Dick Acres

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dick_Acres an entity of type: Thing

Richard K. Acres (May 17, 1934 – June 14, 2012) was an American college basketball coach. He served as head men's coach of Oral Roberts University (ORU) for three seasons. Acres played college basketball at UC Santa Barbara and semi-professionally for Kirby Shoes. He received a degree in education from UC Santa Barbara and later a master's degree from California State University, Los Angeles. After his playing career, he went into teaching, initially at Mark Twain High School. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dick Acres
rdf:langString Dick Acres
rdf:langString Dick Acres
xsd:date 2012-06-14
xsd:date 1934-05-17
xsd:integer 64602714
xsd:integer 1115669306
rdf:langString MCC co-Coach of the Year
xsd:date 1934-05-17
rdf:langString MCC regular season
rdf:langString MCC tournament
xsd:date 2012-06-14
rdf:langString Richard K. Acres (May 17, 1934 – June 14, 2012) was an American college basketball coach. He served as head men's coach of Oral Roberts University (ORU) for three seasons. Acres played college basketball at UC Santa Barbara and semi-professionally for Kirby Shoes. He received a degree in education from UC Santa Barbara and later a master's degree from California State University, Los Angeles. After his playing career, he went into teaching, initially at Mark Twain High School. Acres coached at Carson High School in California from 1970 to 1982, winning the state 4A title in his last season there. He then took an assistant coaching role at Oral Roberts for the 1982–83 season under Ken Hayes. With the move, Acres was able to coach two of his sons, who were already at ORU – Mark (who would later go on to play in the National Basketball Association) and Jeff – as well as Sam Potter, who had played for Acres at Carson High. In December of that season, after a disappointing 3–5 start, Hayes was fired and Acres was installed as interim head coach. After leading the team to an 11–9 record in his time as interim coach, Acres was given the full-time head coaching job during that offseason. The following season, Acres led the Golden Eagles to a 21–10 record, Midwestern City Conference regular season and tournament championships, and was named conference co-coach of the year with Joe Sexson of Butler. In the 1984–85 season, Acres led the Golden Eagles to a 13–15 record and resigned at the end of the season. Besides his coaching career, Acres served as a referee for basketball, football, and baseball at the high school level. He was also a financial services professional. Acres died on June 14, 2012.
rdf:langString Oral Roberts
xsd:integer 1970 1982
xsd:integer 81
xsd:integer 1954
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5604
xsd:string 81–47 ()

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