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Michigan Post > Blog > Sports > George Raveling, former USC basketball coach and Naismith Corridor of Famer, dies at 88
Sports

George Raveling, former USC basketball coach and Naismith Corridor of Famer, dies at 88

By Editorial Board Published September 2, 2025 8 Min Read
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George Raveling, former USC basketball coach and Naismith Corridor of Famer, dies at 88

As a younger man, he stood subsequent to Martin Luther King Jr. as he delivered his “I Have A Dream” speech. As a school basketball coach, he blazed a path for Black coaches and gamers. As an govt, he was instrumental in signing Michael Jordan to his groundbreaking endorsement cope with Nike.

George Raveling had an affect that stretched far past basketball, the game which he final coached three many years in the past at USC. He turned a revered determine within the sport, not for the variety of wins he accrued over his profession, however for his function as a mentor to many.

Raveling, 88, died Monday after a battle with most cancers, his household introduced.

“There are no words to fully capture what George meant to his family, friends, colleagues, former players, and assistants — and to the world,” the household mentioned in an announcement. “He will be profoundly missed, yet his aura, energy, divine presence, and timeless wisdom live on in all those he touched and transformed.”

Raveling coached at USC from 1986 to 1994, the primary Black coach to take the helm of the Trojans basketball program. Over his first 4 seasons on the faculty, Raveling didn’t expertise a lot success, profitable simply 38 of USC’s 116 video games over that stretch.

Raveling discovered his stride within the second half of his tenure, taking the Trojans to 2 straight NCAA tournaments and two NITs after that. However his total report at USC by no means broke .500 (115-118). Then, in Sept. 1994, Raveling was in a critical automobile accident that finally led him to retire. He suffered 9 damaged ribs and a collapsed lung and fractured his pelvis and collarbone.

After his teaching profession, Raveling joined Nike because the director of grassroots basketball, later rising to the function of director of worldwide basketball.

However his largest contribution at Nike got here out of his relationship with Jordan, whom Raveling had coached as an assistant with the U.S. nationwide staff on the 1984 Olympics. Jordan, whose cope with Nike despatched the model into a brand new stratosphere, credited Raveling for making it occur. Within the foreword for Raveling’s e book, Jordan known as him “a mentor”.

“If not for George, there would be no Air Jordan,” Jordan wrote.

Throughout the basketball world, related plaudits got here pouring in Tuesday in mild of Raveling’s loss of life.

Eric Musselman, USC’s present basketball coach, mentioned Raveling was “not only a Hall of Fame basketball mind but a tremendous person who paved the way on and off the court.”

Former Villanova coach Jay Wright wrote on social media that Raveling was “the finest human being, inspiring mentor, most loyal alum and a thoughtful loving friend.”

Raveling grew up in Washington D.C., throughout a time of heavy segregation and hardship. His household lived in a two-room house above a grocery retailer, the place they shared a toilet with 4 different households on the identical ground. His father died out of the blue when he was 9. His mom suffered a psychological well being disaster just a few years later and spent most of her remaining years in a psychiatric hospital. Raveling left residence at 14 to attend a boarding faculty.

It was at St. Michaels, a principally white boarding faculty in Pennsylvania, that Raveling first began taking part in basketball. He earned a scholarship at Villanova, the place he turned a captain and later an assistant coach.

However the faculty expertise, he later mentioned, had an much more profound affect on Raveling.

“I’ve always felt like a sprinter who’d slipped at the starting box and was 20 yards behind everybody — I’ve been in a mad dash to catch up with everybody ever since,” Raveling informed The Instances in 1994. “My mom worked two jobs when I was a kid. There were no books in our house. Nobody envisioned that I’d graduate from college. No one even encouraged me to go to college.”

He’d spend the remainder of his life, it appears, attempting to make up for misplaced time.

Raveling was standing only a few toes away from King on the Nationwide Mall in Washington D.C. in 1963 as he delivered his famed “I Have A Dream” speech. King really handed Raveling his copy of the historic speech instantly after he completed.

For many years, Raveling stored it tucked within a e book, earlier than recounting the story to a journalist. In response to Sports activities Illustrated, a collector later supplied Raveling $3 million for his copy of the speech. However he declined and donated it as a substitute to Villanova.

George Raveling was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Corridor of Fame in Springfield, Mass., in 2015.

(Charles Krupa / Related Press)

Raveling would pioneer a path that few Black coaches ever had by his profession. He was the first-ever Black coach within the historical past of the Atlantic Coast Convention when he began as an assistant in 1969. Three years later, at Washington State, he turned the primary Black coach ever to guide a Pac-8 (now Pac-12) Convention basketball staff.

He coached at Iowa from 1983-86 earlier than being employed at USC. On the time, the Trojans had a roster that included Hank Gathers and Bo Kimble, who have been coming off their freshman season. Raveling gave the gamers a agency deadline to inform him in the event that they deliberate to stay on the staff and after they didn’t he revoked their scholarships. Each went on to star at Loyola Marymount.

Raveling was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Corridor of Fame in 2015. However as a “contributor”, not as a coach. Even whereas he was teaching, Raveling appeared to grasp that his function meant greater than that.

“Winning basketball games just helps you keep your job,” he informed The Instances in 1994. “But keeping your job helps you work with these kids about the real challenges of life, which all happen away from the court. I know there’s an enormous demand around here to win. But I don’t want someone to ask me what I accomplished in my life and for me to say that I won this amount of games or took a team to some tournament.

“If all I can say is that I taught a kid how to shoot a jump shot, well, that’s not good enough. These kids come out of underprivileged, inner-city areas, and I’m just wasting my time if I haven’t put something of substance into their lives.”

TAGGED:BasketballcoachdiesfamerGeorgehallNaismithRavelingUSC
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