Sport(s) | Basketball |
---|---|
Current position | |
Title | Asst coach |
Biographical details | |
Born | April 2, 1954 |
Playing career | |
1972–1976 | Central Arkansas |
Position(s) | Shooting guard |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1976–1977 | Harding University (asst.) |
1977–1979 | Harding Academy |
1979–1981 | Central Arkansas (asst.) |
1981–1985 | Arkansas (asst.) |
1985–1989 | Kentucky (asst.) |
1990–1991 | Texas Tech (asst.) |
1991–2001 | Texas Tech |
2002–2008 | Oklahoma State (asst.) |
2010–2014 | Houston |
2014–present | Oklahoma State (asst.) |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
SWC Tournament Championship (1993, 1996) SWC Regular Season Championship (1995, 1996) |
|
Awards | |
SWC Coach of the Year (1992, 1996) |
James Allen Dickey (born April 2, 1954) is an American college basketball coach who is currently an assistant coach at Oklahoma State University. He previously served as the head men's coach at Texas Tech University from 1991 to 2001, where he led the Red Raiders to the NCAA Tournament in 1993 and again in 1996, and at the University of Houston from 2010 to 2014.
Dickey attended Valley Springs High School, where he played basketball from 1970 to 1972. He later played for Central Arkansas from 1972 to 1976.
Dickey's best team was the Texas Tech's 1996 unit, which finished 30–2, including an undefeated record in the final season of Southwest Conference play. They won the SWC conference tournament and advanced all the way to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament.
The Raiders moved to the Big 12 for the 1996–97 season, and appeared to pick up right where they left off with a solid 19–9 season. It was discovered during the inaugural Big 12 basketball tournament, however, that two players had played the entire season while academically ineligible. Hours after the team's first-round game, Texas Tech announced that it was withdrawing from postseason consideration and forfeiting its entire conference schedule. The Raiders had lost that game, and would have had to forfeit it if they had won.
A subsequent investigation revealed massive violations dating back to 1990 in men's basketball and nine other sports (though Dickey himself was not personally implicated). As a result, the NCAA stripped Tech of its two NCAA tournament wins in 1996 and docked it nine scholarships over four years. The lost scholarships were too much for Dickey to overcome, and he tallied four straight losing seasons before being fired in 2001.