Johnny Neumann Explained

Johnny Neumann
Height Ft:6
Height In:6
Weight Lb:200
Birth Date:11 September 1951
Birth Place:Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.
Death Place:Oxford, Mississippi, U.S.
High School:Overton (Memphis, Tennessee)
College:Ole Miss (1970–1971)
Draft Year:1973
Draft Round:6
Draft Pick:98
Draft Team:Chicago Bulls
Career Start:1971
Career End:1982
Career Number:14, 22, 44, 4, 31, 21
Career Position:Small forward / shooting guard
Coach Start:1982
Coach End:2017
Years1:19711974
Team1:Memphis Pros / Tams
Years2:1974
Team2:Utah Stars
Years3:1974
Team3:Virginia Squires
Years4:1974–1975
Team4:Indiana Pacers
Years5:1975
Team5:Virginia Squires
Years6:1975–1976
Team6:Kentucky Colonels
Team7:Buffalo Braves
Team8:Los Angeles Lakers
Team9:Indiana Pacers
Years10:1978–1979
Team10:Gabetti Cantù
Years11:1980–1982
Team11:Saturn Köln
Cyears1:1982–1984
Cteam1:Maine Lumberjacks / Bay State Bombardiers
Cyears2:1986–1987
Cteam2:RBC Pepinster
Cyears3:1987–1989
Cteam3:PAOK Thessaloniki
Cyears4:1989–1990
Cteam4:Pagrati Athens
Cyears5:1991–1992
Cteam5:Louisville Shooters
Cyears6:1992–1993
Cteam6:Iraklis Thessaloniki
Cyears7:1993–1994
Cteam7:Pezoporikos
Cyears8:1994–1995
Cteam8:AEK Larnaca
Cyears9:1997–1998
Cteam9:APOEL
Cyears10:1998
Cteam10:Hapoel Tel Aviv
Cyears11:1999–2000
Cteam11:Youngstown Hawks
Cyears12:2000
Cteam12:Kazma Sport Club
Cyears13:2001–2002
Cteam13:Lebanon
Cyears14:2003–2004
Cteam14:Al-Hilal Riyadh
Cyears15:2005
Cteam15:Al Ittihad
Cyears16:2006–2007
Cteam16:Zhejiang Lions
Cyears17:2007–2009
Cteam17:Rizing Fukuoka
Cyears18:2009–2010
Cteam18:Takamatsu Five Arrows
Cyears19:2010–2012
Cteam19:Romania
Cyears20:2016–2017
Cteam20:South Panola HS (assistant)
Highlights:As player:

As head coach:

Stats League:ABA and NBA
Stat1label:Points
Stat1value:6,022 (13.2 ppg)
Stat2label:Rebounds
Stat2value:1,234 (2.7 rpg)
Stat3label:Assists
Stat3value:1,345 (3.0 apg)

Carl John Neumann (September 11, 1951 – April 23, 2019), nicknamed "Johnny Reb", was an American professional basketball player and coach. At 6'6" and 200 pounds, he played at the shooting guard and small forward positions.

High school and college

Following a standout career at Overton High School in Memphis, Neumann took his game to the University of Mississippi, where he played from 1969 to 1971. During his sophomore season, he drew comparisons to Pete Maravich, after averaging an NCAA-high of 40.1 points per game.[1] His strongest performances included a 63-point game against Louisiana State University and a 60-point game against Baylor University.[2] Neumann earned All-America and SEC Player of the Year honors at the end of the season.

Johnny Neumann returned to Ole Miss and completed his undergraduate degree, in 2016.[3] After earning his degree, he returned to coaching. He was named to the 2016 SEC Legends class. Neumann continues to hold the Ole Miss single-season scoring record of 923 points.

Professional career

Memphis Pros and Memphis Tams

After his sophomore season at Ole Miss, Neumann became the first player in basketball history to sign a hardship clause[4] as he signed a five-year, $2 million contract with the Memphis Pros of the American Basketball Association.[5] Neumann was later drafted by the Chicago Bulls, in the 6th round of the 1973 NBA draft.[6]

Neumann's professional career started strong, with averages of 18.3 points per game and 19.6 points per game in his first two full seasons with Memphis. He was named to the ABA All-Rookie Team in 1972.[7] However, Neumann gradually fell out of favor with the team's head coach and management, who thought he was not passing the ball enough, and he was traded by the Memphis Tams to the Utah Stars, in exchange for Glen Combs, Ronnie Robinson, Mike Jackson and cash, in January 1974.

Utah Stars

In Neumann's first year with the Utah Stars, his team won the ABA Western Division and defeated the San Diego Conquistadors, in the Western Division Semifinals and the Indiana Pacers in the Western Division Finals, to make it to the ABA Championship series, where they lost the 1974 ABA Finals to the New York Nets. Despite the team's success, Neumann struggled to regain his scoring average after being traded to Utah. He averaged just 10.1 points per game, in 44 games played with the Stars.

