John Stroud Explained

John Stroud
Height Ft:6
Height In:7
Weight Lb:215
Birth Date:29 October 1957
Birth Place:New Albany, Mississippi
Nationality:American
High School:West Union (Myrtle, Mississippi)
College:Ole Miss (1976–1980)
Draft Year:1980
Draft Round:2
Draft Pick:27
Draft Team:Houston Rockets
Career Start:1980
Career End:1981
Career Number:42
Career Position:Small forward
Team1:Houston Rockets
Years2:1982-1983
Team2:Caja de Ronda
Highlights:

John Stroud (born October 29, 1957) is an American former basketball player and coach who played four years at the University of Mississippi,[1] before being drafted by the Houston Rockets in the second round of 1980 NBA draft[2] as their first pick. Following his playing career Stroud coached for 32 years at various levels.

Biography

College career[3]

Stroud signed with the University of Mississippi out of West Union High School in Union County, Mississippi where he had received both all state and All America honors.[4] He played for the Rebels from 1976 until 1980. In 1978-79 he led the SEC in scoring with 26.3 points per game and was named as an All-America honorable mention. He again led the SEC in scoring in 1979-80 with 25.2 points per game. During his time at Ole miss he led the Rebels to their first postseason tournament victory over Grambling 76-74 at Tad Smith Coliseum in the National Invitational Tournament.

During his career in Oxford Stroud recorded the highest career point total in Ole Miss history and is still the third-most in league history with 2,328 points and sixth in field goals made in the SEC with 894. He is fifth in free throws made in a season at 233. Only Pete Maravich and Bailey Howell made more free throws in a season. Only five players have attempted more free throws in a single season in the SEC than Stroud. His 39 points in the first round of the 1979 SEC tournament ranks as the second most points ever scored in an SEC tournament game. Likewise, his 15 field goals in that game are the second most in a tournament game.[5] Following his senior season in '79-80 Stroud was selected to All-America honors for the second straight season and named SEC Athlete of the year.

College statistics

Cited from Basketball Reference[1] .

Per Game!Season!School!G!GS!MP!FG!FGA!FG%!FT!FTA!FT%!TRB!AST!PF!PTS
1976-77Ole Miss265.712.3.4643.04.3.7035.11.23.314.5
1977-78Ole Miss277.715.8.4862.73.6.7558.50.92.918.1
1978-79Ole Miss272739.010.317.7.5785.77.2.7999.10.63.026.3
1979-80Ole Miss3037.48.715.6.5577.89.7.7987.20.92.525.2
CareerOle Miss1102738.28.115.4.5274.96.3.7777.50.92.921.2
Totals!Season!School!G!GS!MP!FG!FGA!FG%!FT!FTA!FT%!TRB!AST!PF!PTS
1976-77Ole Miss26149321.46478111.7031333087376
1977-78Ole Miss27207426.4867498.7552302577488
1978-79Ole Miss27271052277479.578155194.7992471780709
1979-80Ole Miss301123261469.557233292.7982162874755
CareerOle Miss1102721758941695.527540695.7778261003182328

Professional career

Following his senior year at Ole Miss, Stroud was the top choice of the Houston Rockets in the 1980 NBA draft. He played with the Rockets from 1980-1981 and was a member of the 1981 team that lost to the Boston Celtics in the NBA Finals.[6] Stroud played the 1982-83 season in Europe with Caja de Ronda, located in Malaga, Spain.[4]

Coaching career

University of Alabama (Mens)[7]

After a three-year professional career, Stroud entered the coaching profession in 1984 as a graduate assistant at the University of Alabama.

New Albany High School[8]

In 1985, he became the head basketball coach at W.P. Daniel High School in New Albany, Mississippi, where helmed the boy's program to back-to-back state championships in 1986 and 87. He compiled a 71-24 record in three years.

East Mississippi Community College[9]

In 1988, Stroud accepted the head coaching position at East Mississippi Community College in Scooba, Mississippi. Making an immediate impact in Scooba, Stroud led EMCC to its first-ever state tournament appearance and its first regional tournament appearance in 25 years. In his two seasons at EMCC, Stroud compiled a 30-30 record and was named the Mississippi Junior College Coach of the Year following the 1989-90 season before assuming the reins of the Millsaps' basketball program the following year.

