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This category is for men's basketball coaches at West Virginia University. Pages in category "West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball coaches" The following 35 pages are in this category, out of 35 total.
The West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team represents West Virginia University in NCAA Division I college basketball competition. They are a member of the Big 12 Conference . WVU has won 13 conference tournament championships, and has 31 appearances in the NCAA tournament , including two Final Fours, most recently in 2010 .
In his next season, DeVries made history as the first coach to lead an 8-seed to a win over the 1-seed in the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament ("Arch Madness"), defeating UNI 77–56. [ 5 ] DeVries' success at Drake continued in the 2020–21 season where he took the team to a 18–0 start which included the Bulldogs' inclusion in the AP ...
Oct. 17—MORGANTOWN — It's been eight months since Darian DeVries was introduced as the WVU men's basketball coach. He's yet to hear the sound of the Mountaineer mascot's musket firing in the ...
Huggins is the sixth men's college basketball coach with 900 or more career victories. [3] He has been to 24 total NCAA tournaments , including 23 in the last 26 seasons. He has led his teams to nine Sweet Sixteen appearances, four Elite Eight appearances (3 at Cincinnati and 1 at West Virginia University), and two Final Four appearances (1992 ...
To boot, Eilert was given a $1.5 million salary to be the WVU men's basketball coach. In that same situation, the guess from here is that 98 % of the people living in this state would have jumped ...
Josh Eilert (born December 2, 1980) is an American college basketball coach who is an interim head coach at Utah. He previously served as the interim head coach of the West Virginia Mountaineers in the Big 12 Conference .
^A. In the 1934–35 season, West Virginia finished the Eastern Intercollegiate Conference season with a record of 6–2, tied for first place with Pittsburgh.The conference win–loss record for 1934–35 includes West Virginia′s subsequent loss to Pittsburgh in a conference championship playoff game, giving West Virginia a second-place finish for the season.