Perry Clark

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born (1951-12-04) December 4, 1951 (age 74)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
1971–1974Gettysburg
PositionGuard
1975–1978DeMatha Catholic HS (MD) (assistant)
Perry Clark
Biographical details
Born (1951-12-04) December 4, 1951 (age 74)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Playing career
1971–1974Gettysburg
PositionGuard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1975–1978DeMatha Catholic HS (MD) (assistant)
1978–1982Penn State (assistant)
1982–1988Georgia Tech (assistant)
1989–2000Tulane
2000–2004Miami (FL)
2007–2011Texas A&M–Corpus Christi
2013–2020South Carolina (assistant)
Head coaching record
Overall304–270 (.530)
Tournaments3–4 (NCAA Division I)
5–5 (NIT)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Metro regular season (1992)
Awards
Henry Iba Award (1992)
UPI Coach of the Year (1992)
2x Metro Coach of the Year (1991, 1992)

Perry Clark (born December 4, 1951) is an American former college basketball coach and the former head men's basketball coach at the University of Miami. He previously served as head coach of Tulane University, and later at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi.[1] From June 2013, until his retirement in June 2020, Clark was an assistant coach for the University of South Carolina basketball team.[2][3]

Clark has over 30 years of collegiate coaching experience, including 15 years combined as head coach at both Tulane University and the University of Miami (Florida). As a head coach, Clark owned a 304–270 (.530) record, including seven 20-win seasons and nine postseason appearances (3 NCAA, 4 NIT) and won the Metro Conference championship in 1992. The 1992 National Coach of the Year, he was a two-time Metro Conference Coach of the Year (1991, 1992).

Clark began his coaching career as an assistant coach at DeMatha Catholic High School. In 1978 he became an assistant coach at Penn State. Beginning in 1982, he served as the recruiting coordinator at Georgia Tech. During this time, five players earned honors as the top freshman – Mark Price (1983), Bruce Dalrymple (1984), Duane Ferrell (1985), Tom Hammonds (1986) and Dennis Scott (1988). At Tulane, Anthony Reed (1990), Kim Lewis (1991) and Pointer Williams (1992) claimed consecutive Metro Conference Freshman of the Year honors. Clark has coached 19 players who were drafted or have gone on to play in the NBA. Thirteen of those draftees have gone in the first or second rounds, including 2002 selection John Salmons, who was taken with the 26th pick of the first round by the San Antonio Spurs, and James Jones, who was a second-round selection by the Indiana Pacers in the 2003 NBA draft. In his stints at Georgia Tech and Tulane, Clark went a phenomenal eight for nine, from 1983 to 1992, in helping produce the conference's top rookie, including a Metro record three in a row at Tulane.

Miami

He took over the program at Miami in 2000 and spent four seasons with the Hurricanes, where he led them to a 65–54 (.546) record. In his first three seasons with the program, he accumulated 51 wins, the most ever by a Hurricane coach, and became the only Miami coach to take the Hurricanes to the postseason in each of his first two seasons.

Clark's 2001–02 Hurricane squad finished 24–8 and received the school's fourth NCAA Tournament berth and set a school record for wins in a season. Included in the 24 wins were a school-record 14 consecutive victories to open the season. His Hurricanes were not ranked in the preseason, but were ranked for the final 13 weeks of the campaign, ending the year ranked No. 21 according to the Associated Press.

Texas A&M Corpus Christi

Head coaching record

References

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