Meac Men's Basketball
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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. -
PAT DELANY Assistant Coach
ORLANDO MAGIC MEDIA TOOLS The Magic’s communications department have a few online and social media tools to assist you in your coverage: *@MAGIC_PR ON TWITTER: Please follow @Magic_PR, which will have news, stats, in-game notes, injury updates, press releases and more about the Orlando Magic. *@MAGIC_MEDIAINFO ON TWITTER (MEDIA ONLY-protected): Please follow @ Magic_MediaInfo, which is media only and protected. This is strictly used for updated schedules and media availability times. Orlando Magic on-site communications contacts: Joel Glass Chief Communications Officer (407) 491-4826 (cell) [email protected] Owen Sanborn Communications (602) 505-4432 (cell) [email protected] About the Orlando Magic Orlando’s NBA franchise since 1989, the Magic’s mission is to be world champions on and off the court, delivering legendary moments every step of the way. Under the DeVos family’s ownership, the Magic have seen great success in a relatively short history, winning six division championships (1995, 1996, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2019) with seven 50-plus win seasons and capturing the Eastern Conference title in 1995 and 2009. Off the court, on an annual basis, the Orlando Magic gives more than $2 million to the local community by way of sponsorships of events, donated tickets, autographed merchandise and grants. Orlando Magic community relations programs impact an estimated 100,000 kids each year, while a Magic staff-wide initiative provides more than 7,000 volunteer hours annually. In addition, the Orlando Magic Youth Foundation (OMYF) which serves at-risk youth, has distributed more than $24 million to local nonprofit community organizations over the last 29 years.The Magic’s other entities include the team’s NBA G League affiliate, the Lakeland Magic, which began play in the 2017-18 season in nearby Lakeland, Fla.; the Orlando Solar Bears of the ECHL, which serves as the affiliate to the NHL’s Tampa Bay Lightning; and Magic Gaming is competing in the second season of the NBA 2K League. -
2013-14 Hampton University Men's Basketball
Men’s Basketball Quick Facts Location ........................................................................................... Hampton, Va. Enrollment ......................................................................................................4,768 2013-14 Hampton University Conference ......................................................................Mid-Eastern Athletic ..................................................................................NCAA Division I Arena ................................................................Hampton Convocation Center Men’s Basketball AffiliationNickname .................................................................................................... Pirates President .........................................................................Dr. William R. Harvey Athletic Director ................................................................ Novelle Dickenson Game #20 - January 27, 2014 Hampton at South Carolina State Head Coach ............................................................................ Edward Joyner, Jr. Sports Information Director • Maurice Williams • Men’s Basketball Contact Record at Hampton .................................................................................... 73-75 [email protected] • Office (757) 727-5757 Hampton (9-10, 4-2 MEAC) vs. 2013-13 Men’s Basketball South Carolina State (7-12, 3-3 MEAC) Schedule and Results S-H-M Memorial Center • Orangeburg, S.C. Monday, January 27, 2014 • 7:30 PM Date Opponent Time/Result Record -
Louisville Cardinals (2-0, 1-0 ACC) Vs. Indiana State Sycamores (0-1)
