Sunday, May 21, 2023

A01349 - Paul-Emile de Souza, Beninese Army Officer and President of Dahomey

Paul-Émile de Souza (b. July 14, 1930, Bohicon, Dahomey – d. June 17, 1999, Cotonou, Benin) was a Beninese army officer and political figure.  He was chairman of the Directory of Dahomey (the President of Dahomey) from December 13, 1969 to May 7, 1970. 

Paul-Emile de Souza was born into the aristocratic De Souza family on July 14, 1930. His birthplace was Athieme, Dahomey. His wife was Françoise De Souza.

In 1966, de Souza was selected as vice president of the Comité de Rénovation Nationale, as well as being one of the three officers on the Comité. It had very few functions other than to advise Christophe Soglo and was abolished on April 6, 1967.  When Soglo was overthrown later that year, de Souza was chosen as Emile Derlin Zinsou's successor as Director of Military Affairs. For the most part, de Souza tried to stay out of politics if he could and led the parachutist unit at Ouidah. 

On December 10, 1969, Emile Derlin Zinsou was overthrown by Maurice Kouandete, though the military did not recognize the latter.  De Souza was briefly put under house arrest in the aftermath.  Since the two men could not end their quarrels, a Military Directorate was established with de Souza as its chairman, Kouandete a member, and Colonel Benoit Sinzogan of the Gendarmie occupying the third seat. An election was held on March 28, 1970, to determine the true president. It was marked by a series of violent outbursts; unvalidated reports state that six people were killed at incidents in Parakou on the eve of the elections. Former presidents Hubert Maga, Sourou-Migan Apithy, and Justin Ahomadegbe-Tometin received a majority of the vote in the north, southeast, and southwest/central, respectively.


De Souza decided to nullify the results from Atakora, the region where Maga received the most votes. Outraged, Maga threatened to secede unless he was declared President. Apithy stated that he would convince his region to join Nigeria if Maga took the presidency. The three former Presidents agreed to a hasty compromise to prevent a civil war. A presidential council, comprising Maga, Ahomadegbe-Tometin, and Apithy, with a presidency that changed every two years, was set up on May 7. Maga inaugurated this system for the first two years, before passing the power, on May 7, 1972, to Ahomadegbe-Tometin.


Colonel Paul-Emile De Souza returned to his role as Chief of Staff of the Dahomeyan Army.


Kouandete attempted to usurp to power again on February 23, 1972. Leading the Ouidah garrison, he also attempted to take over government buildings and murder de Souza. Over the course of the operation, assailant Major Moumouni was mortally wounded by de Souza's bullets.  De Souza, meanwhile, escaped with only a slight injury. The plot was foiled, although Maga cancelled a visit to France to attend the matter at hand.  Kouandete received the death penalty for his role in the attack.


When Mathieu Kerekou seized power in October 1972, de Souza was dismissed from the army. He was appointed commissioner of the national Agricultural Credit Bank.


Paul-Émile de Souza died on June 17, 1999. His widow, former First Lady of Dahomey Francoise de Souza, died on July 30, 2015.

Thursday, May 18, 2023

A01348 - Denny Crum, Hall of Fame Louisville Basketball Coach

 

Denny Crum, Who Made Louisville a Basketball Power, Dies at 86

He led the Cardinals to two national championships in the 1980s and amassed 675 victories over a career that led to his induction into two halls of fame.

A color photo of Denny Crum on the sidelines during a game, his arms outstretched above him. He holds a rolled-up stat sheet in one hand. Three Louisville players, in red jerseys, are in the frame beside him, one raising his fist in triumph.
Denny Crum coaching Louisville in the N.C.A.A. national tournament in 1986. He was nicknamed Cool Hand Luke for unflinching sideline demeanor.Credit...David Longstreath/Associated Press
A color photo of Denny Crum on the sidelines during a game, his arms outstretched above him. He holds a rolled-up stat sheet in one hand. Three Louisville players, in red jerseys, are in the frame beside him, one raising his fist in triumph.

Denny Crum, who won two N.C.A.A. men’s basketball championships and built the University of Louisville into one of the dominant programs of the 1980s during a long Hall of Fame coaching career, died on Tuesday at his home in Louisville, Ky. He was 86.

The university announced his death after being informed by his wife, Susan. No cause was given. Crum had a mild stroke in August 2017 while fishing in Alaska and another two years two ago.

Nicknamed Cool Hand Luke because of his unflinching sideline demeanor, Crum retired in March 2001 after 30 seasons at Louisville with a record of 675-295 and championships in 1980 and 1986.

