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Bernard "Red" Sarachek, Pro Basketball Pioneer and Longtime YU Coach, Dies at 93

Nov 20, 2005 -- Bernard “Red” Sarachek, longtime coach of the Yeshiva University men's basketball team and a member of both the New York City Hall of Fame and the New York City Basketball Hall of Fame, died Monday in Deerfield Beach, Florida after a long illness. He was 93. Renowned internationally as a coach of coaches as well as players, Sarachek counted among his disciples some of the best-known coaches in the U.S. Among them are Lou Carnesecca, Jack Donohue, and Red Holzman. “He has taught more high school and college coaches in (the New York metro area) than anybody,” former St. John’s coach Carnesecca once said of Sarachek. “Red is the guru.” A tireless roundball strategist and innovator, Sarachek was featured in a photo in The New York Times in 1956. The photo shows the coach on the subway with three YU players as they study a notebook-sized blackboard on which Sarachek has sketched plays. That photo accompanied a story by Gay Talese called “Yeshiva Quintet Holds 'Skull Sessions' in Subway." Sarachek coached the YU team from 1942-43 and from 1945-1969. When professional basketball was in its infancy in the 1940s, Sarachek simultaneously coached the Scranton Miners of the American Basketball League and a team representing Herkimer, NY in the New York State League. Sarachek led both teams to championships at the same time he was coaching the Yeshiva University squad. With Scranton in the late 40s, the Bronx-born Sarachek broke the league’s segregation rules by playing Dolly King, William “Pop” Gates, and Eddie Younger at the same time. Pop Gates went on to a stellar pro career that led to international fame with the Harlem Globetrotters and eventual enshrinement in the NBA Hall of Fame. Current YU basketball coach, Jon Halpert, in his 34th season as coach, played for Coach Sarachek from 1962-1966. Halpert said the key thing to know about Sarachek was that he believed in the truth. “If you made a bad play, you heard about it,” Halpert said. “He did what he thought was right and he said what he thought was right. That was Red. That’s how he approached all things. He had as many Italian friends as Jewish friends. As many Irish friends as Jewish friends. As many black friends as Jewish friends. As long as you were truthful and straight up, he liked you. There was no spin with Red.” Yeshiva University named its annual high school basketball invitational after Sarachek in 1992. The Red Sarachek Basketball Tournament, which takes place each spring, attracts Jewish high school basketball teams from as far away as Los Angeles and Toronto. Carnesecca, who called YU's communications office after Sarachek's death, wanted people to know that the old YU coach was "most of all a true friend." "We were friends for 52 years," Carnesecca said. "He was a man for all the people. Character. That's what Red weighed, the person. I'm gonna miss him so much. I used to call him every day. And every