Barbara Ehardt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Preceded byJanet Trujillo
BornBarbara Dee Ehardt
(1964-02-29) February 29, 1964 (age 61)
Barbara Ehardt
Member of the Idaho House of Representatives
from the 33rd district
Assumed office
December 27, 2017
Preceded byJanet Trujillo
Personal details
BornBarbara Dee Ehardt
(1964-02-29) February 29, 1964 (age 61)
PartyRepublican
Coaching career
Biographical details
Alma materNorth Idaho College (AS)
Idaho State University (BS)
Playing career
1983–1985North Idaho
1985–1987Idaho State
PositionPoint guard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1987–1988Pocatello HS (asst.)
1988–1995BYU (asst.)
1995–1997UC Santa Barbara (asst.)
1997–1999Washington State (asst.)
2000–2003Cal State Fullerton
Head coaching record
Overall12–72 (.143)

Barbara Dee Ehardt (born February 29, 1964)[1][2] is an American politician and former college basketball coach. A member of the Republican Party, she has served in the Idaho House of Representatives for the 33rd district since 2017. Previously, Ehardt was a high school and college basketball coach from 1987 to 2003, including three seasons as women's basketball head coach at Cal State Fullerton from 2000 to 2003.

Ehardt was born in Idaho Falls, Idaho in 1964. After graduating from Idaho Falls High School in 1983, she earned an associate degree in general studies from North Idaho College in 1985 and a Bachelor of Science degree in English and language arts education from Idaho State University in 1988.[1][2] A 5-foot-9 point guard, Ehardt also played basketball at North Idaho from 1983 to 1985 and Idaho State from 1985 to 1987.[2][3][4] In her senior season of 1986–87 under head coach Mark French, Ehardt played in 20 games, averaging 1.0 points, 0.6 rebounds, and 0.5 assists.[5]

Coaching career

In the 1987–88 season, Ehardt was an assistant coach at Pocatello High School.[4] After completing her undergraduate degree at Idaho State, Ehardt joined UC Santa Barbara as an assistant coach in 1988, again under head coach Mark French.[2] Ehardt helped turn around a struggling UC Santa Barbara program, tripling its win total from nine in 1988–89 to a 27–5 record in 1991–92. UC Santa Barbara also had back-to-back Big West Conference championships and NCAA Tournament appearances in 1991–92 and 1992–93.[2]

After seven seasons at UC Santa Barbara, Ehardt was an assistant coach at BYU from 1995 to 1997 under head coach Soni Adams and Washington State from 1997 to 1999 under head coach Harold Rhodes.[2]

On May 10, 2000, Cal State Fullerton hired Ehardt as women's basketball head coach.[2] Ehardt inherited a team that last had a winning season nine years ago and won only 16 out of 80 games in the last three seasons.[6] Winning only one game in her first season, Ehardt had a 12–72 record as head coach in three seasons.[7] As announced by Cal State Fullerton on March 12, 2003, following a 7–21 season, Ehardt's contract expired without a renewal on March 31, 2003.[8]

In 2003, Ehardt returned to Idaho Falls, where she has since operated a sports camp for children and managed basketball programs.[1]

Political career

Head coaching record

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI