William Curry "Billy" Keller (born August 30, 1947) is an American retired professional basketball player.
High school career
Billy Keller, the 5'10" Indianapolis, Indiana. He was named Indiana's Mr. Basketball his Senior year.
College career
Keller attended Rick Mount and fellow Senior and co-captain Herm Gilliam, he led the Boilermakers to a Big Ten Conference Title and to the school's first NCAA Tournament appearance, making it to the NCAA Finals game in 1969. In 75 games, "Mr. Hustle" averaged 14.1 points game throughout his career and tallied a total of 1,056 points. He received the Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award his Senior year, which is given to the nation's best player under 6 feet (1.8 m). After his Senior season at Purdue, he participated in the Kentucky-Indiana All-Star Game, where he first played with a three-point line. Billy went 6 for 7 beyond the arc and discovered his specialty as a three-point shooter in the next level (the NCAA didn't have a standard three-point line until 1986-87 while the ABA did throughout its existence from 1967–76).
Professional career
Billy was the 2nd pick in the 7th round of the ABA Championships in '70, '72 and '73 and ABA Final appearances in '69 and '75. Keller would become one of the most successful shooters in ABA history, making 506 three-point field goals during his seven-year career (second in league history behind only Louie Dampier's 794) while leading the league in free throw percentage two times in 1973 and 1976. He set an ABA Playoffs record going 30-30 from the free throw line in the 1974-1975 season. He finished his 7 year ABA career averaging 11.8 points a game, with a .456 field goal percentage and scoring a total of 6,588 points.
Coaching career
Four years after his career in the ABA ended, Bill served as an assistant coach at his alma mater during the 1979-1980 under second year head coach, Lee Rose. He helped lead Purdue to an overall record of 23-10, including an NCAA Final Four appearance.
In 1978, the Indiana Basketball Coaches Association (IBCA) awarded Keller the Joe Boland Award for outstanding contributions to the youth of Indiana.[1]
Following the NCAA Final Four appearance, Bill returned to his hometown of Indianapolis and was named as the Head Basketball Coach at the University of Indianapolis, replacing Bill Bright; Keller was the head coach from 1980–81 through the 1986-87 seasons.
Head coaching record
Season
|
Team
|
Overall
|
Conference
|
Standing
|
Postseason
|
Indianapolis (Great Lakes Valley Conference) (1980–1987)
|
1980–81
|
Indianapolis
|
13-14
|
3-5
|
T-5th
|
None
|
1981–82
|
Indianapolis
|
10-16
|
3-9
|
T-5th
|
None
|
1982–83
|
Indianapolis
|
11-15
|
6-6
|
3rd
|
None
|
1983–84
|
Indianapolis
|
11-17
|
5-7
|
4th
|
none
|
1984–85
|
Indianapolis
|
13-15
|
5-9
|
T-6th
|
none
|
1985–86
|
Indianapolis
|
15-12
|
7-9
|
T-5th
|
none
|
1986–87
|
Indianapolis
|
10-17
|
5-11
|
T-7th
|
none
|
Indianapolis:
|
83-106 (.439)
|
34-56 (.378)
|
|
Total:
|
83-106 (.439)
|
|
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
|
In 1992, Keller was elected to the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame. He currently runs a series of basketball camps in his home state.
References
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^ https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/62096268/
External links
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Career stats
-
Profile at Remember the ABA
-
Billy Keller Camps
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