Oregon went 6-2.
Oregon won the
Pacific Coast
Conference title and
advanced to the West
Region tournament,
where they beat
Texas and Oklahoma
to advance to the
title game at
Northwestern
University in
Chicago. The Ducks
beat Ohio State
46-33 before a crowd
of 5,000 to win the
NCAA title.
Hobson guided the
program through 1944
before handing it
over to Warren. He
left to coach Yale
following the ’47
baseball season and
guided the school
through 1956. He
coached Yale to its
first trip to the
NCAA Tournament in
1949, the same
season he led the
team on its first
tour of the West
Coast.
Hobson
retired in 1956 with
a record of 495-291
in 27 seasons as a
basketball coach. He
was a member of the
U.S. Olympic
Basketball Committee
for 12 years and was
inducted to the
Basketball Hall of
Fame in 1965.
Hobson was
inducted to the
Oregon Sports Hall
of Fame as part of
the inaugural class
in 1980. He died in
1991.
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