Gary Williams

Gary Williams

College coach infobox
Name = Gary Williams
Sport = Basketball
ImageWidth =
Caption =
DateOfBirth = birth date and age|1945|3|4
Birthplace = flagicon|United States Collingswood, NJ
DateOfDeath =
Deathplace =
College = Maryland
Title = Head coach
Awards = ACC Coach of the Year (2002)
Championships = NCAA Division I Tournament Championship (2002)
ACC Tournament Championship (2004)
ACC Regular Season Championship (1995, 2002)
Big East Regular Season Championship (1983)
ECC Regular Season Championship (1981)
CurrentRecord = 397-215 (.649)
OverallRecord = 604-343 (.638)
Player = *
Years = 1964–1968
Team = Maryland
Position = Point guard
Coach = *
CoachYears = 1969–1970
1970–1972
1972–1977
1977–1978
1978–1982
1982–1986
1986–1989
1989–present
CoachTeams = Woodrow Wilson HS (asst.)
Woodrow Wilson HS
Lafayette (asst.)
Boston College (asst.)
American
Boston College
Ohio State
Maryland
CollegeHOFID =
BBallHOF =

Gary B. Williams (born March 4, 1945 in Collingswood, New Jersey, United States) is the current head coach of the University of Maryland's Men's basketball team.

Playing career

Williams played for Maryland as the starting point guard under coach Bud Millikan. He was a member of the 1966 Charlotte Invitational Tournament championship team and the 1965 Sugar Bowl Tournament championship team. He set a Maryland record for field goal percentage, going 8-for-8 from the field in an ACC game against South Carolina in 1966 (35 years later a Williams pupil, Lonny Baxter, would break that record, hitting all ten of his field goal attempts.) Williams was the Maryland team captain in 1967. He graduated in 1968 with a B.S. in Business. While at the University of Maryland, Williams was a member of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity. [http://www.phideltdc.com/chapters.html]

Coaching career before Maryland

Prior to entering the college ranks, Williams was a successful high school basketball coach at Woodrow Wilson High School in Camden, New Jersey before becoming an assistant basketball coach at Lafayette College in 1972 and Boston College in 1973. In 1978, Williams obtained the head coaching position at American University. He would go on to lead American to relative success, coaching them to several NIT berths. In 1982, Williams returned to Boston College as the head coach, and led them to two NCAA tournament appearances, and one NIT appearance in his 4 year tenure. In 1986, Williams took the head coaching position at Ohio State. Williams would take Ohio State to one NCAA tournament appearance, and two NIT appearances.

Tenure at Maryland

Williams was announced as head coach of Maryland on June 13, 1989. The basketball program and the Maryland athletic program as a whole was still reeling from the aftershock of the 1986 death of Maryland basketball star Len Bias. Williams coached the 1989-90 squad to a respectable 18-13 record and an NIT berth. However, the following year saw the beginning of NCAA-imposed sanctions on the school for actions committed under previous coach Bob Wade. Maryland received a three-year postseason ban and a television ban, punishments that hampered the rebuilding process. With the help of highly regarded local standout Walt Williams, Maryland stayed competitive through a low-point of the program.

Williams coached the Terrapins to increasing success through out the 1990s and early 2000s. In 2002, Williams led the Terrapins to the NCAA National Championship, defeating Indiana 64-52. He became the first coach to direct his alma mater to a national title since Norm Sloan accomplished the feat with North Carolina State in 1974.

As of March 2008, Coach Williams is the 8th winningest active coach in the country and the 3rd winningest coach all-time in the ACC. In his 30 years as a Head Coach, Williams has amassed an overall record of 604-343 (.638) and 397-215 (.649) at Maryland. Williams' Maryland teams have performed exceptionally well at Cole Field House and Comcast Center. Under his direction, the Terps are 240-55 (.852) at home including a 134-4 (.970) mark against non-conference foes. Between 1989 and 2003, Williams and Maryland won 87 consecutive non-conference home games. That streak was ended on December 14, 2002 by Billy Donovan's Florida Gators.