Louisville Basketball Quick Facts Location Louisville, Ky. 40292 Founded / Enrollment 1798 / 22,000 Nickname / Colors Cardinals / Red & Black TOUGH. TOGETHER. UNBREAKABLE. Conference Atlantic Coast 1980, 1986 NCAA Champions 8 NCAA Final Fours 39 NCAA Tournament Appearances Home Court KFC Yum! Center (22,090) Sports Information University of Louisville Louisville, KY 40292 www.GoCards.com President Dr. Neeli Bendapudi Phone: (502) 852-6581 email: [email protected] Twitter/Instagram: @LouisvilleMBB Vice President/Director of Athletics Vince Tyra Head Coach Chris Mack (Xavier ‘92) Louisville Cardinals (2-0, 1-0 ACC) UofL Record 22-14 (second year) vs. Indiana State Sycamores (0-1) Overall Record 237-111 (11th year) Assistant Coach Luke Murray (Fairfield ‘07) Wednesday, Nov. 13 8:10 p.m. ET KFC Yum! Center Louisville, Ky. Assistant Coach Mike Pegues (Delaware ‘00) Assistant Coach Dino Gaudio (Ohio U. ’81) PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS Dir. of Basketball Operations Kahil Fennell (Redlands ‘04) Louisville (2-0, 1-0 ACC) Ht. Wt. Yr. PPG RPG Hometown All-Time Record 1,724-926 (106th yr.) F 24 Dwayne SUTTON 6-5 220 Sr. 9.0 4.0 Louisville, Ky. (does not include 123-3 record vacated by NCAA) F 33 Jordan NWORA 6-8 225 Jr. 22.0 9.0 Buffalo, N.Y. All-Time NCAA Tournament Record 61-40 C 23 Steven ENOCH 6-10 255 Sr. 14.0 13.0 Norwalk, Conn. (39 Appearances, 8 Final Fours, 2 NCAA Titles - ‘80, ‘86) G 2 Darius PERRY 6-2 195 Jr. 6.0 4.0 Marietta, Ga. Important Phone Numbers G 30 Ryan McMAHON 6-0 185 Sr. -
University of Cincinnati News Record. Thursday, January 26, 1967. Vol
State· Affiliation Proposed; ,UC: To Benefit Financially by Peter Franklin "The UC students.would be bene- fitted because of Iower fees coup- A plan proposin-g state affilia- led' with broader graduate and tion for UC has 'received the sup- professional offerings. The bene- port of the Ohio Board of Regents. fit to' the University would come The University would continue I from the acquisition ,of a broader under local control and retain its fina~cial base without the loss of' municipal status, but the accept- local ties and support." ance of the- proposal would result Dr.: Langsam explained that in greatly expanded financial aid ' "the City of Cincinnati would reap or the University. benefit from the proposal because l:owerTu.itlonFees of \ the lower instructional fees The most immediate benefit. to made available to its citizens as . ,,', . i '. .~'i 1...b .•...;;0. i " 'U\e uc student would be a drop in well as the millions of new -dollars that would flow into the. city ec- ,ordie Beats AII-Ameri~ci1" es:JtO?M~~~;sa~:6~iOcr.i~~i~~n.a:~:onomy., The city also would bene- r- G ,-, " . \i ~~- ~~ commenting on the proposed - fit from having a University that _ --"" " " ....• . •..•• plan Dr. Walter G. Langsam, UC was - better able to respond to f '" .. - '._, .' . ': '.~ . President, explained that the plan community. needs for 'expanded Later Drops No ..2..Lou. vOre ,. for state affiliation would-benefit and newprograms." , the students, the university, the "The state itself also would by Mike Kelly city and -the state. benefit because it means imple- University of Louisville's Cardi- menting the Regents' master plan nals could, take a tip from the in Southwestern Ohio at consider- Pinkerton police agency: the ,way F~iday/s Concert ably less expense than the· es- to cover Gordie Smith is to put tablishment of a new state uni- three men on him. -
The Athlete, January 1990 Kentucky High School Athletic Association
