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Men's Basketball Coaching Records
MEN’S BASKETBALL COACHING RECORDS Overall Coaching Records 2 NCAA Division I Coaching Records 4 Coaching Honors 31 Division II Coaching Records 36 Division III Coaching Records 39 ALL-DIVISIONS COACHING RECORDS Some of the won-lost records included in this coaches section Coach (Alma Mater), Schools, Tenure Yrs. WonLost Pct. have been adjusted because of action by the NCAA Committee 26. Thad Matta (Butler 1990) Butler 2001, Xavier 15 401 125 .762 on Infractions to forfeit or vacate particular regular-season 2002-04, Ohio St. 2005-15* games or vacate particular NCAA tournament games. 27. Torchy Clark (Marquette 1951) UCF 1970-83 14 268 84 .761 28. Vic Bubas (North Carolina St. 1951) Duke 10 213 67 .761 1960-69 COACHES BY WINNING PERCENT- 29. Ron Niekamp (Miami (OH) 1972) Findlay 26 589 185 .761 1986-11 AGE 30. Ray Harper (Ky. Wesleyan 1985) Ky. 15 316 99 .761 Wesleyan 1997-05, Oklahoma City 2006- (This list includes all coaches with a minimum 10 head coaching 08, Western Ky. 2012-15* Seasons at NCAA schools regardless of classification.) 31. Mike Jones (Mississippi Col. 1975) Mississippi 16 330 104 .760 Col. 1989-02, 07-08 32. Lucias Mitchell (Jackson St. 1956) Alabama 15 325 103 .759 Coach (Alma Mater), Schools, Tenure Yrs. WonLost Pct. St. 1964-67, Kentucky St. 1968-75, Norfolk 1. Jim Crutchfield (West Virginia 1978) West 11 300 53 .850 St. 1979-81 Liberty 2005-15* 33. Harry Fisher (Columbia 1905) Fordham 1905, 16 189 60 .759 2. Clair Bee (Waynesburg 1925) Rider 1929-31, 21 412 88 .824 Columbia 1907, Army West Point 1907, LIU Brooklyn 1932-43, 46-51 Columbia 1908-10, St. -
North Carolina Basketball Former Head Coach Dean Smith
2001-2002 NORTH CAROLINA BASKETBALL FORMER HEAD COACH DEAN SMITH When ESPN’s award-winning Sports Century program in at least one of the two major polls four times (1982, selected the greatest coaches of the 20th Century, it came 1984, 1993 and 1994). to no surprise that Carolina basketball coach Dean Smith • Smith’s teams were also the dominant force in the was among the top seven of alltime. Smith joined other Atlantic Coast Conference. The Tar Heels under Smith had legends Red Auerbach, Bear Bryant, George Halas, Vince a record of 364-136 in ACC regular-season play, a winning Lombardi, John McGraw and John Wooden as the preem- percentage of .728. inent coaches in sports history. • The Tar Heels finished at least third in the ACC regu- Smith’s tenure as Carolina basketball coach from 1960- lar-season standings for 33 successive seasons. In that 97 is a record of remarkable consistency. In 36 seasons at span, Carolina finished first 17 times, second 11 times and UNC, Smith’s teams had a record of 879-254. His teams third five times. won more games than those of any other college coach in • In 36 years of ACC competition, Smith’s teams fin- history. ished in the conference’s upper division all but one time. However, that’s only the beginning of what his UNC That was in 1964, when UNC was fifth and had its only teams achieved. losing record in ACC regular-season play under Smith at • Under Smith, the Tar Heels won at least 20 games for 6-8. -
The Tipoff (Jan. 2012)
BASKETBALL TIMES Visit: www.usbwa.com January 2012 VOLUME 49, NO. 2 Time tells us that history will keep taking twists and turns RALEIGH, N.C. – In college basketball and sports- lar knockout in the conso- writing, you never know how things will turn out. lation game the next night. I certainly had no idea back in March 1966, before I Terry Holland remembers had a serious inkling about going into journalism or even fellow Davidson assistant a driver’s license. I caught a ride with an equally obsessed Warren Mitchell telling Dri- Lenox Rawlings friend and traveled to Reynolds Coliseum for the NCAA esell that he needed another East Regional, a Friday-Saturday whirlwind that propelled timeout. Lefty responded, Winston-Salem Journal Duke toward