A former assistant under the renowned U.C.L.A. coach John Wooden, Crum often wore a red blazer and waved a rolled-up stat sheet like a bandleader’s baton as he directed Louisville to 23 N.C.A.A. tournaments and six Final Fours. He was voted college coach of the year three times.

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He was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., in May 1994, with Wooden, his college coach at U.C.L.A. and longtime mentor, at his side. Crum finished with 11 more wins than Wooden had amassed at U.C.L.A. and was inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame, in Kansas City, Mo., in 2006.

Denzel Edwin Crum was born on March 2, 1937, in San Fernando, Calif. He played guard for two seasons at Pierce Junior College in Los Angeles before transferring to U.C.L.A. in 1956.

The Bruins went 38-14 in Crum’s two seasons as a player. He briefly served as a graduate assistant to Wooden before coaching Pierce in the mid-1960s.

Wooden hired Crum as his assistant and chief recruiter in 1968, when the Bruins were in the midst of their dynastic run to 10 N.C.A.A. championships. Crum is credited with luring the future Hall of Famer Bill Walton to U.C.L.A., and the Bruins went 86-4 and won three N.C.A.A. titles during Crum’s three seasons there.

He succeeded John Dromo as Louisville’s coach in April 1971.

Until then, Louisville had enjoyed little postseason success, reaching only the 1956 N.I.T. championship and the 1959 N.C.A.A. Final Four. The Cardinals lost Crum’s first game, 70-69, to Florida but then reeled off 15 consecutive victories.

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“Denny was so good that I knew I wasn’t going to keep him very long,” Wooden once told The Courier Journal of Louisville. “I was pleased when he got the job at Louisville. I had always hoped when I retired that he’d be the one to succeed me, but he left and proved to be just what I thought he was.”

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A close-up color photo of Crum during a ceremony at Louisville’s basketball arena. He wears a bright red blazer with a boutonniere in one lapel, a black shirt and black slacks. People in the crowd can be seen behind him, out of focus.
Crum in 2007 during a ceremony in which Louisville’s basketball court was named in his honor.Credit...Associated Press
A close-up color photo of Crum during a ceremony at Louisville’s basketball arena. He wears a bright red blazer with a boutonniere in one lapel, a black shirt and black slacks. People in the crowd can be seen behind him, out of focus.

Crum’s Cardinals won the Missouri Valley Conference — the first of his 15 regular-season league titles — and then reached the Final Four, where they met Wooden’s Bruins. At the time, Crum was the third coach to lead his team to the Final Four in his first season. But the Bruins won, 96-77, on their way to a sixth straight championship.

The schools met again in the semifinals three seasons later with a similar result: U.C.L.A. won, 75-74, in overtime. By then Crum had employed much of Wooden’s fundamentally focused style, but with pressure defense and a fast-breaking flair. Instead of an offense built around a dominant center, Crum used athletic guards and forwards who could finish plays with the high-flying dunks Wooden eschewed.

Crum’s philosophy helped make the Cardinals perennial N.C.A.A. tournament participants, with 20 or more wins each season from 1975 through 1979. Louisville’s breakthrough came in the 1979-80 season, when the homegrown star guard Darrell Griffith and the so-called Doctors of Dunk marched through the regular season, 26-3, and won their second Metro Conference championship in three years.

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Crum’s second-seeded Cardinals reached their third Final Four in nine seasons, only to run up against U.C.L.A. again, this time coached by Larry Brown. Louisville finally prevailed, with a 59-54 championship-game win in Indianapolis led by the high-flying all-American Griffith.

Crum’s second title followed in 1986, when Louisville beat Duke, 72-69.

The second half of his tenure was not nearly as successful as the first. Louisville endured two separate N.C.A.A. investigations and never again returned to the Final Four under his watch.

After his retirement, Crum was a co-host with Joe B. Hall, the longtime Kentucky men’s basketball coach, of a sports radio program heard in Kentucky. Hall died last year at 93.

Crum remained a respected presence around Louisville. He frequently attended Cardinals games on the KFC Yum! Center home court bearing his name. He was present for the September 2022 dedication of Denny Crum Hall, a new campus dormitory for athletes and students. And he had a front-row seat in March 2022 for the introduction of one of his former players, Kenny Payne, as the Cardinals’ coach.

Complete information on Crum’s survivors was not immediately available.

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Denzel Edwin Crum (March 2, 1937 – May 9, 2023) was an American men's college basketball coach at the University of Louisville from 1971 to 2001, compiling a 675–295 (.696) record. He guided the Cardinals to two NCAA championships (19801986) and six Final Fours. Honored in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame since 1994, Crum was one of the major figures in the history of sports in Kentucky and in college basketball.

