Robert L. "Bob" Douglas Inducted in 1991

Contributor Inducted in 1991
Robert Bob Douglass Robert L.
Photo credit: (Naismith HOF)
Bob Douglas nicknamed the "Father of Black Professional Basketball",  owned and coached the Rens from 1923 to 1949, guiding them to a 2,318-381 record (.859).  The Rens barnstormed throughout the United States, mostly in the Midwest, and played any team that would schedule them, black or white. Traveling as far as 200 miles for a game, they often slept on the bus and ate cold meals; they were barred from many hotels and restaurants by Jim Crow laws and norms of racial discrimination which prevailed in the northern United States at the time. The Rens soon became a dominant team, winning as many as 88 consecutive games during the 1932–33 season. In the twenties and early thirties, their matches with the Original Celtics were basketball's greatest gate attraction. At the World Professional Basketball Tournament, they won in 1939, lost to the eventual champion Harlem Globetrotters in 1940, and finished second to the National Basketball League Champion Minneapolis Lakers in 1948