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Larry Fitzgerald, Jr. is the third-highest paid NFL football player. The former Holy Angels and University of Pittsburgh star ranks behind quarterback Ben Roethlisberger of Pittsburgh, who makes $27,701,920 to lead the league, and Minnesota Vikings ...
Read moreMinnesota-connected NFL players’ salaries - Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder
Salt Lake City - Utah Jazz head coach Jerry Sloan at the bench with Utah Jazz forward C.J. Miles (34). Sloan was looking for his 1,000th coaching win with the Utah Jazz. Utah Jazz vs. Oklahoma City Thunder NBA basketball, Friday, November 7, 2008 at ...
Read moreUtah Jazz: Sloan sees changes over 20 years - Salt Lake Tribune
Salt Lake City - Utah Jazz head coach Jerry Sloan at the bench with Utah Jazz forward C.J. Miles (34). Sloan was looking for his 1,000th coaching win with the Utah Jazz. Utah Jazz vs. Oklahoma City Thunder NBA basketball, Friday, November 7, 2008 at ...
Read moreUtah Jazz: Sloan sees changes over 20 years (with multimedia) - Salt Lake Tribune
Need a motivating factor to help you train harder? Need a reason to do off-season conditioning or some type of incentive to help your team win championships? How about making millions of dollars playing professional sports? For most athletes, those ...
Read moreCollege isn't such a bad ending point, ladies - News-Bulletin
Barack Obama broke this country's most daunting racial barrier last week when Americans elected him their first black president. At universities around the nation, though, black men remain a very rare presence in another primary seat of power and ...
Read moreAnother hurdle to conquer: The coaches' office - Minneapolis Star Tribune
Something is wrong with the NBA when the New York Knicks and Memphis Grizzlies pay Stephon Marbury and Antoine Walker, respectively, $21 million and $9 million to sit on the bench. Sure, they can practice and work out before games, but do they ...
Read moreMarty Mac's World: Some NBA millionaires simply get paid to sit - Sacramento Bee
Some of the best girls' soccer players in Greater Cincinnati, and indeed the entire state, didn't play for their high schools this season. They didn't give up the sport - they just chose to play for elite club programs rather than their high school ...
Read moreSome skipping high school sports - Cincinnati.com
KNOXVILLE - Tennessee athletic director Mike Hamilton has a long list of qualities he's looking for in the next Tennessee coach but no timeline on which to hire him. "I'm more concerned about hiring the right candidate than I am about how quickly we ...
Read moreUT's Hamilton seeking good salesman with integrity - Jackson Sun
Ada — The end of a losing football season has become something of a November rite of passage at East Central University. And when the 2008 campaign — ECU’s 12th sub-.500 season in the past 15 years — concluded Saturday in Durant with the ...
Read moreWhat now? - Ada Evening News
Redd hit 6 of 10 shots from the field, including 4 of 8 three-point attempts, and added two rebounds and two assists. He knocked in a pair of threes in the first half as Lithuania stayed with a 2-3 zone defense. Former Marquette University and ...
Read moreCollege Basketball Coach Salaries Questions asked
Resolved Question: Basketball coaches......?
I need to do a graduation project in school so could any basketball coaches please answer these questions: 1.How long have you had this career? 2.What qualifications do you need for this job? 3.Why did you choose this career? 4.What is the best part of this career? 5.What is the worst part of this career? 6.How has this career changed over the years? 7.What is the average starting salary for this career? 8.What are the usual hours for this career? 9.What college did you go to and why? 10.Is there opportunity for advancement in this career? 11.How many years do you have to go to school to get he best job offers? 12.Do you enjoy your job? 13.What personal qualities do you need for this career? 14.What does the future look like for this career? 15.What was your first job and how did it prepare you for this career? Thanks alot. moreResolved Question: 2008 Hall of Fame class, who gets in and who doesn't?