Coach Williams has an overall NCAA tournament record of 27-14 (.659, ninth among active coaches), 23-11 at his alma mater. Williams has coached Maryland to twelve NCAA tournament appearances, including a streak of eleven consecutive appearances (1994-2004), as well as four post season NIT appearances, allowing Maryland to own the longest current consecutive streak of postseason appearances in the ACC (Wake Forest, the previous record holder, failed to qualify for the postseason in 2006-07.) Additionally, Williams has sixty-five wins over top-25 ranked opponents, 14 wins over top-10 ranked opponents, two ACC regular season titles (one outright), an ACC tournament title, seven Sweet Sixteens, two Elite Eights, two Final Fours, and a national championship. Williams also leads active coaches with seven wins over top-ranked teams, the most recent coming against North Carolina on January 19, 2008. Since 1995, Coach Williams and Maryland have averaged 22.5 wins per season. Williams has led the Terrapins to at least 20 wins in 10 of the last 13 seasons and ranks 7th among active coaches with 16 career 20-win seasons.

Despite Coach Williams' long track record of success, Maryland has struggled to reach the NCAA Tournament in recent years. Maryland has failed to make the NCAA tournament in 3 of the last 4 years and has led to criticism of the Coach and the program. Most notably, this criticism has spawned a website, [www.firegarywilliams.com] .

Recent Milestones

A home victory over Virginia on January 19, 2005, moved Williams into a tie with former Virginia head coach Terry Holland as the fifth winningest coach in ACC history. On 21 January 2006, a home victory over Virginia Tech earned Williams his 142nd ACC win, moving him into a tie with former Carolina head coach Frank McGuire for third place in that category. Four nights later, a victory over the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets gave him third place outright.

On 7 February 2006, a 76-65 home victory over Virginia gave Williams his 349th win, allowing him to pass Lefty Driesell as the university's all-time winningest head coach. On 3 February 2007, a road victory over Wake Forest earned Williams his 150th ACC victory. He is the third coach in conference history to accomplish this feat; only Dean Smith and Mike Krzyzewski have won more conference games.

On 6 February 2008, a 70-65 road victory over Boston College gave Williams his 600th win. Gary Williams is one of only 8 active NCAA basketball head coaches with at least 600 wins.

Williams is one of the most highly respected coaches in the country for his ability to beat teams ranked #1 in the nation during the regular season.

Trademarks

Williams exclusively runs the flex offense, with a strong emphasis on first getting the ball inside to the post, and once the opposing defense collapses, distributing the ball to the perimeter. On defense, he favors a highly physical, pressing and trapping style, using turnovers to key the offense through the fast break. His defensive philosophy is inspired largely by the Jack Ramsay-coached Saint Joseph's teams he watched while growing up in the Philadelphia area.

He has drawn a great deal of both criticism and humor for his on-court demeanor. He is also known for being incredibly animated towards his bench, especially when one of his on-court players has a miscue. There are followers of the program who affirm that these acts are merely a function of Williams' competitive drive, and on the whole, these acts belie Williams' gift as a teacher of the game. Juan Dixon, starting shooting guard on Maryland's national championship team, spoke highly of Williams in the introduction to the book "Sweet Redemption", labeling him as a father-figure.

Williams has gained a reputation as a recruiter who almost exclusively goes after less-heralded players ("diamonds in the rough") and develops them into major Division I players. An opposing coach, Dave Odom, once said in a newspaper interview that Williams "has made a living off of the player who is maybe one or two tools short of the complete package (say, height or leaping ability), but who competes hard and plays with a chip on his shoulder." True enough, much of his success in the years since the university worked itself out of NCAA sanctions is due to players that fit that mold. Williams has vehemently defended his recruiting methods on numerous occasions; in a 2001 ESPN interview, Williams remarked, "Satisfaction in your job to me isn't just getting some list and saying, 'OK, that guy is rated top in the country. OK, we have to recruit him to be a good coaching staff'...Why not be a coach instead of a used car salesman." [http://espn.go.com/ncb/columns/katz_andy/1268955.html 1]

Coaching tree and NBA picks

Many of Williams' former assistants have gone on to earn head coaching positions. These include:

Rick Barnes - an assistant to Williams at Ohio State. Has had successful tenures at Providence and Clemson, and is currently the head coach of Texas, whom he guided to the Final Four in 2003.

