Summary

  • Coach Carter's true story about Ken Carter's impact on his basketball team's academics is as inspiring as the movie itself.
  • Despite some creative liberties, Coach Carter accurately portrays the real-life events of Ken Carter's coaching career.
  • Ken Carter's influence extends beyond the basketball court, as his former players achieved academic and career success.

The Coach Carter true story is what helped the sports movie classic reach its iconic status. Starring the iconic Samuel L. Jackson as real-life high school basketball coach Ken Carter, and tells the story of how he changed the lives of the student-athletes on the basketball team at an inner-city high school in Northern California. Almost two decades after its 2005 release, the story of Ken Carter is still ranked as one of the best basketball movies ever made — and the story of the Coach Carter real-life inspiration, Ken Carter, is just as inspiring.

In Coach Carter, Jackson's Ken Carter returns to his former high school, Richmond High, to become the school's basketball coach. Carter has the players sign a contract, promising to keep a strong GPA and adhere to a Code of Conduct. They fail to honor it, so he keeps them off of the court. While Coach Carter has all the trappings of a high school sports movie like Remember The Titans, the message that both the movie and the real Ken Carter taught their students is that sports aren't all that matters.

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Is Coach Carter Based On A True Story?

Ken Carter Was A Real Person, And He Really Did Keep His Players Off The Court

Coach Carter with his players

His decision to lock the gym and forfeit games until the players raised their GPAs was unpopular with the community

The Coach Carter true story is based on Ken Carter, the real-life basketball coach of Richmond High School in Northern California, and almost all of the events Samuel L. Jackson depicted while playing him actually happened. The movie is based on the 1998-1999 season lockout, which made national news. In real life, Carter locked the gym and kept his undefeated basketball team (who inspired fictional students like Jason Lyle, played by Channing Tatum in his debut movie) from competing because they did not honor the academic and behavioral contracts that he had them sign at the beginning of the season.

According to the real-life Ken Carter, the freshman, junior varsity, and varsity teams were all 13-0, which was the best start in school history. His decision to lock the gym and forfeit games until the players raised their GPAs was unpopular with the community, but when it made national news, then California Governor Gray Davis called him a hero and came to the Oilers’ first game after improving their grades.

Ken Carter was heavily involved in the production of the film and made sure that the story was as close to accurate as possible. His involvement in the creative process is what kept the film from having a clichéd happy ending, sticking with a Rocky-like ending where the heroes lose the big game. He wanted to be sure that the film showed a story as close to the truth as possible, making it clear that winning wasn't everything for this team. Aside from a few creative liberties to make the story more cinematic, Carter's perspective on the story was honored.

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How Accurate Is Coach Carter's Story? What Does It Change?

The Movie Told Ken Carter's Story With Relatively Few Changes

The team in Coach Carter

According to the real Ken Carter in an interview with The Chicago Sun-Times, most of the story from the movie is accurate (via MTV). He actually was a former Richmond High School basketball player, setting the scoring record at the school, which his son Damien — who really did withdraw himself from private school to play for the Oilers — went on to break. The 1999 team did get locked out of the gym for poor academic performance during the 1998-1999 season.

The biggest change from the real Coach Carter story is the students.

In fact, it was the national news coverage of the story that inspired this realistic sports movie. He didn't, however, leave the gym locked the entire time, as other sports and classes needed to use the gym. Carter did have some pushback from the parents, his players, and the community for his actions, but his focus on academics proved successful in real life, as well. The graduation rate for student-athletes in Richmond was low, and Carter’s basketball players all graduated during his time as coach from 1997 to 2002.

The biggest change from the real Coach Carter story is the students. Like most movies based on true stories, certain characters were invented to serve the story. None of the students depicted in the movie are actual students that Ken Carter coached during his time at Richmond, other than his own son Damien, played by Robert Ri’chard. The character names and circumstances were made up so as not to embarrass any of basketball coach Ken Carter’s real students with implications of criminal activities.

Coach Carter also only shows Richmond High School as having a varsity basketball team. In reality, they had freshman, junior varsity, and varsity teams, all of which Carter coached during his five years at Richmond High. Finally, Coach Carter changed the varsity Oilers' win record to 16-0 before the lockdown. The team ultimately lost in the second round of their district playoffs instead of the first round of the state tournament.