NORTH AMERICAN COMMITTEE FINALISTS VICTOR BUBAS - Contributor (Finalist in 2003), the 1996 recipient of the prestigious John Bunn Lifetime Achievement Award, began a lifelong love affair with basketball in his hometown of Gary, Indiana before attending North Carolina State University where he played for, and coached alongside, Hall of Famer Everett Case. As a player, Bubas helped NC State reach the NCAA Final Four in 1950. Bubas then landed the head coaching position at Duke University in 1959 where he led the Blue Devils to three NCAA Final Fours (1963, 1964, 1966) and four ACC championships (1960, 1963, 1964, 1966). His strong work ethic and vision helped put Duke on the national map in basketball and made Bubas the second winningest coach in the 1960s behind Hall of Famer John Wooden. As the Commissioner of the Sun Belt Conference from 1976-1990, Bubas played a key role in the NCAA's adoption of the both the three-point line and the 45-second shot clock. ADRIAN DANTLEY - Player (Finalist in 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007), a native of Washington, D.C., was one of the most prolific scorers in NBA history. He had a stellar 15-year NBA career with seven different teams (Buffalo Braves, Indiana Pacers, Los Angeles Lakers, Utah Jazz, Detroit Pistons, Dallas Maverick and Milwaukee Bucks), the majority of the time spent with the Jazz (1979-86). At all levels, Dantley enjoyed success - as a scholastic All-America player at DeMatha Catholic High School (Md.), as a collegian at Notre Dame (1973-76), as the leading scorer (19.3 ppg) of the gold medal 1976 Olympic team and as a professional where he was Rookie of the Year in 1977. His 23,177 career points still ranks 23rd all-time in the NBA. He scored 2,223 points in three seasons (25.8) at Notre Dame, ranks second in Irish career scoring and was a unanimous First Team All-America list in 1975 and 1976. In all but four seasons as a professional, Dantley averaged 20 points or better, including topping the 30-point mark four straight years (1981-84). The six-time NBA All-Star (1980-82, 1984-86) was named NBA Comeback Player of the Year in 1984, the year he led the league in scoring (30.6). WILLIAM (Bill) DAVIDSON - Contributor (Finalist in 2007), 85, is a lifelong Michigan resident born in Detroit, where he has created both NBA and WNBA dynasties. An owner of the Pistons since 1974 and the WNBA Shock since 1998, Davidson's Pistons have captured three NBA crowns to go along with two WNBA titles for the Shock. Davidson has served as Chairman of the NBA Board of Governors, and has been an innovative business leader in the sports industry - building the revolutionary Palace of Auburn Hills, playing an integral role in structuring modern NBA salary cap and free agency standards, and even owning the NHL's Tampa Bay Lightning and capturing a Stanley Cup. His Pistons have featured several Hall of Famers, including Isiah Thomas, Joe Dumars, Chuck Daly and Larry Brown. PATRICK EWING - Player, a two-time Olympic gold medal winner (1984, 1992) and a three-time consensus First Team All-America (1983, 1984, 1985), led Georgetown University to three appearances in the NCAA Final Four and the 1984 national championship earning Most Outstanding Player recognition for his efforts. The 1986 NBA Rookie of the Year landed a spot on 11 NBA All Star rosters including ten in a row from 1998 to 1997. A member of the NBA 50th Anniversary Team, Ewing scored 24,815 points during his 17-year NBA career to go along with 11,607 rebounds. Named Parade Magazine's National High School Player of the Year in 1981, Ewing remains the New York Knicks, all-time leader in points, rebounds, blocked shots, steals and field goals made. DENNIS JOHNSON - Player (Finalist in 1999, 2003, 2005), was one of basketball's toughest defenders earning nine consecutive NBA All-Defensive team honors during his 14-year pro career, including six spots on the All-Defensive First Team. A member of three NBA championship teams, Johnson led the Seattle Supersonics to the 1979 NBA title and was named Finals Most Valuable Player. He was an unheralded player coming out of high school and college, but left his mark on the NBA as a five-time All Star (1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1985) and one of the game's great clutch performers. CHRIS MULLIN - Player (Finalist in 2007), a McDonald's High School All-America from Brooklyn, NY, was a five-time NBA All-Star and collegiate standout at St. John's, where he was named Big East Player of the Year an unprecedented three times. A two-time Olympic gold medalist (1984, 1992), Mullin played 16 NBA seasons for Golden State and Indiana, amassing 17,911 points while averaging more than 20 ppg for six consecutive seasons. He is one of only 17 players in NBA history to compile 17,000 points, 3,000 rebounds and 3,000 assists, and was an NBA First Team pick in 1992. He is the all time scoring leader at St. John's (2,440), where he was named the Wooden Award winner and The Sporting News First Team All-America in 