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Gary Williams

Gary Williams
Gary Williams UMD-FSU.jpg
Williams courtside at the XFINITY Center (then called Comcast Center) in 2008
Sport(s) Basketball
Current position
Title Special Assistant to the Athletic Director
Team Maryland
Conference Big Ten
Record 452–242 (.651)
Biographical details
Born (1945-03-04) March 4, 1945 (age 72)
Collingswood, New Jersey
Playing career
1964–1967 Maryland
Position(s) Point guard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1969–1972 Woodrow Wilson HS
1972–1977 Lafayette (asst.)
1977–1978 Boston College (asst.)
1978–1982 American
1982–1986 Boston College
1986–1989 Ohio State
1989–2011 Maryland
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
2011–present Maryland (asst. AD)
Head coaching record
Overall 668–380 (.637)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
NCAA Division I Tournament championship (2002)
Regional Championships - Final Four (2001, 2002)
ACC Tournament championship (2004)
ACC regular season championship (1995, 2002, 2010)
Big East regular season championship (1983)
ECC regular season championship (1981)
Awards
ACC Coach of the Year (2002, 2010)
Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted in 2014
College Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted in 2014

Gary Bruce Williams (born March 4, 1945) is an American university administrator and former college basketball coach. He served as the head coach at the University of Maryland, Ohio State University, Boston College, and American University. In 2002, he led Maryland to win the NCAA Tournament Championship. Williams retired after the 2010–11 season, and is now a college basketball analyst for the Big Ten Network.

Williams played for Maryland as the starting point guard under coach Bud Millikan. He was a member of the 1966 Charlotte Invitational Tournament championship team and the 1965 Sugar Bowl Tournament championship team. He set a Maryland record for field goal percentage, going 8-for-8 from the field in an ACC game against South Carolina in 1966. (35 years later a Williams pupil, Lonny Baxter, would break that record, hitting all ten of his field goal attempts.) Williams was the Maryland team captain in 1967. He graduated in 1968 with a B.S. in Marketing. While at the University of Maryland, Williams was a member of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity.

Prior to entering the college ranks, Williams was a successful high school basketball coach at Woodrow Wilson High School in Camden, New Jersey. He won a NJSIAA state championship as head varsity coach at Wilson High. With his chance to learn under Dr. Tom Davis, Williams left to become an assistant basketball coach at Lafayette College in 1972 and continued at Boston College in 1977 until he became a head coach. He was also the head soccer coach at Lafayette College during his assistant coaching job.


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