Ron Cottrell
Current position | |
---|---|
Title | Head coach |
Team | Houston Baptist |
Conference | Southland |
Biographical details | |
Born | October 11, 1960 |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
??–?? | North Dakota State College of Science (asst.) |
??–1990 | Arkansas (asst.) |
1990–present | Houston Baptist |
Ron Cottrell (born October 11, 1960) is an American basketball head coach.
Cottrell is a current NCAA men's basketball coach at Houston Baptist University in Houston, Texas.
Career bio
He has led the Huskies back to the NCAA Division I ranks after 16 seasons building a perennial power at the NAIA Division I level. In addition to his coaching duties, Cottrell is the associate director of athletics after spending 15 years as director of athletics at HBU. He was one of the driving forces, working closely with HBU President Robert B. Sloan, in the Huskies’ transition to the NCAA.
Cottrell resurrected the HBU men’s basketball program in 1991. During those NAIA years, the Huskies won nine consecutive Red River Athletic Conference championships and competed in the NAIA national tournament 10 straight years. He built the basketball program into one of national prominence, perennially ranked in the NAIA Top 25, and finishing the season as one of the NAIA’s top 10 teams six times.
In 2002-03, Cottrell led the Huskies to a 31-3 record and ended the season as the NAIA’s top-ranked team, a ranking the Huskies held onto for the final five weeks of the season. After that history-making season, Cottrell was chosen as the Basketball Times NAIA National Coach of the Year. That season also boasted the Huskies as the national scoring and rebounding leader, scoring 100.4 points per game and bettering their opponents by a margin of 13 rebounds per game. It was the second straight year the Huskies led the NAIA in rebounding and the third time in the previous eight seasons that HBU led the nation in scoring.
HBU again led the nation in rebounding two years later, out-rebounding their opponents by 10.2 boards per game in 2004-05. During that 2004-05 season, Cottrell reached another milestone in his successful career, posting his 300th career win.
The Huskies entered a new era during the 2009-10 season, as they began their first season of Great West Conference play. HBU went 9-3 in the league, finishing second during the regular season and advancing to the championship game of the conference tournament. Four players earned all-conference recognition, including first-team selections Andrew Gonzalez and Mario Flaherty. Gonzalez was the league’s leading scorer and was named Newcomer of the Year.
He began the 2010-11 season with a 391-229 record and has averaged more than 20 wins per season in his 19-year career. Cottrell is known for his up-tempo offense and pressure defense, a philosophy he learned from his mentor, former Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson. As an assistant to Richardson at Arkansas, Cottrell helped coach the Razorbacks to two Southwest Conference championships and three trips to the NCAA tournament, culminating in the Hogs appearance at the 1990 NCAA Final Four where they lost to Duke in the semifinals. During Cottrell’s tenure on the bench at Arkansas, the Razorbacks posted a record of 88-36.
Prior to joining Richardson’s staff as an assistant coach, Cottrell spent a year as an assistant at North Dakota State College of Science before returning to Arkansas, his alma mater. Cottrell knows the Houston area, having graduated from Houston’s Westbury High School. He returned to his native Arkansas to attain a degree in industrial engineering. While attending the University of Arkansas, Cottrell served as sports director for Fayetteville, Ark., ABC affiliate KTVP-TV before entering the coaching profession.
When Cottrell was hired to lead the HBU program in the fall of 1990, Cottrell spent the second year of the Huskies’ self-imposed basketball hiatus putting the program together, recruiting and scheduling before beginning play in the 1991-92 season.
The first season, the Huskies posted a 7-23 record. It was a season of growing pains for Cottrell and his young team. He had formed his base with freshmen, and although they took their lumps, it paid off in the long run. By the time those fresh men were seniors, they had made the playoffs three straight years and fell just three points shy of making it to the NAIA national tournament. After seven-and-a-half years as the HBU coach, Cottrell broke the school’s coaching record for wins during the 1998-99 season, a record previously held by Gene Iba after an eight-year tenure. The 1997-98 Huskies had a school record 22-game winning streak and a school-best 26-6 record, only to be exceeded by the 1999-2000 team with a 28-6 record. In 2000-01, the Huskies again rewrote the record books with a 31-5 record.