the Final Four. more or less: “Timeout, The regional unfolded on N.C. State’s gleaming heck. I’m so embarrassed I wood floor under an I-beam skeleton obscured by the fog would like to crawl under President of cigarette smoke. The smoke grew thicker by the hour, the floor. Let that clock run competing for sensory attention with popcorn smells from and let’s get our butts out of machines about 40 feet off the court. here.” Lefty Driesell, the flamboyant young Davidson coach, In the final, Duke coach Vic Bubas rode strong per- black starters, beat the all-white outfit nicknamed “Rupp’s stomped his big feet and flapped his jaws. The Saint Jo- formances from Bob Verga (the outstanding player with Runts.” Black players had decided several earlier champi- seph’s Hawk flapped its wings incessantly – such a tough 21 points on 10-for-13 shooting), Jack Marin, Mike Lewis onships, with Bill Russell and K.C. -
Terrapinbasketball
This is TERRAPINBASKETBALL COACHING STAFF 34 • Coaching Staff Coaching Staff • 35 2007-08 MARYLAND Men’s BasketBALL 2002 NCAA CHAMPIONS 2004 ACC CHAMPIONS GARY WILLIAMS HEAD COACh • MARYLANd ‘68 19TH SEASON AT MARYLAND (378-200, .654) 30TH SEASON OVERALL (585-328, .641) Since returning to the College Park campus in 1989, Gary Williams (Maryland ’68) has led his alma mater’s basketball program from a period of troubled times to an era of national prominence. With 12 NCAA Tournament berths in the last 14 seasons, seven Sweet Sixteen appearances, a pair of consecutive Final Four showings, and the 2002 national championship – the first of its kind in Maryland basketball history – Williams and his staff have literally forged what is now more than a decade of dominance in college basketball’s most storied and competitive conference. Now, with 378 victories as Maryland’s head coach, Williams is the school’s Terrapins all-time winningest head coach, eclipsing the mark of former Terp mentor Charles “Lefty” Driesell, who amassed 348 victories in 17 seasons from 1969-70 to 1985-86. The Terrapins have averaged 23.0 wins per year since the 1994-95 season. With 585 career victories in 29 seasons overall, Williams is the seventh-winningest active head coach in NCAA Division I men’s basketball. Williams was heralded as the national and ACC Coach of the Year during the Terps’ 2002 championship run. He is one of just 12 active coaches in America to boast a national title and one of only three in the conference. He has become the third-winningest coach in ACC history after transforming the Maryland program into one of the nation’s most formidable, and building a Baltimore-D.C. -
Coaching Record S
Coa_MBB01_sp 11/20/00 4:48 PM Page 121 Coaching Records All-Division Coaching Records .. .1 2 2 Division I Coaching Records. .1 2 3 Division II Coaching Records. .1 3 8 Division III Coaching Records .. .1 4 0 Coach_MBKB01 11/20/00 3:57 PM Page 122 12 2 ALL-DIVISION COACHING RECORDS All-Division Coaching Records Some of the won-lost records included in this coaches’ section have been Coach (Alma Mater), Teams Coached, Tenure Yrs . Wo n Lo s t Pc t . adjusted because of action by the NCAA Council or the NCAA Executive 41 . Jim Calhoun (American Int’l 1968) Northeastern 1973-86, Connecticut 87-2000*.. 28 57 7 26 7 .6 8 4 Committee to forfeit particular regular-season games or vacate particular 42 . Jim Boeheim (Syracuse 1966) Syracuse 1977-2000*.. 24 57 5 19 9 .7 4 3 NCAA Tournament games. 43 . Mike Krzyzewski (Army 1969) Army 1976-80, Duke 81 - 2 0 0 0 *. 25 57 1 21 9 .7 2 3 43 . Fred Hobdy (Grambling 1949) Grambling 1957-86 .. 30 57 1 28 7 .6 6 6 Coaches With At Least 500 45 . Jim Smith (Marquette 1956) St. John’s (Minn.) 1965-2000* 36 56 9 38 0 .6 0 0 46 . Eldon Miller (Wittenberg 1961) Wittenberg 1963-70, Ca r eer Win s Western Mich. 71-76, Ohio St. 77-86, Northern Iowa 87 - 9 8. 36 56 8 41 9 .5 7 5 (This list includes all coaches who have won at least 500 games regardless of classifica- 47 . Gary Colson (David Lipscomb 1956) Valdosta St. -
