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The official Men's Basketball Coach List for the University of Pennsylvania Quakers.
- News
The official Men's Basketball news stories archives for the...
- Schedule
The official 2023-24 Women's Swimming and Diving schedule...
- Roster
The official 2024 Football Roster for the University of...
- Joe Mihalich Jr
Joe Mihalich Jr. was hired as an assistant coach with the...
- Steve Donahue
Steve Donahue was introduced as the John R. Rockwell Head...
- Nat Graham
In September 2018, Graham was promoted to the position of K....
- News
Coaches. Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Coverage: 123 seasons (1896-97 to 2024-25) Record (since 1896-97): 1841-1167-1 .612 W-L%. Conferences: Ivy and Ind. Conference Champion: 38 Times (Reg. Seas.), 1 Time (Tourn.) NCAA Tournament: 24 Years (13-26), 1 Final Four, 0 Championships.
The following is a list of UConn Huskies men's basketball head coaches. There have been 19 head coaches of the Huskies in their 121-season history. UConn's current head coach is Dan Hurley. He was hired as the Huskies' head coach in 2018, replacing Kevin Ollie, who was fired on March 10, 2018.
15 godz. temu · STORRS, Conn. (AP) — Geno Auriemma soaked in the moment. The UConn Hall of Fame coach now stands alone atop the NCAA college basketball all-time wins list. Auriemma broke a tie with former Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer, earning his 1,217 career victory with an 85-41 win over Fairleigh Dickinson on Wednesday night.
1 dzień temu · Geno Auriemma became the winningest coach in NCAA college basketball history, earning his 1,217th victory as No. 2 UConn beat Fairleigh Dickinson 85-41 on Wednesday night. Auriemma broke a tie ...
16 godz. temu · The 70-year-old is the only head coach to win at least 1,200 games at one school. Former Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski holds the men’s basketball wins record with 1,202 victories.
Daniel S. Hurley (born January 16, 1973) is an American men's college basketball coach who is the head coach of the UConn Huskies. [1] In 2023 and 2024, Hurley led UConn to back-to-back NCAA Division I national championships. [2][3] He previously coached at Rhode Island and Wagner.