Vince Cazzetta
Vincent C. Cazzetta (September 24, 1925 – May 4, 2005) was an American basketball coach and head coach of the Pittsburgh Pipers during the 1967–68 season, in which they won the American Basketball Association (ABA) championship. He was also one of the most successful head coaches in Seattle University's men's basketball history
Cazzetta in the 1958–59 season. | |
Personal information | |
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Born | New Britain, Connecticut | September 24, 1925
Died | May 4, 2005 79) Hartford, Connecticut | (aged
Career information | |
High school | New Britain (New Britain, Connecticut) |
College | Bridgeport |
Career history | |
As coach: | |
1956–1958 | Seattle (assistant) |
1958–1963 | Seattle |
1963–1967 | Rhode Island (assistant) |
1967–1968 | Pittsburgh Pipers |
Career highlights and awards | |
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Cazzetta was head coach at Seattle from 1959 through 1963. He ranked second in school history with a .711 winning percentage and 96 wins. He resigned as coach with nine games left in the 1963 season after a dispute with the athletic director.[1]
Cazzetta moved on to become an assistant coach at the University of Rhode Island.[2]
Cazzetta became head coach of the fledgling Pittsburgh Pipers during the ABA's first season. He made major changes to the roster throughout the season; at the end of the season the team only had four players who had been there at the start of the season. During the season the Pipers had winning streaks of 15 and 12 games and won 18 out of 19 games at one point.[3] The Pipers won the 1968 ABA Championship.
Cazzetta was the ABA's Coach of the Year for the 1967–68 season.[4]
Cazzetta resigned as coach of the Pipers after team owners refused to grant him a raise in order to help move his wife and six children, as the franchise was leaving Pittsburgh to become the Minnesota Pipers. (The owners' refusal and move were both mistakes; the team returned to Pittsburgh as the Pipers after only one season in Minnesota.) Cazzetta was replaced as the Pipers' head coach by Jim Harding of LaSalle College.[5]
Cazzetta died in 2005 in Hartford, Connecticut at the age of 79.