Fran Fraschilla - was also on Williams' Ohio State staff. Had a successful run at Manhattan. He also was the head coach at St. Johns and New Mexico. He now serves as an ESPN college basketball analyst.

Fran Dunphy - served as an assistant to Williams at American. During a seventeen year tenure at Penn, he won 310 games (a school record) and 10 Ivy League titles. Successor to John Chaney at Temple.

Jimmy Patsos - served on Williams' staff at Maryland from 1991 to 2004. Now the head coach at Loyola.

Mike Lonergan - former national championship-winning head coach at The Catholic University of America who was on Williams' Maryland staff during the 2004-05 season. Successor to Tom Brennan at Vermont.

Dave Dickerson - served on Williams' staff at Maryland from 1996 to 2005. Now the head coach at Tulane University.

28 of Williams' players have been drafted by the NBA. This includes four lottery picks since 1992. Among the more prominent names:
*Michael Adams (formerly an assistant on Williams' Maryland staff.)
*Dana Barros
*Jimmy Jackson (the fourth overall pick in the 1992 NBA Draft)†
*Walt Williams (the seventh overall pick in the 1992 NBA Draft)
*Joe Smith (the first overall pick in the 1995 NBA Draft)
*Keith Booth (now an assistant on Williams' Maryland staff.)
*Steve Francis (the second overall pick in the 1999 NBA Draft)
*Chris Wilcox (the eighth overall pick in the 2002 NBA Draft)
*Juan Dixon (the 17th overall pick in the 2002 NBA Draft)
*Lonny Baxter (the 43rd overall pick in the 2002 NBA Draft)
*Steve Blake (the 38th overall pick in the 2003 NBA Draft)

† - recruited by Williams, but not coached by him.

In addition, Šarūnas Jasikevičius, who played for Williams in the late 1990s, was signed by the Indiana Pacers in the summer of 2005. More recently, Chris McCray, who was academically ineligible to play basketball the majority of his senior year at Maryland, was not picked in the NBA draft, but signed a free agent contract with the NBA's Milwaukee Bucks in September 2006 and D. J. Strawberry, son of former major leaguer Darryl Strawberry was signed by the Phoenix Suns after being selected 59th in the second round of the 2007 NBA Draft.