Individual Records
INDIVIDUAL RECORDS INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Scoring Game 1. 100 Frank Selvy, Furman vs. Newberry Jan. 13, 1954 2. 67 Darrell Floyd, Furman vs. Morehead State Jan. 22, 1955 3. 66 Jay Handlan, Washington & Lee vs. Furman Feb. 24, 1951 4. 63 Frank Selvy, Furman vs. Mercer Feb. 11, 1953 5. 62 Darrell Floyd, Furman vs. The Citadel Jan. 14, 1956 NTRODUCTION I 6. 58 Frank Selvy, Furman vs. Wofford Feb. 23, 1954 7. 56 Darrell Floyd, Furman vs. Clemson Feb. 24, 1955 8. 56 Stan Davis, Appalachian St. vs. Carson-Newman Jan. 24, 1974 9. 55 Skip Henderson, Marshall vs. The Citadel Mar. 4, 1988 10. 54 Rod Hundley, West Virginia vs. Furman Jan. 5, 1957 Season 1. 1,209 Frank Selvy, Furman 1953-54 2. 946 Darrell Floyd, Furman 1955-56 3. 931 Stephen Curry, Davidson 2007-08 ONFERENCE C 4. 908 Jerry West, West Virginia 1959-60 5. 903 Jerry West, West Virginia 1958-59 ERN H 6. 897 Darrell Floyd, Furman 1954-55 7. 855 Bob McCurdy, Richmond 1974-75 OUT S 8. 820 Jason Conley, VMI 2001-02 9. 804 Skip Henderson, Marshall 1987-88 10. 798 Rod Hundley, West Virginia 1955-56 Career Furman’s Frank Selvy scored an NCAA-record 100 points 1. 2,574 Skip Henderson, Marshall 1983-88 2. 2,538 Frank Selvy, Furman 1951-54 against Newberry on Feb. 13, 1954. 3. 2,483 John Gerdy, Davidson 1975-79 Field Goals Made ROFILES4. 2,423 Gay Elmore, VMI 1983-87 Game P 5. 2,332 John Taft, Marshall 1987-91 1. 41 Frank Selvy, Furman vs. -
Men's Basketball Decade Info 1910 Marshall Series Began 1912-13
Men’s Basketball Decade Info 1910 Marshall series began 1912-13 Beckleheimer NOTE Beckleheimer was a three sport letterwinner at Morris Harvey College. Possibly the first in school history. 1913-14 5-3 Wesley Alderman ROSTER C. Fulton, Taylor, B. Fulton, Jack Latterner, Beckelheimer, Bolden, Coon HIGHLIGHTED OPPONENT Played Marshall, (19-42). NOTE According to the 1914 Yearbook: “Latterner best basketball man in the state” PHOTO Team photo: 1914 Yearbook, pg. 107 flickr.com UC sports archives 1917-18 8-2 Herman Beckleheimer ROSTER Golden Land, Walter Walker HIGHLIGHTED OPPONENT Swept Marshall 1918-19 ROSTER Watson Haws, Rollin Withrow, Golden Land, Walter Walker 1919-20 11-10 W.W. Lovell ROSTER Watson Haws 188 points Golden Land Hollis Westfall Harvey Fife Rollin Withrow Jones, Cano, Hansford, Lambert, Lantz, Thompson, Bivins NOTE Played first full college schedule. (Previous to this season, opponents were a mix from colleges, high schools and independent teams.) 1920-21 8-4 E.M. “Brownie” Fulton ROSTER Land, Watson Haws, Lantz, Arthur Rezzonico, Hollis Westfall, Coon HIGHLIGHTED OPPONENT Won two out of three vs. Marshall, (25-21, 33-16, 21-29) 1921-22 5-9 Beckleheimer ROSTER Watson Haws, Lantz, Coon, Fife, Plymale, Hollis Westfall, Shannon, Sayre, Delaney HIGHLIGHTED OPPONENT Played Virginia Tech, (22-34) PHOTO Team photo: The Lamp, May 1972, pg. 7 Watson Haws: The Lamp, May 1972, front cover 1922-23 4-11 Beckleheimer ROSTER H.C. Lantz, Westfall, Rezzonico, Leman, Hager, Delaney, Chard, Jones, Green. PHOTO Team photo: 1923 Yearbook, pg. 107 Individual photos: 1923 Yearbook, pg. 109 1923-24 ROSTER Lantz, Rezzonico, Hager, King, Chard, Chapman NOTE West Virginia Conference first year, Morris Harvey College one of three charter members. -
2013-14 Men's Basketball Records Book
Award Winners Division I Consensus All-America Selections .................................................... 2 Division I Academic All-Americans By School ..................................................... 8 Division I Player of the Year ..................... 10 Divisions II and III Players of the Year ................................................... 12 Divisions II and III First-Team All-Americans by School ....................... 13 Divisions II and III Academic All-Americans by School ....................... 15 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners by School................................... 