1985. DON NELSON - Coach (Finalist in 2006), is a three-time NBA Coach of the Year (1983, 1985, 1992) and currently ranks second on the all-time wins list in NBA history behind Hall of Famer Lenny Wilkens. Nelson is one of the modern game's great innovators with his small-ball offense, his eye for international talent and his ability to reinvent preconceived notions about positions on the basketball court. He led the Golden State Warriors to a 4-2 game upset of the Dallas Mavericks in the first round of the 2007 NBA Playoffs, the first time a #8 seed defeated a #1 seed in a seven-game series. In 1996, Nelson was named to the NBA's Ten Best Coaches of All-Time list and has served his country as the head coach of the 1994 U.S. men's national team that won the gold medal at the World Championships. HAKEEM OLAJUWON - Player, a native of Lagos, Nigeria, spent the lion's share of his basketball career in Houston, Texas where he led the Houston Rockets to back-to-back NBA championships in 1994 and 1995 and the University of Houston to three consecutive Final Four appearances from 1982 to 1984. A two-time Defensive Player of the Year, Olajuwon still holds the NBA record for blocked shots (3,830) and is the only player to record more than 3,000 blocked shots and 2,000 steals in a career. Olajuwon was also a five-time member of the NBA All-Defensive First Team, a six-time All-NBA First Team performer, and the 1994 NBA MVP. He recorded 26,946 points and 13,748 rebounds in 18 NBA seasons, good for ninth and fourteenth respectively on the all-time NBA leader board. PAT RILEY - Coach, has experienced success at all levels and in all realms of the game. A player on the 1966 University of Kentucky Final Four team, Riley has left his biggest mark on the game in coaching. Riley is a three-time NBA Coach of the Year and currently ranks third on the all-time wins list in NBA history behind Hall of Famer Lenny Wilkens and fellow finalist Don Nelson. His greatest achievements have come in the form of five NBA championships, including four as the head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers (1982, 1985, 1987, 1988) and a fifth patrolling the sidelines for the Miami Heat in 2005. He is a member of the NBA's Ten Best Coaches of All-Time and is the only coach in history to win NBA Coach of the Year honors with three different teams. DICK VITALE - Contributor (Finalist in 2004, 2006), a native of Passaic, NJ, has been synonymous with college basketball for more than 20 years as the lead color announcer for ESPN. A successful coach at the high school (East Rutherford), collegiate (University of Detroit) and professional (Detroit Pistons) levels, Vitale began his broadcasting career with ESPN in 1979 and has helped make the network an integral part of college basketball's popularity. His enthusiastic, upbeat style has resulted in a lexicon of now-familiar phrases as "Get a TO," "Awesome, Baby," and "PTP-er." An author of six books chronicling his love affair with basketball, Vitale was recipient of the Basketball Hall of Fame's Curt Gowdy electronic media award (1988) and won the NABC Cliff Wells Appreciation Award in 2000. WOMEN'S COMMITTEE FINALIST CATHY RUSH - Coach (Finalist in 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005), a pioneer in women's basketball and an advocate for women's sports, led Immaculata University to three consecutive AIAW national championships from 1972 to 1974. Rush propelled Immaculata, and women's basketball, into the national spotlight when the Mighty Macs appeared on national television in 1975, a first for women's basketball. Rush won 149 games in only seven season and lost only 15, good for a .908 winning percentage. She made six consecutive appearances in the AIAW Final Four (1972-1977) and for her accomplishments was enshrined into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000. INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE FINALISTS TOGO SOARES - Coach, is widely considered the greatest coach in South American basketball history. He coached the Brazilian national team from 1951 to 1971 and led Brazil to five medals in the World Championships including two gold (1959, 1963), two silver (1954, 1970) and one bronze (1967). Soares also managed a bronze medal at the 1960 Olympic Games as well as silver and bronze medals at the 1963 and 1959 Pan-Am Games respectively. His club record included leading teams to five South American championships (1958, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1971). MACIEL UBIRATAN PEREIRA - Player, a native of Sao Paulo, Brazil, is widely considered one of the greatest players in South American basketball history. A member of three Brazilian Olympic teams, Ubiratan led his countrymen to the bronze medal at the 1964 Olympic Games. He was a relentless competitor and all-around player who only cared about winning and filling whatever need for any of his teams. Ubiratan also earned five South American championships (1963, 1968, 1971, 1973, 1977) and eleven titles in Paulista League of