Eastern Kentucky University Encompass The Athlete Kentucky High School Athletic Association 1-1-1990 The Athlete, January 1990 Kentucky High School Athletic Association Follow this and additional works at: http://encompass.eku.edu/athlete Recommended Citation Kentucky High School Athletic Association, "The Athlete, January 1990" (1990). The Athlete. Book 356. http://encompass.eku.edu/athlete/356 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Kentucky High School Athletic Association at Encompass. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Athlete by an authorized administrator of Encompass. For more information, please contact [email protected]. January, 1990 7^\ •V* Volume L, No. 6 .\ n"* >. ^k^ ^^J t V % % Official Publication of The Kentucky High School aft*~— Athletic Association Member of National Federation of Stale High School Associalions VIEWPOINTS At What Cost Is Victory In Athletics? by Jim Watkins Win — pressure; victory — pressure; choose — pressure; practice, practice, practice — pressure. Sound familiar? These are the words and ideas that we are preaching to our high school athletes. Today, high school sports are BIG dollar productions. Victory and winning teams mean dollars for the athletic department, new uniforms, travel, prestige for community. But where are we going with our athletes and their values? What type of future do we see for tomorrow's players'? What have we done to the play for the love-of-the-game attitude? Have we changed to a play-for-the-dollar attitude'' Years ago, many young men and women played athletics for the pleasure and the thrill. It was fun, exciting and for some a little glamour. -
NCHSAA Bulletin Summer03
NORTH CAROLINA HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION BULLETIN VOL. 55, NO. 4 SUMMER 2003 Williamson, Evans Named NCHSAA Athletes Of Year CHAPEL HILL—Anna Evans of Lumberton High School and “We congratulate these Drew Williamson of Hugh Cummings High in Burlington have been fine student-athletes on named winners of the 2003 Athlete of the Year awards by the North their great achievements Carolina High School Athletic Association (NCHSAA). during their high school These are the top athletic awards given by the NCHSAA to honor careers,” said Charlie the most outstanding male and female high school athletes in the Adams, executive director state. They were presented at the Dean Smith Center on the of the NCHSAA. “Both Anna University of North Carolina campus during the NCHSAA’s Annual and Drew.have tremen- Meeting. dously impressive creden- Both Evans and Williamson were nominated and selected by a tials along the lines of the special panel of media representatives from across the state. They previous outstanding win- were each presented with the Pat Best Memorial Trophy, named ners of this award, and they for the former Goldsboro High principal and president of the are also excellent students. NCHSAA who died unexpectedly in 1988. We certainly wish them the best in the future.” Williamson has been NCHSAA ATHLETES OF THE YEAR one of the state’s top per- Winners of the Pat Best Memorial Trophy formers in both football 1985-86 Pam Doggett, Dudley and basketball during his Patrick Lennon, Whiteville career. The quarterback NCHSAA Photo by John Bell threw for 3,118 yards dur- 2003 NCHSAA Athletes of the Year 1986-87 Andrea Stinson, North Mecklenburg ing the 2003 season, good Robert Siler, Jordan-Matthews Anna Evans and Drew Williamson for 38 touchdown passes 1987-88 LeAnn Kennedy, Trinity against only two interceptions. -
Game Notes (PDF)
