Annette Watts

American basketball player and coach From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Annette Watts, née Culberson (born February 5, 1959), is an American high school basketball coach and the current head coach at Greeneville High School. She was formerly a college basketball coach and the former women's head coach at Jacksonville State University in Jacksonville, Alabama. The JSU Gamecocks are members of the Ohio Valley Conference and compete in the NCAA's Division I.[1]

TitleWomen's head coach
TeamGreeneville (TN) High School
Born (1959-02-05) February 5, 1959 (age 67)
Quick facts Current position, Title ...
Annette Watts
Current position
TitleWomen's head coach
TeamGreeneville (TN) High School
Biographical details
Born (1959-02-05) February 5, 1959 (age 67)
Playing career
1978–81East Tennessee State University
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1985–92Greeneville (TN) HS (asst.)
1992–97R.W.Johnson CHS (Gainesville, GA)
1997–99N.C.State (asst.)
1999–2001Jackson County CHS (Jefferson, GA)
2001–10Davidson College
2010–2013Jacksonville State University
2013–PresentGreeneville (TN) High School
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Biography

The daughter of George and Geraldine Culberson, Annette is a native of Greene County, Tennessee and a 1977 graduate of West Greene High School. Attending East Tennessee State University on a basketball scholarship, she helped ETSU to a 54–54 record in her four years of playing guard for the Lady Bucs. She graduated from ETSU in 1981 with a Bachelor of Science degree, then continued in graduate school there, earning her master's degree in Secondary Math Education in 1985. She married Mike Watts, a professional race car driver. Anette now works at Greeneville High School teaching math.[2]

Coaching career

After graduating from ETSU, Annette began her coaching career at Greeneville (Tenn.) High school where she earned local Coach of the Year honors, taught for eight years, and directed the Lady Devils YMCA Basketball Camp for seven years. Relocating to Gainesville, Georgia, she taught and coached at Robert Wood Johnson Comprehensive High School, compiling a 125–51 in five seasons, being named local Coach of the Year three times, and also serving as director of the Lady Knight Basketball Camp from 1990 through 1995. Moving into the college coaching ranks for the first time, Annette spent 1997–99 as an assistant to Hall of Fame coach Kay Yow at North Carolina State University. Annette then spent two seasons as head coach at Jackson County Comprehensive High School in Jefferson, Georgia, where she guided the Lady Panthers to the 2001 state quarterfinals and compiled an overall record of 38–20 and once more was named the local Coach of the Year. In 2001, Annette was named the head coach at Davidson College, where she became the winningest coach in that program's history. Her Davidson teams were 144–121 overall, 102–68 in the Southern Conference, and Annette was named the 2005 SoCon Coach of the Year.[3] After nine seasons, Annette resigned at Davidson and, on May 20, 2010, was named the head coach at Jacksonville State University.[4] On June 4, 2013 it was announced that Annette has been named Head Girls Basketball Coach at Greeneville High School.[5]

Head coaching record

More information Season, Team ...
Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
1992–97 R.W.Johnson CHS 125–51N/AN/AN/A
1999–2001 Jackson County CHS 38–20N/AN/AN/A
HS Total: 163–71N/A
Davidson College (Southern Conference) (2001–2010)
2001–02 Davidson 10–186–128th0–1 (SoCon)
2002–03 Davidson 15–158–106th tie2–1 (SoCon)
2003–04 Davidson 16–1213–73rd tie0–1 (SoCon)
2004–05 Davidson 18–1114–62nd1–1 (SoCon)
2005–06 Davidson 17–1212–6 2nd tie2nd tie1–1 (SoCon)
2006–07 Davidson 23–913–52nd tie1–1 (SoCon), 0–1 (WNIT)
2007–08 Davidson 19–1113–53rd tie0–1 (SoCon)
2008–09 Davidson 12–1811–94th tie0–1 (SoCon)
2009–10 Davidson 14–1512–86th0–1 (SoCon)
Davidson: 144–121102–68
Jacksonville State (Ohio Valley Conference) (2010–2013)
2010–11 JSU 10–216–126th1–1 (OVC)
2011–12 JSU 4–256–129th
2012–13 JSU 1–271–156th East
JSU: 20–6813–39
Total:327–260

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

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References

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