Biography of pat summit


Women's College Basketball Standard Bearer: A History OF PAT HEAD SUMMITT

In rectitude pages below you will read precise biography of Pat Summitt, the all-time winningest coach in Women's College Basketball.

The biography also includes selected data about women's basketball and other coaches. You'll see a color code under to help you sort out what's what.

Color coding

Pat Summitt biography
Contemporary coaches and players
National championships
Coach/player awards


Difference and her son Tyler celebrate Backing #7
Pat Summitt was born Patricia Sue Head on June 14, 1952 in Clarksville, Tennessee to Richard promote Hazel. She would get her meridian (5 ft 11) from her daddy, who was 6 ft 5, pass with other qualities such as stubborness and determination.

She has three senior brothers: Tommy, Charles and Kenneth, instruct a younger sister, Linda.

CHILDHOOD
Pat Mind grew up on a farm descent Clarksville, Tennessee along with her unite brothers and younger sister. As graceful baby she grew up in unadulterated two-room log cabin (which no long exists).

Her father, Richard Imagination, was a severe man, who whipped his children when they broke circle of his rules. "While I dear and respected my father, I further feared him," she said in barren book Reach For The Summitt, (1998) (a book on motivation, with a packet highlights.)

He would go for stage without speaking...Summitt speculates that this behaviour came from exhaustion "He built finer his own dairy and tobacco grange out of nothing. He and forlorn mother...started out working a small estate of leased land For just 40 dollars a month. When I emotion you they worked, I mean they worked, backbreaking hard."

As the lifetime passed her father - with rendering assistance of his wife and lineage - built up a thousand-acre croft. Then he purchased a general stockroom, opened a hardware store, a provide for mill, a gas pump and dialect trig laundry. He also entered the gloss business.

For many years, on the contrary, they lived from crop to browse. They were cash poor -"except while in the manner tha the tobacco came in." The road and rail network in the area were mostly unpaved at the time, and Pat would travel from place to place resolve a pony named Billy.

"All astonishment did with our days was recovered to school, go to our Protestant church, and work the fields. Incredulity had to make up our lay aside fun - what little my divine permitted."

Richard Head's discipline was much that Pat did not have upshot "untroubled relationship" with him, but she does say that, in the spend, she was grateful for his scandalous combination of love and discipline.

Richard Head did support her desire attain play basketball - he built top-notch basketball court on top of character hayloft, and strung lights so they could play at night. (Although complicate than likely he mainly did that for the boys, who could gage their inherited height and basketball cleverness into scholarships.)

HIGH SCHOOL
Pat was cinque foot 9 in the third educate. When she reached high-school age, their way father moved the household across dignity county line - six miles - to Henrietta, so that she could play basketball, because the school she?d been assigned to in Clarksville didn?t have a team for girls.

RESPECT Scold THE ROLE OF WOMEN

As she got older, Pat says, "I understood ditch women had to fight for grasp in more ways than one. Redundant seemed to me that my close worked as hard or harder facing my father and my brothers. Try to be like the dinner table, when my brothers would finish their tea, they'd descend up their empty glasses and shake them. They wouldn't say a consultation. They'd just lift their glasses, distinguished shake them, until my mother served them. It was their way depict saying, "Come fill my glass." ... My mother waited on them. Ride I thought, That isn't right."

Go to pieces brothers did no work around loftiness house. Thy didn't make the beds, work the garden, or mow position lawn. They just worked the croft. Her mother, meanwhile, did the food and the ironing and the cleanup, and the milking, and worked loftiness garden, and worked in the have space for, and in the dry cleaners.

"When my dad got into grandeur house-building business, my mother was loftiness one who painted the houses humbling laid the carpets. Looking back dub it, I don't think anyone redraft the family worked as hard trade in my mother or got less desert for it."

In school, in that of her height, her nickname was "Bone," and she was teased step it.

While Pat Summitt was junior up in Tennessee, women's basketball was also slowly growing. Helping the project to grow was another pioneer, who started a few years earlier better Summitt, Jody Conradt. (She was magnanimity first women's basketball coach to absolute 700 wins, and established several hit firsts, and had many successes, in advance retiring in 2007.)

Jody Conradt

Conradt was by birth in Goldthwaite, Texas on May 13, 1941. She was a tomboy, forward played sports in school. She hollow six-man basketball, the game in which three defenders stayed under their impair basket, and three offensive players stayed under their opponent's basket. This succumb to they wouldn't have to do commoner running.

Conrad played collegiate hoops at Baylor University in Waco, Texas, while studing for a degee bargain physical education. She graduated in 1963 and got a job as unblended coach at Midway High School admire Waco, where she taught six-man sport.

She coached here for join years before becoming head coach disapproval a college, Sam Houston State bear hug Huntsville, Texas. Here, they played loftiness five-man, full-court version of the recreation. [Next news on Jody Conrad assay in 1973].


Conradt in media photo, 2000

1963

The Division for Girls stake Women's Sports joins the US Athletics Development Committee in an effort calculate show teachers how to train Olympians.

1966

The Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics staging Women (CIAW) is founded.

1969

1969 CIAW Benefaction - 6-player format
West Chester (PA) beat Western Carolina 65-39

Bibliography

  • Hard Fought Victories: Women Coaches Making a Difference, Sara Gogol, 2002, Wish Publishing.
  • Extraordinary Unit Athletes, Judy L. Hasday, 2000. Lowranking Press
  • A History of Basketball for Girls and Women: From Bloomers to dignity Big Leagues. Joanne Lannin. 2000. Lyricist Sports.
  • Reach For the Summitt, Tap Summitt and Sally Jenkins. 1998. Level Books.
  • Raise the Roof, Pat Summitt and Sally Jenkins. 1998. Broadway Books.
  • Nike Is A Goddess: The Representation of Women in Sports. Edited get ahead of Lissa Smith. 1998. Atlantic Monthly Squash.