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Clarence Gaines, 81; Fifth on NCAA’s List of Winningest Coaches

From Associated Press

Clarence E. “Big House” Gaines, one of college basketball’s winningest coaches during his 47 seasons at Winston-Salem State, died Monday, his daughter said.

He was 81.

Gaines entered a hospital Friday with heart problems. He was released Saturday but had a stroke and returned to Forsyth Medical Center in Winston-Salem, N.C.

Lisa Gaines McDonald said her father died at 9:10 p.m. Monday, possibly from complications related to a stroke.

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Gaines, a native of Paducah, Ky., retired in 1993 after 47 seasons at NCAA Division II Winston-Salem State.

His 828 wins rank him fifth on the NCAA’s list of career coaching wins after Dean Smith, Adolph Rupp, Bob Knight and Jim Phelan.

Gaines had 18 20-win seasons and won 12 Central Intercollegiate Athletic Assn. titles at Winston-Salem. In 1967 he led the Rams, featuring future NBA star Earl “the Pearl” Monroe, to a 31-1 record and an NCAA championship. He was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1982.

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Gaines was a 6-foot-5, 265-pound high school prospect in 1941, and his college possibilities were considered slim.

Yet with the determination of his family and the black community, he was offered scholarships from three predominantly black colleges.

He went to Morgan State in Maryland, where a school worker inspired the nickname that stayed with him the rest of his life, telling him: “The only thing I’ve seen as big as you is a house.”

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After graduation, he continued toward his goal of becoming a dentist.

He was offered a job as an assistant football and basketball coach at Winston-Salem Teachers’ College and decided it would be a temporary solution until he decided what to do next.

It turned into an unexpected career, one that Gaines loved for 47 years, all at Winston-Salem. He gave up coaching football after four years to focus on basketball.

Gaines’ 2004 autobiography is titled “They Call Me Big House.”

Funeral arrangements are pending.

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