17 2 2013-14 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL RECORDS - DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS Division I Consensus All-America Selections 1917 1930 By Season Clyde Alwood, Illinois; Cyril Haas, Princeton; George Charley Hyatt, Pittsburgh; Branch McCracken, Indiana; Hjelte, California; Orson Kinney, Yale; Harold Olsen, Charles Murphy, Purdue; John Thompson, Montana 1905 Wisconsin; F.I. Reynolds, Kansas St.; Francis Stadsvold, St.; Frank Ward, Montana St.; John Wooden, Purdue. Oliver deGray Vanderbilt, Princeton; Harry Fisher, Minnesota; Charles Taft, Yale; Ray Woods, Illinois; Harry Young, Wash. & Lee. 1931 Columbia; Marcus Hurley, Columbia; Willard Hyatt, Wes Fesler, Ohio St.; George Gregory, Columbia; Joe Yale; Gilmore Kinney, Yale; C.D. McLees, Wisconsin; 1918 Reiff, Northwestern; Elwood Romney, BYU; John James Ozanne, Chicago; Walter Runge, Colgate; Chris Earl Anderson, Illinois; William Chandler, Wisconsin; Wooden, Purdue. Steinmetz, Wisconsin; -
Aw a Rd Wi Nners
Awar MBKB02 10/21/02 10:19 AM Page 107 Awa r d Win n e r s Division I Consensus All-American Selections.. .1 0 8 Division I Academic All-Americans By Tea m. .1 1 3 Division I Player of the Yea r .. .1 1 4 Divisions II and III Fi r s t - Te a m All-Americans By Tea m. .1 1 6 Divisions II and III Ac a d e m i c All-Americans By Tea m. .1 1 8 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners By Tea m .. .1 1 9 Awar MBKB02 10/21/02 10:19 AM Page 108 10 8 DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS Division I Consensus All-America Selections Second Tea m —R o b e r t Doll, Colorado; Wil f re d Un r uh, Bradley, 6-4, Toulon, Ill.; Bill Sharman, Southern By Season Do e rn e r , Evansville; Donald Burness, Stanford; George Ca l i f o r nia, 6-2, Porte r ville, Calif. Mu n r oe, Dartmouth; Stan Modzelewski, Rhode Island; Second Tea m —Charles Cooper, Duquesne; Don 192 9 John Mandic, Oregon St. Lofgran, San Francisco; Kevin O’Shea, Notre Dame; Don Charley Hyatt, Pittsburgh; Joe Schaaf, Pennsylvania; Rehfeldt, Wisconsin; Sherman White, Long Island. Charles Murphy, Purdue; Ver n Corbin, California; Thomas 1943 Ch u r chill, Oklahoma; John Thompson, Montana St. First Te a m— A n d rew Phillip, Illinois; Georg e 1951 193 0 Se n e s k y , St. Joseph’s; Ken Sailors, Wyoming; Harry Boy- First Tea m —Bill Mlkvy, Temple, 6-4, Palmerton, Pa.; ko f f, St. -
2010-11 NCAA Men's Basketball Records
Award Winners Division I Consensus All-America Selections .................................................... 2 Division I Academic All-Americans By Team ........................................................ 8 Division I Player of the Year ..................... 10 Divisions II and III Players of the Year ................................................... 12 Divisions II and III First-Team All-Americans By Team .......................... 13 Divisions II and III Academic All-Americans By Team .......................... 15 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners By Team ...................................... 16 2 Division I Consensus All-America Selections Division I Consensus All-America Selections 1917 1930 By Season Clyde Alwood, Illinois; Cyril Haas, Princeton; George Charley Hyatt, Pittsburgh; Branch McCracken, Indiana; Hjelte, California; Orson Kinney, Yale; Harold Olsen, Charles Murphy, Purdue; John Thompson, Montana 1905 Wisconsin; F.I. Reynolds, Kansas St.; Francis Stadsvold, St.; Frank Ward, Montana St.; John Wooden, Purdue. Oliver deGray Vanderbilt, Princeton; Harry Fisher, Minnesota; Charles Taft, Yale; Ray Woods, Illinois; Harry Young, Wash. & Lee. 1931 Columbia; Marcus Hurley, Columbia; Willard Hyatt, Wes Fesler, Ohio St.; George Gregory, Columbia; Joe Yale; Gilmore Kinney, Yale; C.D. McLees, Wisconsin; 1918 Reiff, Northwestern; Elwood Romney, BYU; John James Ozanne, Chicago; Walter Runge, Colgate; Chris Earl Anderson, Illinois; William Chandler, Wisconsin; Wooden, Purdue. Steinmetz, Wisconsin; George Tuck, Minnesota. Harold -
