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Greg White (basketball)

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Greg White
Biographical details
Born (1959-03-31) March 31, 1959 (age 65)
Mullens, West Virginia
Alma materMarshall University
Playing career
1977–1981Marshall
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1981–1982Marshall (student assistant)
1984–1989University of Pikeville
1989–1990Marshall (assistant)
1990–1995University of Charleston
1995–1996UCLA (assistant)
1996–2003Marshall
2003–2010University of Charleston
Head coaching record
Overall115–84 (.578) (Division I)[1]
Tournaments0–0
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 Southern Conference regular season (1997)
Awards
WVIAC Coach of the Year (1992)
Southern Conference Coach of the Year (1997)

Greg White (born March 31, 1959) is an American basketball coach best known, as the head coach at Marshall University and assistant coach for the UCLA Bruins. He is also a well known motivational speaker on the speakers circuit in both the university and business world. He has spoken to major corporations such as Mercedes, BMW, Subway, State Farm, Chevrolet, AT&T, Timken and Nisource to name a few. On the college speakers circuit he has spoken at University of Alabama, Ohio State University, University of Kentucky, UCLA, Kansas State University, University of South Carolina, University of Louisville, Wake Forest University, University of Tennessee, University of Maryland, Iowa State University, Catholic University of America and University of Denver to name a few. He graduated from the (now closed) Mullens High School in Mullens, WV and went on to play at NCAA Division I Marshall University, where he is a member of the school's Hall of Fame.[2] He was a record setting point guard, starting 113 consecutive games from 1977–81 and still holds numerous records at Marshall. His legendary ball handling skills are world-famous as he has traveled the globe performing as motivational speaker, exhibitionist and clinician. His 115 wins as Marshall's head coach rank him as the 3rd winningest coach in Marshall Basketball history (29 coaches). His teams amassed an 87-17 home record in Marshall's Cam Henderson Center. Additionally, his teams at Marshall had a record setting 27 game home win streak and were 34-3 in home games against non conference teams beating foes like Wake Forest University, University of Georgia, University of Detroit and The University of Massachusetts. In 2002, Greg's Marshall team lead all Division I basketball teams in 3 point field goal shooting percentage at 44% and he had 18 all conference players during his time as Marshall's head coach. He had one player, Keith Veney, who hit 15 3's in a game which still stands as an NCAA record. He has written several books with his most popular book being "The Winning Edge", a book about the importance of goal setting and time management. In 2016, he published "Success: Attitude is Everything," a book focused on having a great attitude and strong mindset. His basketball camps are the largest sports camps in the history of West Virginia at Marshall University and the University of Charleston attracting over 1000 per summer at their peak.

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Charleston Golden Eagles (West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference) (1990–1995)
1990–91 Charleston 10–18 6–12 11th
1991–92 Charleston 21–9 15–3 1st NAIA Division I First Round
1992–93 Charleston 14–16 9–10 7th NAIA District 28 Playoffs
1993–94 Charleston 10–13 8–9 10th
1994–95 Charleston 13–14 8–9 8th
Marshall Thundering Herd (Southern Conference) (1996–1997)
1996–97 Marshall 20–9 10–4 T–1st (North)
Marshall Thundering Herd (Mid-American Conference) (1997–2003)
1997–98 Marshall 11–16 7–11 T–3rd (East)
1998–99 Marshall 16–11 11–7 6th (East)
1999–00 Marshall 21–9 11–7 T–3rd (East)
2000–01 Marshall 18–9 12–6 T–2nd (East)
2001–02 Marshall 15–15 8–10 5th (East)
2002–03 Marshall 14–15 9–9 T–3rd (East)
Marshall: 115–84 (.578) 68–54 (.557)
Charleston Golden Eagles (West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference) (2003–2010)
2003–04 Charleston 20–10 11–7 5th
2004–05 Charleston 20–9 12–6 4th
2005–06 Charleston 18–11 11–7 8th
2006–07 Charleston 15–14 9–9 T–8th
2007–08 Charleston 19–10 12–8 5th
2008–09 Charleston 13–15 8–12 11th
2009–10 Charleston 19–11 15–7 5th
Charleston: 192–150 (.561) 124–99 (.556)
Total: 307–234 (.567)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

References

  1. ^ "Greg White coaching record". Sports Reference. Retrieved August 19, 2020.
  2. ^ "Greg White (1993) – Marshall Athletics". herdzone.com. Retrieved August 19, 2020.