Enfield in 2014.
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Sport(s) | Basketball |
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Current position | |
Title | Head coach |
Team | USC |
Conference | Pac-12 |
Record | 70–64 (.522) |
Biographical details | |
Born |
Shippensburg, Pennsylvania |
June 8, 1969
Playing career | |
1987–1991 | Johns Hopkins |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1994–1996 | Milwaukee Bucks (assistant) |
1998–2000 | Boston Celtics (assistant) |
2006–2011 | Florida State (assistant) |
2011–2013 | Florida Gulf Coast |
2013–present | USC |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 111–92 (.547) |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
As head coach:
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Awards | |
As player:
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As head coach:
As player:
Andrew William Enfield (born June 8, 1969) is an American basketball coach who is currently the head men's basketball coach at the University of Southern California (USC). He came to national prominence as the head coach of Florida Gulf Coast University when his team achieved two major feats at the 2013 NCAA Tournament. First they became just the seventh 15-seed to defeat a 2-seed by upsetting Georgetown in the first round of the tournament. Then with an 81–71 upset of No. 7 San Diego State they became the first ever 15-seed to make it to the Sweet 16 round.
Enfield is arguably one of the best players in the history of Johns Hopkins University basketball. He spent his collegiate career there as a shooting guard and currently holds 18 school records in the program.
Andrew William Enfield, the son of Bill and Barbara Enfield, graduated as class valedictorian from Shippensburg High School in Shippensburg, Pennsylvania. He attended Johns Hopkins University, where he was the first recruit of longtime head basketball head coach Bill Nelson. Enfield was a shooting guard and currently holds 18 school records, such as career points (2,025), single-season points (610), career scoring average (18.8), career field goals (680), career three-pointers (234), career three-point percentage (.470), career free throws (431), single-season free-throw percentage (95.3), and career minutes (3,542). He also set the NCAA record for career free throw percentage (.925) (since broken by Blake Ahearn) and was named a Division III Academic All-American in 1990 and 1991 and NABC All-American in 1991. Enfield graduated from JHU with a bachelor's degree in economics and earned the prestigious NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship. He earned an MBA from the University of Maryland.