*** Welcome to piglix ***

Barry Collier (basketball)

Barry Collier
Sport(s) Basketball
Current position
Title Athletic Director
Team Butler
Conference Big East Conference
Biographical details
Born (1954-07-15) July 15, 1954 (age 62)
Alma mater Miami Dade CC, A.A., 1974
Butler, B.S., 1976
Indiana State, M.S., 1977
Playing career
1972–1974 Miami Dade CC
1974–1976 Butler
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1976–1977 Rose Hulman (asst.)
1977–1978 Seattle Central CC (asst.)
1978–1983 Idaho (asst.)
1983–1986 Oregon (asst.)
1986–1989 Stanford (asst.)
1989–2000 Butler
2000–2006 Nebraska
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
2006–present Butler
Head coaching record
Overall 285-223 (.561)
Tournaments 0–3 (NCAA)
4–5 (NIT)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
MCC Regular Season (1997, 2000)
3× MCC Tournament (1997, 1998, 2000)
Awards
MCC Coach of the Year (1991, 1997, 1999, 2000)
Records
196–132 (Butler)
190–101 (Nebraska)

Barry Collier (born July 15, 1954) is an American former college basketball coach. He is currently the athletic director at Butler University in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Collier attended Miami Palmetto High School in Miami, Fla., and later received an Associate of Arts degree from Miami-Dade Community College. From there he went to Butler, and played basketball under George Theofanis for two seasons, and was named a team captain and co-MVP in 1975-76. As a senior, he averaged 15.2 points and a team-high 7.5 rebounds while earning first team all-conference recognition in the Indiana Collegiate Conference. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Butler in 1976 and a Master of Science degree from Indiana State University in 1977.

Collier began his coaching career at Rose-Hulman in 1976-77, and then followed with assistant coaching stops at Seattle Central Community College (1977–78), the University of Idaho (1978-83), the University of Oregon (1983–86) and Stanford University (1986-89). After Stanford had reached the NCAA Tournament in 1989, Collier began actively searching for a head coaching position. When he learned his alma mater had an opening, "he submitted a 45-page proposal on how to revive the Butler program to then university president Geoffrey Bannister. It worked, and the 34-year-old Collier was put in charge of team that hadn’t made the NCAA tournament in nearly 30 years."

He took his first head coaching job at Butler in 1989, a position he held until 2000. During those eleven seasons at Butler, the team had six postseason appearances, including an NCAA Tournament appearance, Butler's first in 35 years. The team, overall, had five 20-win seasons, after just two 20-win seasons in the prior 91-year history of the school, and was named Midwestern Collegiate Conference (now Horizon League) Coach of the Year in 1991, 1997, 1999 and 2000.


...
Wikipedia

...