Crum played college ball for the UCLA Bruins under head coach John Wooden. He was later an assistant under Wooden, and the Bruins won a national championship in each of his three seasons on the staff. As the head coach at Louisville, Crum was widely credited with pioneering the now-common strategy of scheduling tough non-conference match-ups early in the season in order to prepare his teams for March's NCAA tournament, where one defeat ends the season.[3] Crum's prolific post-season play and calm demeanor earned him the monikers "Mr. March" and his most well-known nickname, "Cool Hand Luke".[4][5]

Playing career[edit]

Denzel Edwin Crum was born in San Fernando, California, in Los Angeles County.[6] After graduating from San Fernando High School in 1955, he played basketball at Los Angeles Pierce College from 1955 to 1957,[7] averaging 27 points per game in his first season.[8] He then transferred to the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), to play for the UCLA Bruins.[7] Playing as a guard at UCLA (1957–1959),[8] Crum averaged seven points per game.[6] He was honored with the Irv Pohlmeyer Memorial Trophy for outstanding first-year varsity player. He also received the Bruin Bench Award for most improved player the following year.[9] The Bruins went 38–14 in his two seasons.[10]

Coaching career[edit]

After graduating in 1959, Crum served as the freshman basketball coach at UCLA.[7][9] In 1961, he returned to Pierce College as an assistant coach and served as their head coach from 1964 through 1968.[7][11] Crum was then rehired by UCLA to replace assistant coach Jerry Norman,[12] and became John Wooden's top assistant coach and chief recruiter.[6][13] Crum took a $3,000 pay cut from UCLA compared to his earnings at Pierce.[12] The Bruins won national titles in each of his three seasons while compiling an 86–4 record.[10] His recruits included Bill Walton, one of the greatest college basketball players ever.[6][14]

Louisville (1971–2001)[edit]

In 1971, Crum was hired as head coach by the University of Louisville, taking over for John Dromo,[6] but he left UCLA thinking he would return one day to succeed Wooden.[12][15] Although the Cardinals had substantial national success under former coach Bernard "Peck" Hickman,[16] their last NCAA tourament appearance was in 1968 and Final Four in 1959; they had never won a national championship.[3] In his first season, Crum led Louisville to the Final Four, where they lost to Wooden's UCLA team.[3]

The Cardinals reached the Final Four again in 1975, losing once more to UCLA. Wooden retired following the tournament after winning his 10th national title. Crum declined the opportunity to replace his mentor at UCLA. Two years later, he turned down the job again after Wooden's successor, Gene Bartow, left for UAB.[3][8] UCLA's salary offer was around half of what Louisville was paying him, and even less when he factored in the higher cost of living in Los Angeles.[12][17] Crum said life in Louisville was "more relaxed and it's not a hassle to do everything".[15] He led the Cardinals to four more Final Fours in the 1980s (1980, 1982, 1983, and 1986).[18][5] Only five other coaches have reached more Final Fours than Crum's six: Wooden, Dean SmithMike KrzyzewskiRoy Williams, and Tom Izzo.[5][19]

In 1979–80, national player of the year Darrell Griffith led the Cardinals to a 33–3 record. They defeated Crum's alma mater, UCLA, 59–54, to win the 1980 national championship.[6] That squad was credited with popularizing the High-5.[6][20] Six years later, Louisville defeated Duke, 72–69, for their second title, led by Pervis Ellison,[21] who became the first freshman to be named the NCAA tournament's most outstanding player.[22] Through his first 15 seasons, Crum won 76% of his games.[6] He received another offer to return to UCLA in 1988, after Walt Hazzard was fired, but he remained at Louisville.[12] In 1993, Crum became the second fastest coach to reach 500 wins.[23]

On his 64th birthday in 2001, Crum announced that he would retire at the end of the season. Though Crum insisted the decision was his, it was widely rumored that Louisville athletic director Tom Jurich drove him out to pursue the newly available Rick Pitino.[24] In the last 15 seasons of his career, Crum's winning percentage fell to 63%, including a 61–61 record in his final four seasons.[6] His only three losing seasons came in his last 11 seasons,[25] including twice in his final four seasons.[26] Nonetheless, he led the Cardinals to four 20-win seasons and eight NCAA tournaments in the 1990s. He retired with a record of 675–295, a 69.6% winning percentage.[6] At the time, his 675 career wins ranked 14th in NCAA history.[6] In 30 seasons, Crum took the Cardinals to 23 NCAA tournaments, the 10th most by a coach, while compiling an overall tournament record of 42–22.[5] The Cardinals won 20 or more games in 21 of his 30 seasons.[5] While in the Metro Conference, they won or shared 12 regular-season titles and won 11 conference tournament championships.[5]