HBU tied the school record for wins and set a new low for losses with the 2002-03 team’s 31-3 mark and broke the record for consecutive wins with 25. In 2003-04, the Huskies saw a 60-game home winning streak come to an end, ending the nation’s longest current home winning streak for a men’s team. That team went on to finish the year with a 27-6 record.
The Huskies had at least one basketball player receive All-America honors each season during a span of 13 seasons and Cottrell has coached athletes to All-America accolades 20 times, including the 2002-03 Basketball Times NAIA National Player of the Year, Rod Nealy. In addition, the Huskies have had recipients of All-Conference honors 38 times under Cottrell.
In conjunction with the Huskies’ on-court success, Cottrell stresses excellence in the classroom as well. He has had six players receive Academic All-America honors and 53 have garnered Academic All-Conference accolades. Cottrell was named Red River Athletic Conference Coach of the Year five times. He also has twice been awarded the Houston Area High School Boys Basketball Coaches’ College Coach of the Year and he received what he regards as one of his highest honors in the summer of 2006 when he was selected by USA Basketball to serve as a court coach for the gold-medal winning 18U USA team.
With Cottrell at the helm as Athletics Director, the Huskies won 42 conference championships and had teams compete in national tournaments 35 times. HBU won eight Red River Athletic Conference all-sports awards in the nine-year history of the RRAC. HBU produced 99 All-America honorees, 65 academic All-America athletes and 241 All-Conference performers during his tenure.
He was honored for his leadership as the 2001 recipient of the NAIA Region VI athletic director of the year award. He is a member of the National Association of Basketball Coaches, the Texas Association of Basketball Coaches, the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics and the Division I-AAA Athletics Directors Association.
Cottrell is married to the former Jacque George, who is the director of media relations for the Great West Conference, and they have two daughters, Scottlyn Rose (15) and Sydney-Anne (13). He also serves as a deacon at Sugar Land Baptist Church.[1]
Career head coaching record
Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Houston Baptist () (1991–1998) | |||||||||
1991–92 | Houston Baptist | 7–23 | |||||||
1992–93 | Houston Baptist | 14–19 | |||||||
1993–94 | Houston Baptist | 17–16 | |||||||
1994–95 | Houston Baptist | 21–13 | |||||||
1995–96 | Houston Baptist | 16–14 | |||||||
1996–97 | Houston Baptist | 17–15 | |||||||
1997–98 | Houston Baptist | 26–6 | NAIA Tournament | ||||||
Houston Baptist (Red River Athletic Conference) (1998–2007) | |||||||||
1998–99 | Houston Baptist | 25–10 | 1st | NAIA Tournament | |||||
1999–00 | Houston Baptist | 28–6 | 1st | NAIA Tournament | |||||
2000–01 | Houston Baptist | 31–5 | 1st | NAIA Tournament | |||||
2001–02 | Houston Baptist | 26–9 | 1st | NAIA Tournament | |||||
2002–03 | Houston Baptist | 31–3 | 1st | NAIA Tournament | |||||
2003–04 | Houston Baptist | 27–6 | 1st | NAIA Tournament | |||||
2004–05 | Houston Baptist | 23–10 | 1st | NAIA Tournament | |||||
2005–06 | Houston Baptist | 27–6 | 1st | NAIA Tournament | |||||
2006–07 | Houston Baptist | 22–7 | 1st | NAIA Tournament | |||||
Houston Baptist (Independent) (2007–2009) | |||||||||
2007–08 | Houston Baptist | 13–15 | |||||||
2008–09 | Houston Baptist | 5–25 | |||||||
Houston Baptist (Great West Conference) (2009–2013) | |||||||||
2009–10 | Houston Baptist | 12–21 | |||||||
2010–11 | Houston Baptist | 5–26 | 2–10 | 6th | |||||
2011–12 | Houston Baptist | 10–20 | 3–7 | 5th | |||||
2012–13 | Houston Baptist | 14–17 | 3–5 | 3rd | |||||
Houston Baptist (Southland Conference) (2013–present) | |||||||||
2013–14 | Houston Baptist | 6–25 | 2–16 | 14th | |||||
2014–15 | Houston Baptist | 12–16 | 7–11 | T–8th | |||||
2015–16 | Houston Baptist | 17–17 | 10–8 | 5th | CBI First Round | ||||
Total: | 452–350 (.564) | ||||||||
National champion
Postseason invitational champion
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