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・ Bob Kessler
・ Bob Kevoian
・ Bob Keyes
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・ Bob Kiddle
・ Bob Kierlin
・ Bob Kiesel
・ Bob Kilby
・ Bob Kilcullen
・ Bob Kiley
・ Bob Kilger
・ Bob Kilpatrick
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・ Bob King (American football coach)
・ Bob King (athlete)
Bob King (basketball)
・ Bob King (children's musician)
・ Bob King (editor)
・ Bob King (footballer)
・ Bob King (labor leader)
・ Bob King (New Zealand footballer)
・ Bob King (Queensland politician)
・ Bob King (speed coach)
・ Bob Kingsley
・ Bob Kingsley's Country Top 40
・ Bob Kingston
・ Bob Kinnear
・ Bob Kinney
・ Bob Kinsella
・ Bob Kipper


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Bob King (basketball) : ウィキペディア英語版
Bob King (basketball)

Bob King (August 24, 1923 – December 10, 2004) was a college basketball coach and administrator. He was head coach at the University of New Mexico from 1962 to 1972 and at Indiana State University from 1975 to 1978. He also served as Assistant Athletics Director at New Mexico (1972–73) and Athletics Director at Indiana State (1974–80).
King coached basketball Hall of Famers Larry Bird, Mel Daniels, and Don Nelson. The success of his New Mexico teams led to the construction of The Pit, the home venue of the Lobos, and its court is named after him. He also assembled the Indiana State team that went to the 1979 NCAA Final Four and lost in the championship game. Both schools have inducted King into their Athletics Halls of Fame, as has the Missouri Valley Conference.
== Early career ==

King was born in Gravity, Iowa, where he was an All-State basketball player in high school.〔New Mexico Athletics Official Site, (Lobo Basketball Media Guide 2013-14 ), p.96.〕 He played on the freshman team at the University of Iowa before graduating in three years with a Bachelor’s degree in Physical Education in 1947. He earned a Master’s degree in Educational Guidance and Psychology from Drake University in 1957. King coached for 12 seasons at Britt and Algona high schools in Iowa and West High in Rockford, Illinois, compiling a record of 205-75. He then became an assistant coach at Iowa for two seasons (1960–62) under Sharm Scheuerman, where he coached two-time All-American and NBA player and Hall of Fame coach Don Nelson.〔Nelson and other Iowa players sent a letter to the New Mexico athletics director praising King and recommending him for the Lobo coaching position. Rick Wright, (''AD Pete McDavid Presided Over the Golden Era of UNM Athletics'' ), Albuquerque Journal, Oct. 17, 2004.〕

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