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Joe Bryant
Joe Bryant 2010
Personal information
Born October 19 1954 () (age 69)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Nationality American
Listed height 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)
Listed weight 185 lb (84 kg)
Career information
High school John Bartram
(Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
College La Salle (1973–1975)
NBA Draft: Selected by the Golden State Warriors
Playing career 1975–1992
Position Power forward / Center
Number 23, 22
Coaching career 2003–present
Career history
As player: 1975–1979 Philadelphia 76ers
1979–1982 San Diego Clippers
1982–1983 Houston Rockets
1984–1986 AMG Sebastiani Rieti
1986–1987 Standa Reggio Calabria
1987–1989 Olimpia Pistoia
1989–1991 Reggiana
1991–1992 FC Mulhouse Basket
As coach: 2003–2004 Las Vegas Rattlers
2004–2005 Boston Frenzy
2005–2006 Los Angeles Sparks
2007–2009 Tokyo Apache
2010–2011 Levanga Hokkaido
2011 Los Angeles Sparks
2012 Bangkok Cobras
2013 Chang Thailand Slammers
2015 Rizing Fukuoka
Career highlights and awards
  • Points 12,584 (14.8 ppg)
  • Rebounds 4,012 (4.7 rpg)
  • Assists 1,595 (1.9 apg)

Joseph Washington "Jellybean" Bryant (born October 19, 1954) is an American retired professional basketball player, current coach, and the father of the late Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant. Bryant was the head coach of the WNBA's Los Angeles Sparks from August 22, 2005 until April 4, 2007.[1] He returned to that position for the remainder of the 2011 WNBA season after Jennifer Gillom was fired by the Los Angeles Sparks on July 10, 2011. Bryant has also coached in Italy, Japan and Thailand.

Pro career

After starring at La Salle University, Bryant, a 6'9" (2.07 m) forward, was drafted in the first round by the Golden State Warriors in 1975.[2] Before the season started, though, he was dealt to his hometown team, the Philadelphia 76ers, with whom he played for four seasons. His 1976–77 Sixers team, featuring NBA all-stars Julius Erving, Doug Collins and George McGinnis, reached the NBA finals, but eventually lost to the Portland Trail Blazers 4 games to 2.[3] Bryant headed back to the West Coast when he was traded by the 76ers[4] to the San Diego Clippers, for whom he played from 1979 to 1982. In the first game of the 1979–80 season at home in San Diego, Bryant slam dunked on Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, however, despite that and a 46-point effort by Bryant's Sixer/Clippers teammate World B. Free (then known as Lloyd Free), the Lakers won the game off a game winning sky hook by Abdul-Jabbar.

After a final NBA season with the Houston Rockets in 1983, Bryant headed to Europe, playing seven seasons in Italy with clubs of the Italian A1 League and the Italian A2 League. He played with the Italian clubs AMG Sebastiani Rieti (1984–86), Viola Reggio Calabria (1986–87), Pistoia (1987–89) and Reggio Emilia (1989–91). He twice had 53-point games with Pistoia, in the 1987–88 season.

Bryant continued to play into his fifties, appearing in several games for the Boston Frenzy of the fledgling American Basketball Association.

Coaching career

Bryant's first coaching position after returning from Europe was in 1992–1993 as the head coach of the women's varsity team at Akiba Hebrew Academy in Lower Merion, Pennsylvania.[5] In June 1993, he left Akiba and accepted an assistant coach position at his alma-mater, La Salle University.[6] Bryant served as coach for the Diablos in the 2003 Season of SlamBall.

On August 22, 2005, Bryant, who had been serving as the assistant coach to the Los Angeles Sparks team in the Women's National Basketball Association, was named Head Coach of the Sparks, succeeding previous coach (and former 76ers teammate) Henry Bibby. During the 2006 season, he led the Sparks to a 25-9 record and a Conference Finals berth. However, in April 2007, Bryant was replaced as Sparks head coach by Michael Cooper, who had previously helmed the team in 1999–2004.

Bryant spent the 2007–08 season coaching the Tokyo Apache in Japan's professional basketball league the Japanese BJ League.

On July 3, 2009 he signed a contract with his first Italian club, Sebastiani Rieti.[7]

In January 2012, he became coach of the Bangkok Cobras in the ASEAN Basketball League (ABL).[8] He also served as the head coach of Rizing Fukuoka of the bj league.

Head coaching record

Legend
Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W–L % Win–loss %
Post season PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW–L % Playoff win–loss %
[hide]Team Year G W L W–L% Finish PG PW PL PW–L% Result
Tokyo Apache 2005-06 40 20 20 .500 3rd - - - -
Tokyo Apache 2006-07 40 12 28 .300 8th - - - -
Tokyo Apache 2007-08 44 27 17 .614 2nd in Eastern 2 1 1 .500 Runners-up
Tokyo Apache 2008-09 52 33 19 .635 2nd in Eastern 4 3 1 .750 Runners-up
Rera Kamuy Hokkaido 2010-11 22 6 16 .273 Fired - - - -
Rizing Fukuoka 2014-15 32 9 23 .281 9th in Western - - - -

Personal life

Bryant is married to Pam Cox, sister of former NBA player Chubby Cox. Their son, Kobe, won five NBA championships with the Los Angeles Lakers. They also have two daughters, Sharia and Shaya. Through his wife Pam, Bryant is the uncle of professional basketball player John Cox IV.

On January 26, 2020, Kobe, Bryant’s only son, died in a helicopter crash, along with Bryant's 13-year-old grand-daughter Gianna and seven others.

References

  1. Jump up^
  2. Jump up^
  3. Jump up^ http://www.basketball-reference.com
  4. Jump up^ Bryant was traded for what eventually turned out to the first pick in the 1986 NBA draft, although prior to the draft the 76ers had traded the pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers, who selected Brad Daugherty. [1]
  5. Jump up^
  6. Jump up^
  7. Jump up^
  8. Jump up^ Bangkok team hires Kobe’s dad
  9. Jump up^ Bryant out as Rizing Fukuoka coach

External links

  • Joe Bryant at Basketball-Reference.com
  • Joe Bryant WNBA Coach Profile
  • Joe Bryant statistics in Italian Championship
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