Bumper Tormohlen Explained

Bumper Tormohlen
Height Ft:6
Height In:8
Weight Lb:230
Birth Date:12 May 1937
Birth Place:Holland, Indiana, U.S.
Death Place:Spring Hill, Tennessee, U.S.
High School:Holland (Holland, Indiana)
College:Tennessee (1956–1959)
Draft Year:1959
Draft Round:2
Draft Pick:11
Draft Team:Syracuse Nationals
Career Start:1961
Career End:1970
Career Number:12, 34
Career Position:Power forward / center
Coach Start:1968
Coach End:1982
Years1:1959-1961
Team1:Cleveland Pipers
Years2:1961–1963
Team2:Kansas City Steers
Years3:
Team3:St. Louis / Atlanta Hawks
Cyears1:–;
Cteam1:Atlanta Hawks (assistant)
Cteam2:Atlanta Hawks (interim)
Cyears3:–;
Cteam3:Chicago Bulls (assistant)
Highlights:
Stats League:NBA
Stat1label:Points
Stat1value:1,191 (4.4 ppg)
Stat2label:Rebounds
Stat2value:1,122 (4.1 rpg)
Stat3label:Assists
Stat3value:257 (0.9 apg)

Eugene R. "Bumper" Tormohlen (May 12, 1937 – December 27, 2018) was an American professional basketball player and coach. He was born and raised in Holland, Indiana; he attended Holland High and helped lead the Dutchmen to an IHSAA Sectional in 1953.

He was recruited to the University of Tennessee by former Purdue star Emmett Lowery. During his time in Knoxville, Bumper became a 3-year starter, set the Tennessee career rebounding record (1,113 rebounds), a 16.9 rpg rate; was twice named All-SEC and was named to Converse's All-American team and become known to scores of Vols fans as the "Chairman of the Boards."

After a splendid college career at the University of Tennessee, Tormohlen was selected with the fifth pick in the second round of the 1959 NBA draft by the Syracuse Nationals. However, his first years as a pro were spent in the NIBL with the Cleveland Pipers before being traded to the Kansas City Steers in the fledgling American Basketball League. After two seasons in that league, he moved to the NBA, joining the St. Louis Hawks) in 1962. His entire NBA playing career was with the Hawks; five seasons in St. Louis and one season in Atlanta. He retired as an NBA player in 1970, having spent the 1968-68 & 1969-70 seasons as a player-coach for the Hawks. He was a member of the 1970 Western Division champions during his final season in uniform.

He remained with the Hawks, becoming an assistant coach for four seasons. With the Hawks at 28 - 46 and mired in a ten-game losing streak, he was promoted to replace Cotton Fitzsimmons on an interim basis on March 30, 1976.[1] The next season, the team hired Hubie Brown as their full-time head coach. He spent several seasons as the Director of College Scouting for the Los Angeles Lakers.

Tormohlen died on December 27, 2018, at age 81.[2]

Career statistics

NBA

Source[3]

Regular season

YearTeamGPMPGFG%FT%RPGAPGPPG
St. Louis7 6.7 .500 .200 2.1 .7 1.7
St. Louis51 12.5 .376 .478 4.2 1.0 4.1
St. Louis71 10.9 .444 .659 4.4 .8 4.8
St. Louis63 16.4 .427 .595 5.5 1.2 6.3
St. Louis77 9.3 .374 .589 2.9 .9 3.0
Atlanta2 5.5 .500  - 2.0 .5 2.0
Career271 11.9 .411 .579 4.1 .9 4.4

Playoffs

YearTeamGPMPGFG%FT%RPGAPGPPG
1963St. Louis5 3.0 .400  - 1.0 .6 1.6
1964St. Louis6 6.5 .385 .600 2.3 .8 2.2
1966St. Louis6 6.3 .200 .750 3.0 1.0 1.2
1967St. Louis6 8.7 .524 .400 3.7 .3 4.0
1968St. Louis3 8.3 .333 .750 2.0 1.7 2.3
Career26 6.5 .400 .611 2.5 .8 2.3

Head coaching record

|- | style="text-align:left;"|Atlanta| style="text-align:left;"|| 8||1||7|||| style="text-align:center;"|5th in Central||—||—||—||—| style="text-align:center;"|Missed playoffsSource[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/i/image/pdf-idx?cc=bhl_midaily&rgn1=ic_id&q1=mdp.39015071754548-00000589&sort=sortable_page_identifier&attachment=1 "Cotton pickin'," The Associated Press (AP), Wednesday, March 31, 1976.
  2. Web site: Tennessee Basketball Great Gene Tormohlen Passes Away. https://web.archive.org/web/20190411232022/https://www.wvlt.tv/content/sports/Tennessee-Basketball-Great-Gene-Tormohlen-Passes-Away-503730041.html. 11 April 2019 . wtlv.tv. December 31, 2018. January 1, 2019.
  3. Web site: Gene Tormohlen NBA player stats. Basketball Reference. Sports Reference LLC. 12 February 2024.
  4. Web site: Gene Tormohlen: Coaching Record, Awards. Basketball Reference. Sports Reference LLC. 12 February 2024.