During his tenure, Crum coached 13 players who were later selected in the first round of the NBA draft, including first overall pick Ellison and six others in the top 10: Junior BridgemanDarrell GriffithRodney McCrayLancaster GordonFelton Spencer, and Samaki Walker.[27]

Other coaching[edit]

Crum coached the U.S. World University team to a gold medal in 1977.[28] He led the American's Pan American team to a silver medal in 1987.[29]

Coaching style[edit]

Crum had a signature style as a coach. He usually held a rolled-up program in one hand during games, like Wooden,[12][10] and would often gesture with it.[10] At Louisville, whose team colors are red and black, Crum sometimes wore a red blazer on the sidelines.[10] He stood composed, eschewing theatrics. "It's hard for players to play under control if you're not. It's hard to think or function when you're screaming", he said.[30]

On the court, Crum's system mirrored Wooden's.[12][31] Louisville was famous for running a 2-2-1 zone press that switched at half court to man-to-man defense.[32] He ran a variation of Wooden's trademark high-post offense.[8][33] Even Crum's guards tended to score on the interior: his 1980 national championship team was known as the "Doctors of Dunk."[34] On defense, his players were expected to be interchangeable, switching on all picks, and fronted the pivot.[35] This defense denied interior passes and encouraged perimeter shots. The year after Crum won his last national championship in 1986, the NCAA introduced the three-point line, revolutionizing the game.[3][36] With outside shooting newly emphasized, Crum was slow to adjust. He never returned to the Final Four, coming as close as the Elite Eight in 1997.[3]

Throughout his career, Crum was known for superior in-game coaching. His teams tended to score immediately out of timeouts—using plays Crum would draw up in the huddle—and play well in close games.[37]

Radio career[edit]

From 2004 to 2014, Crum co-hosted a local radio talk show with former University of Kentucky head coach Joe B. Hall. Both did their portions of the show from different studios, Crum in Louisville and Hall in Lexington.[38] The Joe B. and Denny Show was the top Fox Sports radio show in the state of Kentucky.[39] The show, which aired on WKRD in Louisville and WVLK-FM in Lexington, was carried by 21 stations in all at its peak, and still had 16 stations when it ended on October 30, 2014, after WVLK-FM announced a format change.[38]

Personal life[edit]

Crum was married to his third wife Susan Sweeney Crum, then a news anchor and reporter for Louisville television station WDRB, from 2001 until his death. [40] In 2006, she became an announcer and news anchor at Louisville public radio station WFPL.[41] Crum had three children, Cynthia and Steve from his first marriage, and Scott from his second marriage.[6] He lived in Jeffersontown, Kentucky, and had a hunting ranch in eastern Idaho.[6]

Crum played professional poker[42] and collected western novels by Louis L'Amour.[9] During his coaching career, he was amongst the founders of the Louisville Eccentric Observer, the city's alternative weekly newspaper. Crum also bred horses.[43]

While able, Crum appeared at various functions with former Cardinal and pro-basketball player Darrell Griffith.[44]

Crum founded The Denny Crum Scholarship Foundation, Inc., which awards scholarships to individuals who have demonstrated leadership, community service, and academic achievement. Requirements include: application form, high school transcript, 3.0 cumulative GPA, and a community service resume listing detailed volunteer involvement and leadership experience.[45]

Crum had a stroke in 2017 and another in 2019.[10] He died at home on May 9, 2023, aged 86.[46] A celebration of life was held on May 15, 2023 at the KFC Yum! Center.[47]

Honors[edit]

In the 1980s, Crum was named National Coach of the Year three times (1980, 1983, 1986). He was awarded Metro Conference Coach of the year three times (1979, 1980, 1983). In 1980, he was also named the Sporting News Coach of the Year, the Basketball Weekly Coach of the Year, and the Basketball Weekly Man of the Year.[48]

Crum was inducted into the UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame in 1990.[9] In 1994, he was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame;[6] during the ceremony, he was accompanied to the stage by Wooden.[12]

In 2002, Crum received the Legends of Coaching award given by the John R. Wooden Award Committee. This award recognizes "a coach's character, success rate on the court, graduating rate of student athletes, [and] his coaching philosophy".[49]

On February 7, 2007, Louisville's home floor at Freedom Hall was officially named "Denny Crum Court."[44] When the Cardinals basketball teams moved to the downtown KFC Yum! Center in 2010, the name "Denny Crum Court" was retained in the new facility.[50]

In 2010 Crum was an inaugural inductee of Pierce College's athletic hall of fame.[51]