NABC Contact: Rick Leddy, Senior Director of Communications
203-815-2437 | ricknabc@gmail.com
 
MINNEAPOLIS NORTH HIGH SCHOOL COACH LARRY MCKENZIE TO RECEIVE
NABC GUARDIANS OF THE GAME AWARD FOR EDUCATION
APRIL 7 IN MINNEAPOLIS
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - (March 20, 2019) - Long-time community and youth advocate Larry McKenzie, the boys' basketball coach at Minneapolis North High School, is the recipient of the 2019 Guardians of the Game Pillar Award for Education from the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC).
He will receive the award on Sunday, April 7, at the AT&T NABC Guardians of the Game Awards Show at the Main Auditorium of the Minneapolis Convention Center.  The show, which begins at 6:30 p.m. CT, is held during the annual NABC Convention in conjunction with the NCAA Division I Men's Final Four. The Guardians of the Game Pillar Awards are presented annually for advocacy, education, leadership and service, the four core values of the NABC.
The show will be broadcast live on Stadium (https://watchstadium.com).
2019 Convention logo
As a high school coach, McKenzie is the first coach to win four consecutive state titles in the 100-year history of Minnesota boys' basketball with his team at Minneapolis Patrick Henry. He added to his legacy most recently as the first coach to lead two schools to multiple state titles, as his Minneapolis North Polar Bears have won two straight state championships.
The recipient of numerous coach of the year awards, including section and region coach of the year and Class AAA coach of the year, McKenzie became the first African-American coach to be inducted into the Minnesota Boys Basketball Hall of Fame, earning the honor in 2014.
McKenzie has set the mission for his program to develop a foundation for a championship program and to use basketball as a tool to empower young men to be champions in the classroom, in their families, and their communities. The coach, educator and author utilizes three key elements: athletic development, academic development and moral growth.
His advocacy for youth has earned McKenzie significant recognition away from the court. In 2018, he was among 24 selected as a recipient of a Bush Fellowship, presented to individuals driven to improve their communities in Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and the 23 Native nations that share the same geography.
Bush Fellows receive up to $100,000 to pursue the education and experiences they need to become more effective, agile leaders. Honored in the category of public and societal benefit, McKenzie intends to use the fellowship to complete a master's in athletic leadership and development and seek executive leadership training.
About the National Association of Basketball Coaches
Located in Kansas City, MO, the NABC was founded in 1927 by Forrest "Phog" Allen, the legendary basketball coach at the University of Kansas.  Allen, a student of James Naismith, the inventor of basketball, organized coaches into this collective group to serve as Guardians of the Game.  The NABC currently has nearly 5,000 members consisting primarily of university and college men's basketball coaches.  All members of the NABC are expected to uphold the core values of being a Guardian of the Game by bringing attention to the positive aspects of the sport of basketball and the role coaches play in the academic and athletic lives of today's student-athletes.  The four core values of being a Guardian of the Game are advocacy, leadership, service and education.  Additional information about the NABC, its programs and membership, can be found at http://www.nabc.org/.
NHSBCA

Written by NHSBCA