Head coaching record

CBB Yearly Record Start
type=coach
conference=
postseason=
poll=no
CBB Yearly Record Subhead
name=American
startyear=1978
conference=East Coast Conference
endyear=1982|
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1978–1979
name = American
overall = 14-13
conference = 7-4
confstanding = 4th
postseason =
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1979–1980
name = American
overall = 13-14
conference = 5-6
confstanding = 4th
postseason =
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship = conference
season = 1980–1981
name = American
overall = 24-6
conference = 11-0
confstanding = 1st
postseason = NIT 1st Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1981–1982
name = American
overall = 21-9
conference = 8-3
confstanding = 3rd
postseason = NIT 1st Round
CBB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = American
overall = 72-42
confrecord = 31-13
CBB Yearly Record Subhead
name=Boston College
startyear=1982
conference=Big East Conference
endyear=1986|
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship = conference
season = 1982–1983
name = Boston College
overall = 23-7
conference = 12-4
confstanding = 1st
postseason = NCAA 2nd Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1983–1984
name = Boston College
overall = 18-12
conference = 8-8
confstanding = 4th
postseason = NIT 2nd Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1984–1985
name = Boston College
overall = 20-11
conference = 7-9
confstanding = 6th
postseason = NCAA Sweet 16
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1985–1986
name = Boston College
overall = 13-15
conference = 4-12
confstanding = 7th
postseason =
CBB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = Boston College
overall = 74-45
confrecord = 31-33
CBB Yearly Record Subhead
name=Ohio State
startyear=1986
conference=Big Ten Conference
endyear=1989|
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1986–1987
name = Ohio State
overall = 20-13
conference = 9-9
confstanding = 6th
postseason = NCAA 2nd Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1987–1988
name = Ohio State
overall = 20-13
conference = 9-9
confstanding = 6th
postseason = NIT Runner-Up
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1988–1989
name = Ohio State
overall = 19-15
conference = 6-12
confstanding = 8th
postseason = NIT Quarterfinals
CBB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = Ohio State
overall = 59-41
confrecord = 24-30
CBB Yearly Record Subhead
name=Maryland
startyear=1989
conference=Atlantic Coast Conference
endyear=|
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1989–1990
name = Maryland
overall = 19-14
conference = 6-8
confstanding = T-5th
postseason = NIT 2nd Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1990–1991
name = Maryland
overall = 16-12
conference = 5-9
confstanding = T-7th
postseason =
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1991–1992
name = Maryland
overall = 14-15
conference = 5-11
confstanding = 8th
postseason =
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1992–1993
name = Maryland
overall = 12-16
conference = 2-14
confstanding = 8th
postseason =
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1993–1994
name = Maryland
overall = 18-12
conference = 8-8
confstanding = T-4th
postseason = NCAA Sweet 16
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship = conference
season = 1994–1995
name = Maryland
overall = 26-8
conference = 12-4
confstanding = T-1st
postseason = NCAA Sweet 16
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1995–1996
name = Maryland
overall = 17-13
conference = 8-8
confstanding = T-4th
postseason = NCAA 1st Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1996–1997
name = Maryland
overall = 21-11
conference = 9-7
confstanding = T-4th
postseason = NCAA 1st Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1997–1998
name = Maryland
overall = 21-11
conference = 10-6
confstanding = 3rd
postseason = NCAA Sweet 16
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1998–1999
name = Maryland
overall = 28-6
conference = 13-3
confstanding = 2nd
postseason = NCAA Sweet 16
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 1999–2000
name = Maryland
overall = 25-10
conference = 11-5
confstanding = 2nd
postseason = NCAA 2nd Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 2000–2001
name = Maryland
overall = 25-11
conference = 10-6
confstanding = 3rd
postseason = NCAA Final Four
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship = national
season = 2001–2002
name = Maryland
overall = 32-4
conference = 15-1
confstanding = 1st
postseason = NCAA Champions
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 2002–2003
name = Maryland
overall = 21-10
conference = 11-5
confstanding = T-2nd
postseason = NCAA Sweet 16
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship = conference tournament
season = 2003–2004
name = Maryland
overall = 20-12
conference = 7-9
confstanding = T-6th
postseason = NCAA 2nd Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 2004–2005
name = Maryland
overall = 19-13
conference = 7-9
confstanding = T-6th
postseason = NIT Semifinals
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 2005–2006
name = Maryland
overall = 19-13
conference = 8-8
confstanding = 6th
postseason = NIT 1st Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 2006–2007
name = Maryland
overall = 25-9
conference = 10-6
confstanding = T-3rd
postseason = NCAA 2nd Round
CBB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
season = 2007–2008
name = Maryland
overall = 19-15
conference = 8-8
confstanding = T-5th
postseason = NIT 2nd Round
CBB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = Maryland
overall = 397-215
confrecord = 165-140
CBB Yearly Record End
overall=604-343

Other

Williams was married to Diane McMillen from 1968 to 1990. Together, they had a daughter, Kristin, who works as a schoolteacher. Williams is a grandfather of three, including a pair of twins.

He is good friends with Syracuse head coach Jim Boeheim, going back to his days at Boston College. Along with Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese, they play golf frequently.

Williams was one of thirteen college coaches to appear in EA Sports' NCAA March Madness 2004. As part of the "Coaches Council", he imparted information and guidance to the gamer.

He has been a member of the University of Maryland's Alumni Hall of Fame since June 2005.

External links

* [http://www.coachgarywilliams.com/ Official site]
* [http://www.kepplerspeakers.com/speakers/speakers.asp?1-SRP5 Gary Williams Biography]


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