The George-Anne Student Media
Georgia Southern University Digital Commons@Georgia Southern The George-Anne Student Media 2-21-1963 The George-Anne Georgia Southern University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/george-anne Part of the Higher Education Commons Recommended Citation Georgia Southern University, "The George-Anne" (1963). The George-Anne. 2497. https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/george-anne/2497 This newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Media at Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. It has been accepted for inclusion in The George-Anne by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Presently Enrolled Stu- dents—Apply For Next Year’s Dorm Room Anne By March 1 Published By Students of Georgia Southern College VOLUME 36 STATESBORO, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1963 NUMBER 17 ’De Land ’O Cotton’ Holds Second Performance Tonight; Starts 8:15 Math Division Final Show Is Places Exhibit In Williams Center Tomorrow Night The curtain goes up tonight for the second time The Math department of GSC has placed an exhibit concern- on Phi Mu Alpha’s “De Land of Cotton” minstrel show ing the various aspects of two in McCroan Auditorium at 8:15 p.m., according to Tom and three dimensional mathem- Fouche, director. atics in the lobby of the stu- Fouche added that this is the Several selections of dixie- dent center, according to Mr. second edition of the national land jazz wil be played by the Norman Wells, professor of “Dixieland Band.” mathematics at GSC. honorary music fraternity’s pro- The Forward Look duction of music, blackface an- “The Novelty Band,” Phi Mii “The primary purpose of this tics, and fun, which was first Alpha’s hit of last year’s show, GSC’s department of mathematics placed a National Aeronautics and Space Administration ex- exhibit is to interest talented initiated last spring quarter, and will also perform with several students who have not selected is now an annual event. -
Xavier University Newswire
Xavier University Exhibit All Xavier Student Newspapers Xavier Student Newspapers 1966-12-16 Xavier University Newswire Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio) Follow this and additional works at: https://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/student_newspaper Recommended Citation Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio), "Xavier University Newswire" (1966). All Xavier Student Newspapers. 2194. https://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/student_newspaper/2194 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Xavier Student Newspapers at Exhibit. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Xavier Student Newspapers by an authorized administrator of Exhibit. For more information, please contact [email protected]. - -· ~ 1.·.:.r ·.•.• ···• • e- l?llLS CINCINNATI, 01110, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1966 Ten Cents 20 ~ \'ol. LI, No. 10 O'Mara Discusses Ca1npus Radical; Seeks '~Fu11dan1ental'' Social Change· By ~UKE HENSON, News Associate Editor mental change; the liberal choos• "The Place of the Radical in the Academic CommunityH es lo r cm a i n in the present was the subject of a talk Monday at 1 :30 in the Univer framework. sity Center. Mr. Phillip O'.Mara, professor of English at "A liberal begins veering to• 'l'ougaloo College, Tougaloo. Miss., has an extensive past ward rallicalism when he re;ilizc1 history in radical movements, including Cursillo, demon &hat human values are more een• strations at Notre Dame, the 1963 March on Washington tral to existence than econom' and membership in the Students for a Democratic Society. values.'' "The academic rndical w i l1 lie repeatedly insisted on the look at the world from a consis- applying." The radical must look necessity or creating a new Corna tent perspective," he slated, "and at himselC and his ideas.