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Magee: The Coach Who Never Left

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From the Associated Press

He built his reputation as a shooter, a jump-shot guru who expects to make every single shot, no matter where he is on the court. But it’s his passing that makes Herb Magee so remarkable.

More than 40 years ago, Magee arrived at Philadelphia University as a skinny, undersized freshman with a deft shooting touch -- and never left. After 800 wins and numerous offers for big-time college and NBA coaching jobs, he’s still at his alma mater -- winning games and preaching the gospel of the jump shot.

“Believe me when I tell you that if I warmed up and went out there right now and took 100 shots, I’d expect to miss one or two,” said the 64-year-old Magee, pointing through the door of his office to the bandbox gym where his jersey hangs from the rafters.

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“Anyone can do it. I don’t have any special attributes, I’ve just done it the right way my whole life.”

And on that simple principle, Magee has built a legacy: eighth-most wins in NCAA history, one Division II national title and 80 consecutive home wins during one stretch. And yet, he chose to stay.

“It’s hard for people to understand,” Magee said. “Why would a guy who has been this successful stay at a small school and, obviously, get paid a lower salary -- much, much lower?”

“The simple reason,” he said, “is family.”

Magee, who lost both parents by the age of 13, put his family ahead of everything else when the bigger schools came calling -- seeking a shooting guru with a soft touch, not just around the basket but with his players, too.

“Most of those jobs would’ve involved me uprooting and moving to a different part of the country,” said the soft-spoken Magee, who stayed local early in his career to be close to his young daughters following a divorce from his first wife. “And that’s not me, I’m a Philadelphia guy.”

No kidding.

One of three teammates -- along with Jim Lynam and Jim Boyle -- at West Catholic High School that went on to be coaches, Magee went to then-Philadelphia Textile and ended his career as the school’s leading scorer with 2,235 points. He averaged 29.1 points per game one season and was drafted by the Boston Celtics in 1963.

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That was the first time he passed.

“You ready for the reasons?” Magee asks. “There are five of them.”

Magee ticks them off on his fingers one at a time. “Bob Cousy, Bill Sharman, Sam Jones, K.C. Jones and John Havlicek,” Magee said, referring to the Celtic guards of that era, all of them Hall of Famers.

“I think I made the right decision,” Magee laughed.

He finagled an assistant job at his alma mater by promising to take on coaching duties in other sports as needed -- cross country, squash, golf, whatever.

“One year, I was supposed to be the golf coach. I ended up doing it for 20,” Magee said.

But even though he never jumped ship for a big college program or an NBA assistant job -- passing up “two or three solid, take-our-job offers” -- Magee has still made an impact in the pros, privately instructing NBA players.

Former NBA coach Jack McKinney, whom Magee assisted for a season at Textile, brought him to Indiana to teach his Pacers how to shoot in the early 80s.

“He walked in and I could hear it, ‘Who the hell is this skinny sucker, he’s going to teach us how to shoot?”’ McKinney said.

Four days later, the players wouldn’t let Magee leave.

“They’d say, ‘We’ll pay for him ourselves. Don’t let him go,” McKinney said.

Magee has schooled kids and pros alike. A girl made the trip from Virginia to Philadelphia for a Thanksgiving-morning session, and New York Knicks player Malik Rose -- a Philly guy himself -- has taken shooting lessons from Magee.

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