Millsaps College

Stroud began an illustrious career at Millsaps in 1990. During his thirteen-year tenure, Stroud guided his teams to three Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference championships and led the Majors to three NCAA tournament appearances. The two-time SCAC Coach of the Year and the all-time wins leader at Millsaps, Stroud compiled a record of 204-131, reaching the 200-victory plateau this season in a 71-48 triumph over Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology on January 31, 2003. Suffering only two losing seasons while at Millsaps, Stroud posted seven seasons of at least sixteen wins, including three campaigns of twenty wins or more. Stroud's best year came in 1994-1995 as he led the Majors to a 25-3 mark, an SCAC title, and a trip to the NCAA Division III Sweet 16. Upon his retirement from Millsaps then President Frances Lucas-Tauchar commented, "John has given Millsaps College thirteen years of superior leadership and coaching. He is also a personal role model, which is the ultimate form of teaching, and he will be greatly missed."

Business Career[10]

Stroud returned to New Albany in 2003 and went into private business. He first purchased an insurance agency and later opened a Dry Cleaners.[11] He has subsequently been inducted into the SEC Business Hall of Fame.

Return to Coaching

New Albany High School (Girls)

In 2004 he became coach of the girls team at New Albany High School where he compiled a 248-131 record over 13 years and won the Class 4A state title in 2011. New Albany also made appearances in the MHSAA's state tournament in 2009 as a semifinalist, 2010 where the team finished as the Class 4A runner-up, and 2015 when the Lady Bulldogs lost in triple overtime to Bay High School in the quarterfinal round.

He retired yet again from coaching in 2017.

Awards and honors

As high school player

As collegiate player

As coach

At Millsaps College

In High School

As Business Executive
Hall of Fame Memberships

Notes and References

  1. Web site: John Stroud College Stats College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. en. March 8, 2018.
  2. Web site: John Stroud - The Draft Review. Consulting. Fine Line Websites & IT. thedraftreview.com. May 29, 2007 . en-us. March 8, 2018.
  3. Web site: Ole Miss Basketball Historical Timeline. grfx.cstv.com. March 8, 2018. March 8, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180308231647/http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/ole/sports/m-baskbl/auto_pdf/2015-16/misc_non_event/History_89-111.pdf. dead.
  4. News: Stroud basketball career spans five decades. Editor. Dennis Clayton Sports. Daily Journal. March 8, 2018. en.
  5. Web site: SEC ALL TIME RECORDS. a.espncdn.com/photo/2017/1107/2018%20Record%20Book.pdf.
  6. Web site: John Stroud Stats Basketball-Reference.com. Basketball-Reference.com. en. March 8, 2018.
  7. News: John B. Stroud. November 7, 2012. Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. March 8, 2018. en-US.
  8. News: Stroud resigns as New Albany girls coach. Daily Journal. March 8, 2018. en.
  9. Web site: John Stroud Resigns As Men's Basketball Coach. Millsaps College. March 18, 2003 . en. March 8, 2018.
  10. News: Former Rebel Hoops Star John Stroud Honored As Businessman. March 8, 2018.
  11. News: Ole Miss Legend John Stroud opens Lapels Dry Cleaning at 501 West Bankhead Street, New Albany - Lapels Dry Cleaning. July 16, 2014. Lapels Dry Cleaning. March 8, 2018. en-US.
  12. Web site: - Ole Miss Rebels Official Athletic Site Ole Miss Rebels Official Athletic Site - Men's Basketball. olemisssports.com. March 8, 2018. November 19, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121119083116/http://www.olemisssports.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/all-century-team.html. dead.
  13. News: East Mississippi (h)ires John Stroud . 3 September 2022 . Sun Herald . 30 Apr 1988 . D4 . en . East Mississippi Junior College in Scooba announced Friday the hiring of John Stroud as the new head basketball coach. Stroud has been coach at New Albany High School for the past three years, two of which he carried his team to the state Class 3-A basketball finals..