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What Happened To Coach Carter After The Movie

Ken Carter Became A SlamBall Coach And Olympic Torch Carrier

Samuel L Jackson as Coach Carter

Ken Carter was considered a hero in Richmond after the 1998-1999 season. He continued to coach at Richmond High School until 2002, at which point he left to coach the LA Rumble, a professional SlamBall team. A prime candidate for a sports comedy like Dodgeball, SlamBall is a form of basketball that is played on four trampolines that also has a professional league that originally aired games on Spike TV.

The real Ken Carter also went on to carry the Olympic torch in the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. Coach Carter ends after the team comes back to Richmond High after their loss in the state tournament, showing what became of each student following the movie.

What Coach Carter's Players Are Up To Now

The Richmond High Basketball Team Mostly Went On To Achieve Academic Success

Samuel L Jackson on a basketball court in Coach Carter

In reality, the Coach Carter real-life basketball players all graduated from high school, with many attending college. One of the players from the 1998-1999 season that Carter coached was Courtney Anderson, who became an NFL tight end and played for the Oakland Raiders, the Detroit Lions, and the Atlanta Falcons from 2004 to 2007.

Coach Carter's controversial decision to lock the gym and keep his undefeated team from playing really did change the lives of everyone involved, including his.

Wayne Oliver is another notable member of Coach Carter's Richmond players. He took his basketball skills to the international circuit, playing in a variety of different countries and leagues around the world. When he decided to end his basketball career, Oliver continued to take Coach Carter's teachings to heart, becoming a motivational speaker and even touring alongside his former coach.

After the Coach Carter movie came out, Ken Carter became a motivational speaker and is the founder of the Coach Ken Carter Foundation which, just like in the movie, focuses on improving the lives of BIPOC students through education, training, and mentoring. Coach Carter's controversial decision to lock the gym and keep his undefeated team from playing really did change the lives of everyone involved, including his.

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Where The Real Coach Carter Is Now

Ken Carter Continues To Be An Inspirational Figure

Coach Ken Carter talking to an interviewer

Coach Carter is nearly 20 years old, so what is the real Ken Carter up to after being played by Samuel L. Jackson? Ken Carter is still very much in the full stride of his career having continued his work as a motivational speaker and author since the mid-'00s. He founded a school in Texas in 2009 – the Coach Carter Impact Academy boarding school — of which he is the dean and headmaster. Carter also owns and runs Prime Time Publishing and Prime Time Sports, which offers sports marketing services.

As an author he's released two books, 2005's Coach Carter: My Life and 2012's Yes Ma'am, No Sir: The 12 Essential Steps for Success in Life. He reconnected with former Richmond students in 2018, and one, Wayne Oliver, went on to be an international basketball player after playing under Carter in high school. It seems that Ken Carter, the father and former basketball coach who inspired Coach Carter, continues to be a role model to this day.

In 2018, Ken Carter reunited with several of his former players at Richmond High School where he continued to teach the same values that guided that team years earlier. In speaking at the event (via NBC), Carter shared that

"There were four things we tried to teach these kids. It was accountability, integrity, how to be a great follower before you can ever be a great leader, and it was all about team and family."

What Samuel L. Jackson Said About Bringing Ken Carter To The Screen

The Coach Carter Star Feels A Kinship With The Real-Life Figure

Despite playing larger-than-life roles like Nick Fury in the MCU, the Coach Carter true story makes this role one of Samuel L. Jackson's finest. The actor also seems to have had a strong connection to the story and formed a relationship with the real Carter while preparing for the role. When discussing playing Ken Carter (via MovieWeb), Jackson spoke about the similarities he saw between himself and the real-life basketball coach, saying:

"He believes in education and he believes people should be accountable for things they say they are going to do."

Jackson went on to stress how important it was to see a sports movie that emphasized the value of education for young high school athletes, as so few of them go on to have professional sports careers. Samuel L. Jackson enjoyed participating in a movie with a message he truly believed in, and this passion is apparent in his performance bringing Ken Carter to life in Coach Carter.

Coach Carter
PG-13
Drama
Documentary
sport
Where to Watch

*Availability in US

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Director
Thomas Carter
Release Date
January 14, 2005
Cast
Samuel L. Jackson , Rob Brown , Robert Ri'chard , Rick Gonzalez , Nana Gbewonyo , Antwon Tanner
Runtime
136 minutes