David Coulthard (basketball) explained

David Coulthard
Number:15
Position:Shooting guard
Height Ft:6
Height In:3
Nationality:Canadian
High School:Glendale Secondary School
(Hamilton, Ontario)
College:York University (1977–1982)
Draft Year:1982
Draft Round:10
Draft Pick:214
Draft Team:Detroit Pistons
Highlights:
  • CIAU All-Canadian (1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982)
  • 2× CIAU Player of the Year (1979, 1981)
  • 2× CIAU Tournament All-star (1978, 1980)
  • OUA East Player of the Year (1981, 1982)
  • 5× OUA East First Team All-star (1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982)
  • OUAA Tournament MVP (1978)
  • 2× York University Male Athlete of the Year (1980, 1982)

David Coulthard is a Canadian former basketball player. He is one of only two Canadian university ("CIAU") basketball players to be a five-time All-Canadian.[1] [2] [3] He also was awarded the CIAU MVP award twice, the first to accomplish that feat.[4] [5] [6] He was drafted by the Detroit Pistons in the 1982 NBA Draft.[7] [8] [9]

University

Coulthard played for York University for five seasons from 1977 to 1982.[10] Coulthard was named an All-Canadian in each of these five seasons, once as a Second Team All-Canadian (1978) and four times as a First Team All-Canadian (1979, 1980, 1981, 1982). Only one other athlete in Canadian university basketball history, John Carson, was a five-time All Canadian, with Carson being the only five-time First Team All-Canadian. Besides Coulthard and Carson, only four other athletes were four-time First Team All-Canadians: Karl Tilleman, Byron Tokarchuk, John Stiefelmeyer and Philip Scrubb.

Coulthard also received the Mike Moser trophy as the CIAU's Most Outstanding Player twice (1979, 1981), the first athlete to accomplish this feat. For context, only seven other athletes have since achieved this feat: Karl Tilleman (1982, 1983), Patrick Jebbison (1988, 1989), J.D. Jackson (1991, 1992), Eric Hinrichsen (1997, 1999), Osvaldo Jeanty (2006, 2007), Philip Scrubb (2012, 2013, 2014) and Kadre Gray (2018, 2019).

Coulthard was named a CIAU tournament all-star twice (1978, 1980).[11] [12] He was named the OUA East Conference MVP twice (1981, 1982), an OUA East First Team All-star five times (1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982) and MVP of the OUA tournament (1978). Coulthard was also named York's male atlhete of the year twice (1980, 1982).[13]

Under Coulthard's leadership, the York Lions also performed well. They obtained a third-place finish in the CIAU tournament twice (1978, 1979), another CIAU top 8 placement (1982) and were OUA Conference champions four times.

University statistics

Year Team GP FG FG%FT FT% Rbds RPG PtsPPG
1977-78 1277-130 59.2 20-28 71.4 25 2.1 17414.5
1978-79 1287-168 51.8 19-28 67.9 62 5.2 193 16.1
1979-80 12117-215 54.4 27-33 81.8 39 3.2 261 21.8
1980-81 965-130 50.0 13-14 92.9 49 5.4 143 15.9
1981-82 12161-280 57.5 40-55 72.7 67 5.6 362 30.2
Career 57507-923 54.9 119-158 75.3 242 4.2 1133 19.9

Professional

Coulthard was drafted by the Detroit Pistons in the 10th round of the 1982 NBA Draft as the 214th overall pick.[14] [15]

Post-career recognition

Coulthard was inducted into the York University Athletics Hall of Fame in 2001.

Personal life

Coulthard's father is Bill Coulthard, who competed in the 1952 Olympics, is credited for pioneering the modern one-handed jump shot in Ontario (as compared to the two-handed shot which was standard at the time) and has been inducted into the Canada Basketball Hall of Fame.[16] [17] Coulthard's brother, Chris, played for what was then Waterloo Lutheran and Coulthard's other brother, Bruce, played briefly in Buffalo, NY, then for Windsor University and later with the Canadian national team.

Coulthard's wife, Terri Carson Coulthard, played basketball for McMaster University. Their sons Will and Owen played basketball for Wilfrid Laurier University.[18]

Coulthard's nephew, Brett Coulthard (Chris's son) also played for Wilfrid Laurier and Coulthard's niece, Sarah Coulthard (Bruce's daughter) played for Western University.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Men's Basketball All-Canadian Teams . 7 February 2024 . U Sports . ciau_all_can.
  2. Web site: Basketball Award Winners - National First Team All-Canadian . U Sports Hoops . 11 July 2024 . u_sports_hoops_all_can_1.
  3. Web site: Basketball Award Winners - National Second Team All-Canadian . U Sports Hoops . 11 July 2024 . u_sports_hoops_all_can_2.
  4. Web site: Scanlon . Joseph . Canadian University Basketball – A Family Affair . Canada Basketball . 11 July 2024 . cb_art.
  5. Web site: Mike Moser Memorial Trophy (Player of the Year) . U Sports . 7 February 2024 . ciau_mvp.
  6. Web site: Mike Moser Memorial Trophy (CIS Outstanding Player) . U Sports Hoops . 11 July 2024 . u_sports_hoops_ciau_mvp.
  7. Web site: McGregor . Gilbert . NBA Draft: Modern day history of Canadians in the NBA Draft . Sporting News . 11 July 2024 . sporting_news.
  8. Web site: Canadians That Were Drafted By The NBA . Canada One Foundation . 11 July 2024 . can_one.
  9. Web site: Complete Draft History: 1982 . DraftExpress . 11 July 2024 . draft_express.
  10. Web site: David Coulthard . U Sports Hoops . 11 July 2024 . u_sports_hoops_profile.
  11. Web site: Men's Basketball Championship All-Stars . U Sports . 7 February 2024 . ciau_tourn.
  12. Web site: CIS Tournament All-Star Team . U Sports Hoops . 11 July 2024 . u_sports_hoops_ciau_tourn.
  13. Web site: David Coulthard . York University Athletics Hall of Fame . 11 July 2024 . york_hof.
  14. Web site: David Coulthard . Basketball Reference . 11 July 2024 . bask_ref.
  15. Web site: Canadians in NCAA/NBA – others . Naismith to Nash - The Encyclopedia of Canadian Basketball . 11 July 2024 . nais_to_nash.
  16. Web site: Tribe . Jeff . A lasting basketball legacy . Norfolk & Tillsonburg News . 11 July 2024 . nor_till_1.
  17. Web site: Tribe . Jeff . Coulthard 'class' of 2013 . Norfolk & Tillsonburg News . 11 July 2024 . nor_till_2.
  18. Web site: Duff . Bob . Duff: Windsor part of NBA history . Windsor Star News . 11 July 2024 . windsor.