SIU Edwardsville Cougars | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
|||
University | Southern Illinois University Edwardsville | ||
Conference | OVC | ||
Location | Edwardsville, IL | ||
Head coach | Jon Harris (2nd year) | ||
Arena |
The Sam M. Vadalabene Center (Capacity: 4,000) |
||
Nickname | Cougars | ||
Colors | Red and White |
||
Uniforms | |||
|
|||
NCAA Tournament Elite Eight | |||
(D-II) 2006 | |||
NCAA Tournament second round | |||
(D-II) 1986, 1987, 1989, 2006 | |||
NCAA Tournament appearances | |||
(D-II) 1986, 1987, 1989, 2005, 2006 |
The SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team represents Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) in the Ohio Valley Conference of NCAA Division I basketball. The Cougars play their home matches at the Sam M. Vadalabene Center located in the SIUE core campus in Edwardsville, Illinois. The head coach is Jon Harris.
The SIUE basketball program first entered competition on November 23, 1967 under the leadership of Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame coach Harry Gallatin. The newborn program had no scholarships, inadequate facilities, and very little money to work with. Home games were played at the Shurtleff College gymnasium in Alton, usually with crowds of fewer than a dozen fans in attendance. Gallatin departed as the program's coach after three years (while remaining as athletic director and golf coach for many years) with a record of 19–31.
Gallatin was succeeded by Jim Dudley, who would head the program for eleven years, compiling a 146–143 record. During Dudley's tenure, home games moved to the gymnasium at Edwardsville High School (now Lincoln Middle School) which was located a short distance from the SIUE campus.
Dudley was followed by Tom Pugliese, whose two years saw a record of 17–40 and brought about NCAA sanctions, resulting in the university administration's almost unheard of action of suspending of the program for the 1983–84 season.
Larry Graham resurrected the program in 1984, as the program finally got a home of its own, moving into the new Sam M. Vadalabene Center on campus. Graham was the most successful of the Cougars' coaches, earning a record of 147–84, with three NCAA Division II tournament appearances in his eight seasons.
After Graham, Jack Margenthaler had limited success, achieving a record of 112–150 in ten years.
Success returned to Cougars basketball during Marty Simmons' five years at the helm. Simmons's teams went 88–59, making the NCAA Division II tournament in 2005 and not only returning in 2006, but earning a spot in that season's Elite Eight in Springfield, Massachusetts.