Brazil. VETERAN'S COMMITTEE FINALIST RICHARD GUERIN - Player (Finalist in 2007), was a six-time NBA All Star (1958-1963) and scored 14,676 points, 4,278 rebounds and 4,211 assists during a pro career with the Knicks (1956-63), St. Louis Hawks (1963-67) and Atlanta Hawks (1968-70). Guerin was the first Knick to score 2,000 points in a single season, and averaged 20.1 ppg as a member of the Knicks. Born in Bronx, NY, Guerin played at Iona College, where as a senior he averaged 24.7 ppg and was named an All-America. Guerin was also a player/coach for both the St. Louis and Atlanta Hawks, compiling a 327-291 record while being named NBA Coach of the Year in 1968. JOHNNY "RED" KERR - Contributor (Finalist in 2004, 2005, 2006), a native of Chicago, IL, has dedicated more than 60 years of his life to the game of basketball as a player, coach, executive, and broadcaster. A three-time NBA All Star (1956, 1959, 1963) and a member of the 1955 NBA champion Syracuse Nationals, Kerr was one of basketball's most durable players appearing in a then-record 844 consecutive games. The 1967 NBA Coach of the Year is the only coach in NBA history to lead an expansion to the playoffs in the franchise's first season. He is the author of Bull Session and served as the Business Manager for the Chicago Bulls from 1973-1975. Kerr has served as color commentator for the Chicago Bulls since 1975. moreResolved Question: What are some steps in becoming a D3 college basketball coach and what is an average salary? any help is great
i'm 19 and have coached middle school for 2 years. how can i get into high school coaching and eventually college. thanks! moreResolved Question: Where can i find a list of division 1 college basketball coaches salaries?
moreResolved Question: Is anyone on the Rutgers womens basketball team not adult, and not in a $multi-million worldwide TV event?
I don't see how anybody can say that these "girls" were not fair game for national discussion--which is one of the main criticisms of Don Imus's comments. Isn't their coach writing a $multimillion book? Isn't college womens basketball a HUGE industry??? How can anyone participate in one of the professional college sports industries--really BILLIONS are at sake with advertising, equipment makers' revenues and endorsements, and TV time, and the salaries of the basketball announcers. So how can these girls and Oprah and Hillary and others say that nobody should be talking about them? PLEASE NOTE: This issue is entirely separate from the issue of what Imus said about them--it is only about whether Imus should be allowed to say something negative, not racial. moreResolved Question: Where can I find information on college basketball coach's salaries?
I want to see a list of what the major basketball coaches in the NCAA make per year. moreResolved Question: Equitable Wages?
Should college football coaches be paid the same as college volleyball coaches? Should female basketball players in the Women's National Basketball Association be paid the same as their male counterparts in the National Basketball Association? Should men and women be paid the same salaries in every job, or just some? That is, are their jobs of comparable worth? What role should market forces and government in the United States play in determining wages? moreResolved Question: Equitable Wages?
Should college football coaches be paid the same as college volleyball coaches? Should female basketball players in the Women's National Basketball Association be paid the same as their male counterparts in the National Basketball Association? Should men and women be paid the same salaries in every job, or just some? That is, are their jobs of comparable worth? What role should market forces and government in the United States play in determining wages? moreResolved Question: what are college basketball coaches salaries?
Top ten Coaches/Highest paid moreTop College Basketball Coach Salaries Links
Contracts for college coaches cover more than salaries - USATODAY.comNational Security Agency The National Security Agency/Central Security Service is Americas cryptologic organization. It coordinates, directs, and performs ... More |
College Basketball Coach SalarySweet deals. More and more college coaches are making CEO money Posted: Monday June 02, 2003 12:58 PM |
SI.com - College Basketball - Men - College coaches getting CEO ...National College Basketball Coverage, News, Rosters, Stats, Schedules and more. ... became public, Krause justified it by saying K-State's salary structure with the head coach ... |
Rivals.com College Basketball - Kansas State's Hill earns surprising ...Find Basketball Coaching Jobs, Basketball Coach Salary Info ,and Network with High School and College Coaches. |
HoopCoach.org :: Basketball Jobs : Coaching Salaries : Network ...Basketball coach job search made simple at SimplyHired ... For the Deaf - by LinkedIn; Assistant Basketball Coach-Girls Salaries in ... at Chattahoochee Valley Community College - by ... |
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