Bruce Drake (December 5, 1905 – December 4, 1983) was an American college men's basketball and golf coach. The Gentry, Texas native was head coach at the University of Oklahoma between 1938 and 1955, compiling a 200–181 record. He also coached the Air Force team to a 34–14 record in 1956.

Prior to coaching, he was also a star for Hugh McDermott's Oklahoma team. He was a 1928–29 Helms Foundation All-American. He was a multi-sport athlete at Oklahoma.

As a coach, Drake led the Sooners to two Final Fours–the first one in 1939, here they lost to Oregon 55–37; the second in 1947, where he lost in the Championship Game to Holy Cross 58–47. He made only one additional NCAA tournament appearance, in 1943. However, he coached at a time when only eight teams made the tournament. He won or shared six (Big Six/Big Seven conference titles. At the time of his retirement, he was the winningest coach in OU history, but is now third behind Billy Tubbs and Kelvin Sampson.

He coached 5 Olympic (Wayne Glasgow and Marcus Freiberger of University of Oklahoma, 1952; Bill Evans, Ron Tomsic and Gib Ford of Air Force team, 1956) and three All-Americans (Jimmy McNatt, 1940; Gerald Tucker, 1943, 1947; Allie Paine, 1944)

Drake was selected as the assistant coach for the 1956 USA Men's Basketball Gold Medal Olympic Team

In 1958 he coached the Wichita Vickers in the National Industrial Basketball League getting 30–21 record tying him for first with his old player Gerald Tucker who was coaching the Bartlesville Phillips 66ers.

One of the lasting contributions Drake developed is the shuffle offense. He helped make goaltending illegal.

Drake was the Chairman of the NCAA Rules Committee from 1951 to 1955. He made the Basketball Hall of Fame as a coach in 1973.

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Oklahoma Sooners (Big Six Conference) (1938–1947)
1938–39Oklahoma12–97–3T–1stNCAA Final Four
1939–40Oklahoma12–78–2T–1st
1940–41Oklahoma6–125–54th
1941–42Oklahoma11–78–2T–1st
1942–43Oklahoma18–97–32ndNCAA Elite Eight
1943–44Oklahoma15–89–1T–1st
1944–45Oklahoma12–135–5T–3rd
1945–46Oklahoma11–107–32nd
1946–47Oklahoma24–78–21stNCAA Runner-up
Oklahoma Sooners (Big Seven Conference) (1947–1955)
1947–48Oklahoma13–97–5T–2nd
1948–49Oklahoma14–109–3T–1st
1949–50Oklahoma12–106–6T–4th
1950–51Oklahoma14–106–64th
1951–52Oklahoma7–174–8T–4th
1952–53Oklahoma8–135–7T–4th
1953–54Oklahoma8–134–86th
1954–55Oklahoma3–181–117th
Oklahoma:200–182 (.524)106–80 (.570)
Total:200–182 (.524)
National champion Postseason invitational champion Conference regular season champion Conference regular season and conference tournament champion Division regular season champion Division regular season and conference tournament champion Conference tournament champion

See also

External links