Career
Pinholster most notably coached at from 1956 to 1966. Basketball
He compiled a 181–67 record as a basketball coach. Pinholster developed the wheel offense, an offensive strategy developed in the late 1950s.
lieutenant is a kind of continuity offense in which players move around in a circular pattern to create good scoring opportunities.
The wheel offense is a popular offensive play, frequently used by teams from middle school to college levels because it can effectively work against any defense, including zone defense and man-to-man defense. He is one proposed inventor for the foul-line huddle.
His teams were notable for their defense. He wrote several books on the sport, including Coach"s Guide to Modern Basketball Defense.
He coached the United States men"s national basketball team including a gold medal finish at the 1963 Pan American Games and fourth place finish in the 1963 International Basketball Federation World Championship.
The 1963 team included Willis Reed. Former coach Gary Colson once said "Garland Pinholster, for a period of time, was the best coach in the United States."
After his days at Oglethorpe, he became one of Atlanta"s most successful business mentor He then entered politics.
Pinholster became chairman of the minority caucus of the Georgia House of Representatives and was elected to the Georgia State Board of Transportation.