词条 | Tom Asbury |
释义 |
| name = Tom Asbury | current_title = | current_team = | current_conference = | current_record = | contract = | birth_date = {{birth date and age|1945|7|14}} | birth_place = Denver, Colorado | death_date = | death_place = | alma_mater = | player_years1 = 1964–1967 | player_team1 = Wyoming | player_positions = Forward | coach_years1 = 1976–1979 | coach_team1 = Wyoming (assistant) | coach_years2 = 1979–1988 | coach_team2 = Pepperdine (assistant) | coach_years3 = 1988–1994 | coach_team3 = Pepperdine | coach_years4 = 1994–2000 | coach_team4 = Kansas State | coach_years5 = 2003–2007 | coach_team5 = Alabama (assistant) | coach_years6 = 2008–2011 | coach_team6 = Pepperdine | overall_record = 453–238 | bowl_record = | tournament_record = | championships = 3 WCC Tournament (1991, 1992, 1994) | awards = 2× WCC Coach of the Year (1991, 1992) | coaching_records = }} Thomas Sydnor Asbury (born July 14, 1945) is a retired American men's college basketball coach. He spent two separate terms as head coach of Pepperdine University, retiring from that position in 2011. He also was a head coach for Kansas State University and served as an assistant coach at Pepperdine, the University of Wyoming (his alma mater), and the University of Alabama. CareerPepperdineAsbury was an assistant coach at Pepperdine for nine seasons before succeeding Jim Harrick as head coach. Asbury was very successful in his first stint at Pepperdine, becoming the conference coach of the year twice and compiling a 125–59 record in his first six years. He took the Waves to the NCAA Tournament in 1991, 1992 and 1994, as well as two NIT appearances, three regular-season WCC titles and three WCC Tournament championships.[1] Kansas State and AlabamaHis success landed him the head coaching job at Kansas State University. He coached the Wildcats for six seasons making the NCAA Tournament once and the NIT Tournament twice. However, his final season ended in 1999–2000 at Kansas State with a 9–19 record and a 2–14 conference record. He was fired and later returned to coaching as an assistant at the University of Alabama under former pupil Mark Gottfried. Mark Fox, the head coach at the University of Georgia, is another former Asbury assistant, having coached with him at Kansas State. Return to Pepperdine and retirementAsbury came out of retirement to coach Pepperdine for a second time prior to the 2008-09 season. After three more seasons, on March 11, 2011, Asbury announced his retirement, turning the Pepperdine program over to assistant Marty Wilson.[2] In October 2012, Asbury was inducted into the Pepperdine Athletics Hall of Fame.[3] Head coaching record{{CBB Yearly Record Start|type=coach |conference= |postseason= |poll=no }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subhead |name=Pepperdine Waves |startyear=1988 |conference=West Coast Athletic Conference/West Coast Conference |endyear=1994 }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1988–89 | name = Pepperdine | overall = 20–13 | conference = 10–4 | confstanding = T–2nd | postseason = NIT Second Round | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1989–90 | name = Pepperdine | overall = 17–11 | conference = 10–4 | confstanding = 2nd | postseason = | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = confboth | season = 1990–91 | name = Pepperdine | overall = 22–9 | conference = 13–1 | confstanding = 1st | postseason = NCAA Round of 64 | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = confboth | season = 1991–92 | name = Pepperdine | overall = 24–7 | conference = 14–0 | confstanding = 1st | postseason = NCAA Round of 64 | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = conference | season = 1992–93 | name = Pepperdine | overall = 23–8 | conference = 11–3 | confstanding = 1st | postseason = NIT Second Round | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = conference tournament | season = 1993–94 | name = Pepperdine | overall = 19–11 | conference = 8–6 | confstanding = T–2nd | postseason = NCAA Round of 64 | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subtotal | name = Pepperdine | overall = 125–59 ({{Winning percentage|125|59}}) | confrecord = 66–18 ({{Winning percentage|66|18}}) }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subhead |name=Kansas State Wildcats |startyear=1994 |conference=Big Eight Conference |endyear=1996 }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1994–95 | name = Kansas State | overall = 12–15 | conference = 3–11 | confstanding = 8th | postseason = | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1995–96 | name = Kansas State | overall = 17–12 | conference = 7–7 | confstanding = 4th | postseason = NCAA Round of 64 | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subhead |name=Kansas State Wildcats |startyear=1996 |conference=Big 12 Conference |endyear=2000 }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1996–97 | name = Kansas State | overall = 10–17 | conference = 3–13 | confstanding = T–10th | postseason = | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1997–98 | name = Kansas State | overall = 17–12 | conference = 7–9 | confstanding = T–7th | postseason = NIT First Round | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1998–99 | name = Kansas State | overall = 20–13 | conference = 7–9 | confstanding = T–7th | postseason = NIT First Round | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 1999–2000 | name = Kansas State | overall = 9–19 | conference = 2–14 | confstanding = 12th | postseason = | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subtotal | name = Kansas State | overall = 85–88 ({{Winning percentage|85|88}}) | confrecord = 29–63 ({{Winning percentage|29|63}}) }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subhead |name=Pepperdine Waves |startyear=2008 |conference=West Coast Conference |endyear=2011 }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 2008–09 | name = Pepperdine | overall = 9–23 | conference = 5–9 | confstanding = 6th | postseason = | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 2009–10 | name = Pepperdine | overall = 7–24 | conference = 3–11 | confstanding = T–6th | postseason = | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Entry | championship = | season = 2010–11 | name = Pepperdine | overall = 16–18 | conference = 5–9 | confstanding = 6th | postseason = | ranking = | ranking2 = }}{{CBB Yearly Record Subtotal | name = Pepperdine | overall = 32–66 ({{Winning percentage|32|66}}) | confrecord = 13–29 ({{Winning percentage|13|29}}) }}{{CBB Yearly Record End |overall= 242–212 ({{Winning percentage|242|212}}) |poll=no }} References1. ^Pepperdine Basketball Records Book {{Pepperdine Waves men's basketball coach navbox}}{{Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball coach navbox}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Asbury, Tom}}2. ^Retiring Pepperdine Coach Tom Asbury's Statement, accessed March 14, 2011 3. ^Pepperdine Inducts Four Into Hall of Fame, accessed Oct. 22, 2012 13 : 1945 births|Living people|Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball coaches|American men's basketball coaches|American men's basketball players|Basketball coaches from Colorado|Basketball players from Colorado|College men's basketball head coaches in the United States|Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball coaches|Pepperdine Waves men's basketball coaches|Sportspeople from Denver|Wyoming Cowboys basketball coaches|Wyoming Cowboys basketball players |
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