Virginia Squires and Indiana Pacers

In August 1974 the Stars traded Neumann and a draft choice, to the Virginia Squires, in exchange for Jim Eakins and Larry Miller. After just four games with the Squires, the Indiana Pacers bought Neumann's rights from the Squires, in November 1974. He averaged 8.3 points per game with Indiana.[6] Neumann finished out the 1974–75 season as a Pacer, and in March 1975, the Virginia Squires bought Neumann's rights back from the Pacers.[8]

Neumann averaged 16.6 points per game for Virginia during the 1975–76 season, but in January 1976, he was traded by the Squires.[6]

Kentucky Colonels

In January 1976, Neumann was traded along with Jan van Breda Kolff, to the Kentucky Colonels, in exchange for Marv Roberts. He averaged 10.1 points per game as the Colonels defeated the Indiana Pacers in the ABA Quarterfinals and lost a 4–3 seven-game series to the Denver Nuggets, in the 1976 ABA Semifinals.

NBA

After the ABA–NBA merger took place in June 1976, Neumann ended up with the Buffalo Braves. From 1976 to 1978, Neumann played 83 games in the NBA, as a member of the Braves, Los Angeles Lakers, and once again with the Pacers. His 1977–78 campaign with the Pacers, during which he averaged just 4.2 points per game, would be his last in the United States.

Europe

After leaving the NBA, Neumann took his game to Europe, where he competed in the Italian A League with Gabetti Cantù, in the 1978–79 season,[9] and in the German Federal League, with Saturn Köln, from 1980 to 1982.[10] [11]

Coaching career

Neumann became an assistant coach while playing in Germany, a position that would prove to be his first of many basketball coaching jobs. Neumann also coached in Belgium, Greece, Cyprus, Israel, Kuwait, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, China, and Japan, as well as in the American minor-league Continental Basketball Association with the Maine Lumberjacks.[12] Neumann also coached the Louisville Shooters of the Global Basketball Association, in 1991 and 1992. While in Cyprus, he discovered Darrell Armstrong, a little-known American point guard from Fayetteville State University, who later found success in the NBA.[13]

On June 23, 2010, Neumann was appointed as the new head coach of the Romanian national team. After graduation from Ole Miss with a bachelor's degree in general studies, he hoped to obtain a position as a professional sports analyst and broadcaster, but those opportunities did not materialize. In an attempt to reenter coaching while waiting for the next professional opportunity, he served as an assistant coach at South Panola High School, in Batesville, Mississippi.[14]

Death

Neumann had suffered from several health issues for many years. By 2018, Johnny's health had declined significantly and it was discovered he had developed a brain tumor. In spite of surgery, Neumann died in Oxford, Mississippi, on April 23, 2019, after struggling against brain cancer. His ashes were deposited in an undisclosed location, but close to some of his most significant basketball achievements.[15]

Head coaching record

|-| style="text-align:left;"|Rizing Fukuoka| style="text-align:left;"|2007–08| 44||20||24|||| style="text-align:center;"|3rd in Western|||1||0||1||| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in playoff semifinals|- | style="text-align:left;"|Rizing Fukuoka| style="text-align:left;"|2008–09| 52||22||30|||| style="text-align:center;"|4th in Western|||2||0||2||| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in 1st round |- | style="text-align:left;"|Takamatsu Five Arrows| style="text-align:left;"|2009–10| 52||13||39|||| style="text-align:center;"|7th in Western|||-||-||-||| style="text-align:center;"|- |-

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.thelocalvoice.net/TLV-pages/athletics/TLV22-johnnyneumann.html http://www.thelocalvoice.net/TLV-pages/athletics/TLV22-johnnyneumann.html
  2. Web site: High scorers . 2007-05-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070623140552/http://library.thinkquest.org/25934/high_scorers.htm . 2007-06-23 . dead .
  3. https://www.japantimes.co.jp/sports/2017/07/29/basketball/documentary-former-hoop-star-neumanns-life-provides-cautionary-tale/ Documentary on former hoop star Neumann's life provides a cautionary tale.
  4. http://www.nba.com/pacers/news/johnny_neumann.html NBA Official Site, "Where Are They Now? Johnny Neumann article
  5. http://www.remembertheaba.com/MemphisMaterial/BuccaneersMemphisYearly.html http://www.remembertheaba.com/MemphisMaterial/BuccaneersMemphisYearly.html
  6. https://www.basketball-reference.com/players/n/neumajo01.html Basketball-Reference.com Johnny Neumann page
  7. http://www.remembertheaba.com/TeamMaterial/MemphisMaterial/BuccaneersMemphisYearly.html RememberTheABA.com Memphis Pros Detailed Year to Year Notes Page
  8. http://www.remembertheaba.com/TeamMaterial/IndianaMaterial/PacersYearly.html RememberTheABA.com Indiana Pacers Detailed Year to Year Notes Page
  9. Web site: John Neumann . 2008-09-27 . 2011-05-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110529153610/http://195.56.77.208/player/?id=NEU-JOH&year=1978&team=104 . dead .
  10. http://www.remembertheaba.com/Memphis-Tams.html http://www.remembertheaba.com/Memphis-Tams.html
  11. Web site: Johnny Neumann Stats .
  12. https://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/5501046.html His playbook has an atlas
  13. Web site: Where Are They Now? Johnny Neumann . .
  14. https://www.panolian.com/2019/04/25/johnny-neumann-dead-at-68/ Johnny Neumann dead at 68.
  15. Web site: Cobb . David . Local basketball legend, former Ole Miss star Johnny Neumann dies at 68 . . April 24, 2019. April 23, 2019.