Kerry Keating

American college basketball coach From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kerry Keating (born July 15, 1971) is an American college basketball coach and the former head men's basketball coach at Santa Clara University.

Born (1971-07-15) July 15, 1971 (age 54)
Stoughton, Massachusetts, U.S.
AlmamaterSeton Hall ('93)
1989–1990Seton Hall
1994–1995Vanderbilt (asst.)
Quick facts Biographical details, Born ...
Kerry Keating
Keating in 2024
Biographical details
Born (1971-07-15) July 15, 1971 (age 54)
Stoughton, Massachusetts, U.S.
Alma materSeton Hall ('93)
Playing career
1989–1990Seton Hall
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1994–1995Vanderbilt (asst.)
1995–1998Seton Hall (asst.)
1998–2000Appalachian State (asst.)
2000–2001Tulsa (asst.)
2001–2003Tennessee (asst.)
2003–2007UCLA (asst.)
2007–2016Santa Clara
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
1990–1993Seton Hall (video coor.)
1993–1994Wake Forest (administrative asst.)
Head coaching record
Overall139–159 (.466)
Tournaments4–0 (CBI)
5–0 (CIT)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
CIT (2011)
CBI (2013)
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Early life and college education

Keating was born in Stoughton, Massachusetts, and grew up in Rockville Centre, on New York's Long Island. He attended Archbishop Molloy High School in Queens and Seton Hall Preparatory School in West Orange, New Jersey.[1]

Keating enrolled at Seton Hall University in 1989 and played on the Seton Hall Pirates men's basketball team as a walk-on as a freshman under coach P. J. Carlesimo.[2] The following year, Keating became a student assistant and video coordinator on Carlesimo's staff. Keating graduated from Seton Hall in 1993.[3]

Coaching career

Keating served as an administrative assistant for Wake Forest head coach Dave Odom in the 1993–94 season.[1] The following season, Keating joined Jan van Breda Kolff's staff at Vanderbilt as an assistant coach. Keating then returned to Seton Hall University in 1995 to be an assistant coach for three seasons, first under George Blaney, then under Tommy Amaker.[3]

Having previously worked with Buzz Peterson as an assistant coach at Vanderbilt, Keating became an assistant coach under Peterson at Appalachian State in 1998. Keating would follow Peterson to Tulsa in 2000 and Tennessee in 2001.[3]

In 2003, Keating joined Ben Howland's staff at UCLA.[4] Rivals.com ranked Keating as one of the nation's best recruiters of incoming talent in 2005.[1][4][5] These accomplishments and reputation helped Keating become the 14th head coach of Santa Clara when the school decided to replace longtime coach Dick Davey.

Keating signed a six-year contract through 2013 at his hiring and was extended for two years through the 2014–15 season in 2011.[6][7] In October 2013, Keating signed a multi-year contract extension.[8] He is Santa Clara University's second highest paid employee.[9]

He has led Santa Clara to the 2011 CollegeInsider.com Tournament and the 2013 College Basketball Invitational championships. Santa Clara is the first school to win both the CIT and CBI titles.

Keating left Santa Clara after a nine-year tenure that saw him go 139–159 overall, and 53–88 in the WCC.[10]

Post-Coaching

After leaving Santa Clara University, Kerry was a scouting consultant for the Houston Rockets. Kerry regularly appears as an analyst for ABC7 KGO-TV “After The Game” NBA live post-game show in San Francisco. He regularly advises tech startups through his consulting company, The Vinculum Group. Some of his companies include Hot Mic, TaskHuman, FanWide, Boost, SocialVenu, Mojo Vision, Adapt Inc., and Versalume.[11]

Head coaching record

More information Season, Team ...
Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Santa Clara Broncos (West Coast Conference) (2007–2016)
2007–08 Santa Clara 15–166–84th
2008–09 Santa Clara 16–177–74th
2009–10 Santa Clara 11–213–11T–6th
2010–11 Santa Clara 24–148–64thCIT Champion
2011–12 Santa Clara 8–220–169th
2012–13 Santa Clara 26–129–74thCBI Champion
2013–14 Santa Clara 14–196–12T–8th
2014–15 Santa Clara 14–187–11T–6th
2015–16 Santa Clara 11–207–116th
Santa Clara: 139–159 (.466)53–88 (.376)
Total:139–159 (.466)

      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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