2012-13 HAMPTON PIRATES BASKETBALL Hampton University SPORTS INFORMATION Maurice Williams Pirates Basketball 210 Holland Hall Men’s Basketball Contact Hampton University Phone (757) 727-5757 2012-13 SCHEDULE/RESULTS Hampton, VA 23668 Fax (757) 727-5813 www.hamptonpirates.com NOVEMBER 9 William & Mary L, 51-69 15 Richmond L, 58-68 20 Ohio L, 67-75 GAME 31: Hampton (14-16) vs. Delaware State (14-17) 23 Wofford L, 51-56 Date: March 14, 2013 • Time: 6:00 p.m. 25 UNC Wilmington L, 60-61 Location: Norfolk, Va. (Scope Arena) 28 Radford L, 64-73 Television: None • Radio: 88.1 FM WHOV DECEMBER 1 Howard* W, 58-50 8 Robert Morris L, 54-66 18 American W, 72-65 20 Northern Kentucky L, 52-54 30 Winthrop L, 43-50 JANUARY VERSUS 2 USC Upstate L, 49-68 7 James Madison W, 69-65 12 Howard* W, 51-49 HAMPTON’S PROBABLE STARTERS 14 Quinnipiac W, 70-64 No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Yr. Hometown Ppg. Rpg. 19 Morgan State* L, 78-80 5 Emmanuel Okoroba C 6-8 225 r-Sr. Garland, Texas 8.3 5.3 21 Coppin State* L, 65-67 OT 11 Deron Powers G 5-11 165 Fr. Williamsburg, Va. 11.9 2.8 26 Norfolk State* L, 67-74 14 Aaron Austin G 6-3 180 Sr. Newport News, Va. 3.9 2.3 30 SC State* W, 64-60 20 Du’Vaughn Maxwell G/F 6-7 215 Jr. Manhattan, N.Y. 10.2 7.0 21 Ke’Ron Brown G 6-3 215 Fr. -
Sports Venue Success Story Dean E
Sports Venue Success Story Dean E. Smith Student Activities Center Published May 2020 THE SOLUTION As long-standing Ross customers, the Go Heels Production team had been operating a Production Control Room with core Ross products for years. When it was time to choose a Display Control System for the new video boards that would integrate with their existing equipment, a Unified Venue Solution from Ross was an easy decision. After seeing the newly released XPression Tessera solution at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta Georgia, the Go Heels team, and Ross worked to design and build the new system. The core Ross components included: With four new video boards, each 576 pixels tall by 3,024 pixels wide, the staff at North Carolina needed to add an Four channels of XPression Tessera, an XPression INcoder, and three Carbonite Black Solos were above-average Display Control System to simultaneously control these extra-long screens. added to the existing production room equipment to allow for control of the four corner boards. An existing XPression was upgraded with a Tessera license to make it easier to continue feeding real-time rendered content to the existing 360 fascia, scorers table, TV announcer table, tunnel signage, and basket support signage. A DashBoard Custom Panel allowed the Go Heels to shift from an in-game, stat focused design, to a sponsored fan cam take over. DEAN E. SMITH STUDENT ACTIVITIES CENTER (2018) CHAPEL HILL NC, USA NCAA MEN’S BASKETBALL | UNC TAR HEELS The University of North Carolina Tar Heels men’s basketball program is one of the winningest NCAA Division I basketball programs in the country. -
Past Match-Ups & Game Notes
7DAYS EuroCup PAST MATCH-UPS & GAME NOTES REGULAR SEASON - ROUND 2 Euroleague Basketball Whatsapp Service Do you want to receive this document and other relevant information about Euroleague Basketball directly on your mobile phone via Whatsapp? Click here and follow the instructions. EUROCUP 2020-21 | REGULAR SEASON | ROUND 2 1 Oct 06, 2020 CET: 17:00 LOCAL TIME: 19:00 | BASKET HALL KAZAN UNICS KAZAN BAHCESEHIR KOLEJI ISTANBUL 19 MORGAN, JORDAN 33 YILMAZ, ERKAN Center | 2.04 | Born: 1991 Forward | 1.92 | Born: 1997 15 SMITH, JAMAR 23 ALDRIDGE, PEYTON Guard | 1.91 | Born: 1987 Forward | 2.03 | Born: 1995 @Jamar_Smith309 7 WOLTERS, NATE 20 AKYAZILI, THOMAS Guard | 1.93 | Born: 1991 Guard | 1.90 | Born: 1997 @NateWolters 00 BROWN III, JOHN 19 YILDIZLI, BURAK Forward | 2.03 | Born: 1992 Forward | 2.04 | Born: 1994 88 KAIMAKOGLOU, KOSTAS 13 KILICLI, DENIZ Forward | 2.06 | Born: 1983 Center | 2.06 | Born: 1990 42 KOLESNIKOV, EVGENY 11 GREEN, ERICK Guard | 1.95 | Born: 1985 Guard | 1.90 | Born: 1992 23 HOLLAND, JOHN 10 ONCEL, RIDVAN Guard | 1.96 | Born: 1988 Guard | 1.91 | Born: 1997 22 RAZUMOV, ALEKSANDR 8 OZDEMIR, HADI Center | 2.03 | Born: 1992 Forward | 2.02 | Born: 1983 13 UZINSKII, DMITRII 5 AKPINAR, ISMET Forward | 2.00 | Born: 1993 Guard | 1.93 | Born: 1995 @ismetakpinar 12 KLIMENKO, ARTEM 2 PEREZ, ALEX Center | 2.14 | Born: 1994 Guard | 1.91 | Born: 1993 10 SERGEEV, PAVEL 1 JONES, JAMAL Guard | 1.85 | Born: 1987 Forward | 2.03 | Born: 1993 6 ZHBANOV, GEORGY 22 OWENS, JOSH Forward | 1.97 | Born: 1997 Center | 2.06 | Born: 1988 3 CANAAN, -
18/#19 TENNESSEE (15-5, 5-3 SEC) 2017-18 » SCHEDULE & RECORD Vs
GAME #21 10 SEC CHAMPIONSHIPS | 25 ALL-AMERICANS | 11 SEC PLAYERS OF THE YEAR | 46 NBA DRAFT PICKS #18/#19 TENNESSEE (15-5, 5-3 SEC) 2017-18 » SCHEDULE & RECORD vs. LSU (12-8, 3-5 SEC) OVERALL RECORD: 15-5 JAN. 31 » THOMPSON-BOLING ARENA » KNOXVILLE, TENN. » 6:31 PM ET SEC 5-3 NON-CONFERENCE 10-2 THE MATCHUP HOME 8-2 AWAY 5-2 TENNESSEE VOLUNTEERS LSU TIGERS vs NEUTRAL 2-1 THE RECORD QUICK COMPARISON 76.7 ppg Points Per Game 78.8 ppg THE SCHEDULE 67.7 ppg Points Allowed Per Game 72.4 ppg DATE OPPONENT (TV) TIME/RESULT 36.7 rpg Rebounding Per Game 34.0 rpg N10 Presbyterian (SEC Network+) W, 88-53 34.5 rpg Rebounding Defense 34.0 rpg N14 High Point (SEC Network+) W, 84-53 N22 1-vs. #18 Purdue (ESPN2) W, 78-75 (OT) .444 Field Goal Pct. .486 N23 1-vs. #5 Villanova (ESPN) L, 85-76 .389 3-Point Pct. .351 UTSPORTS.COM LSUSPORTS.NET N24 1- vs. NC State (ESPN2) W, 67-58 N29 Mercer (SEC Network+) W, 84-60 TENNESSEE QUICK FACTS LSU QUICK FACTS Head Coach: Rick Barnes (Lenoir-Rhyne, 1977) Head Coach: Will Wade (Clemson, 2005) D3 at Georgia Tech (ESPNU) W, 77-70 Record at Tennessee: 46-40 / 3rd year Record at LSU: 12-8 / 1st year D9 Lispcomb (SEC Network) W, 81-71 D17 #7 North Carolina (ESPN) L 78-73 Career Record: 650-354 / 31st year Career Record: 103-53 / 5th year D20 Furman (SEC Network) W, 66-61 Scoring Leader: Grant Williams (16.2 ppg, 7th in SEC) Scoring Leader: Tremont Waters (15.2 ppg, T-12th in SEC) D23 at Wake Forest (ESPN2) W, 79-60 Rebounds Leader: Grant Williams (6.4 rpg, T-12th in SEC) Rebounds Leader: Aaron Epps (6.0 rpg) D30 at Arkansas* (SEC Network) L, 95-93 (OT) Assists Leader: James Daniel III (3.5 apg) Assists Leader: Tremont Waters (5.8 apg, 2nd in SEC) J2 Auburn* (ESPNU) L, 94-84 J6 #17 Kentucky* (ESEC Network) W, 76-65 J9 at Vanderbilt* (SEC Network) W, 92-84 VOLUNTEERS LOOK TO RUN WIN STREAK TO FOUR J13 Texas A&M* (SEC Network) W, 75-62 J17 at Missouri* (SEC Network) L, 59-55 J20 at South Carolina* (ESPN2) W, 70-63 THE SERIES RIGHT NOW A WIN WOULD.. -
Raleigh Losing More Affordable Housing
WWW.TRIANGLE TRIBUNE.COM Fall test scores show learning remotely was a struggle THE TRIANGLE’S CHOICE FOR THE BLACK VOICE By Greg Childress "Celebrating Our 23rd Year" THE POLICY WATCH Scores on state tests taken in the fall show that students across North Carolina have not fared well academically during a year VOLUME 23 NO. 11 WEEK OF MARCH 14, 2021 $1.00 when many of them learned remotely. On the beginning-of- grade, third-grade reading test, 58.2% of students across the state scored Level 1, which is the lowest level. Three quarters of third graders aren’t proficient. High schools returned to school buildings in December and 3 MEAC coaches in January to take end-of-course tests in Math 1 and Math 1, bio- logy and English II. More than half of test takers were not profi- running for top Division cient on Math 1, Math 3 or biology exams. Only 41.4% were I national award. proficient on the English II exam. The test results are the first statewide look at how students are performing academically amid the COVID-19 pandemic, forced schools to close for in- person instruction. Many of the state’s 1.5 million students have received remote instruction this year. North Carolina Department of Public Instruction officials shared the scores with the State Board of Education last week. Please see TESTS/2A The 16- Some year Raleigh losing more can take itch is affordable housing mask off due in around 2024 others By Gary Pearce By Mike Stobbe THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SPECIAL TO THE TRIBUNE There’s a 16-year cycle in NEW YORK — Fully vacci- modern politics.