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Billy Kennedy (basketball)

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Sport(s)
  
Basketball

Name
  
Billy Kennedy

Title
  
Head coach

Role
  
Basketball Coach


1986–1987
  
New Orleans (asst.)

Spouse
  
Mary Ethredge

1987–1988
  
Wyoming (asst.)

Billy Kennedy (basketball) AampM39s Kennedy uses new diet to combat Parkinson39s

Born
  
February 2, 1964 (age 60) Metairie, Louisiana (
1964-02-02
)

1985–1986
  
Southeastern Louisiana (asst.)

1988–1989
  
Northwestern State (asst.)

Team
  
Texas A&M Aggies men's basketball

Children
  
Lexie Kennedy, Will Kennedy, Anna Cate Kennedy, Brooks Kennedy

Education
  
Southeastern Louisiana University (1986), Delgado Community College (1984)

Similar People
  
Alex Caruso, Billy Gillispie, Mark Turgeon, Kourtney Roberson, J‑Mychal Reese

Profiles


Conference
  
Southeastern Conference

Basketball preseason press conference billy kennedy 10 07


William Joseph Kennedy, Jr. (born February 2, 1964) is the head men's basketball coach at Texas A&M University. He took over the position vacated by Mark Turgeon in May 2011. He previously held the same position at Murray State University for five seasons.

Contents

Billy Kennedy (basketball) billy kennedy Rush The Court

Kennedy previously held the same position at Centenary and Southeastern Louisiana. He has served 13 seasons as a collegiate head coach and 13 as an assistant.

Billy Kennedy (basketball) Texas AampM39s Billy Kennedy receives twoyear extension

Kennedy is a 1986 graduate of Southeastern Louisiana and 1984 graduate of Delgado Community College in New Orleans. He played basketball and attended Holy Cross High School in New Orleans.

Billy Kennedy (basketball) Texas AampM extends Billy Kennedy39s contract through 2018

2016 17 aggie basketball national signing day billy kennedy


Centenary

Billy Kennedy (basketball) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

After serving 12 years as an assistant coach, including the previous four at California, Kennedy's first collegiate head coaching job came at Centenary. There, he took over a program that had won only 30 games in the previous three seasons. His first team won 10 games but his second improved to a 14-14 overall record and a 9-7 Trans America Athletic Conference mark, its best finish in five years.

Southeastern Louisiana

Billy Kennedy (basketball) SEC Media Day 3 points with Texas AampM coach Billy Kennedy

Southeastern Louisiana hired Kennedy in 1999 and he steadily improved his alma mater, winning 10 games in his first season and doubling that total four seasons later, winning the Southland Conference regular-season championship. His sixth team went 24-9, the most wins in school history, and won both the conference regular-season and tournament titles. The Lions advanced to the NCAA tournament for the first time in school history, where it lost to Oklahoma State 63-50.

The Louisiana Sports Writers Association, the Louisiana Association of Basketball Coaches, and the National Association of Basketball Coaches (District 8) selected Kennedy coach of the year in 2004 end 2005.

Kennedy resigned from his position at Southeastern Louisiana to become the associate head coach at Miami.

Murray State

After serving one season as an assistant at Miami, Kennedy was named Murray State's 14th men's basketball coach in 2006, taking over after Mick Cronin departed for Cincinnati.

Taking over a team with only one returning starter, he led the Racers to a 16-14 season and second-place finish in the Ohio Valley Conference. His next two squads won 18 and 19 games, again placing second in the conference regular-season standings, and advanced as far as the OVC tournament semifinals.

His fourth team at Murray State won more games than any in school history, reaching the second round of the NCAA tournament. The 13th-seeded Racers beat fourth-seed Vanderbilt University 66-65 in the first round in the West Regional at San Jose, California, before falling 54-52 to fifth-seeded Butler University in the second round, equaling the deepest run in the NCAA tournament in school history. During the season, the Racers won a school record 17 games in a row before losing 70-65 at Morehead State University on February 25, 2010. The Racers finished the season with a 31-5 record, including a 17-1 conference mark, and avenged their lone league loss with a 62-51 win over Morehead State in the OVC tournament championship game.

Kennedy was named 2010 OVC and National Association of Basketball Coaches (District 19) coach of the year.

In 2010-11, Kennedy's Racers repeated as OVC regular-season champions but fell in the conference tournament semifinals. As OVC regular-season champions, Murray State earned a berth in the National Invitation Tournament where it lost 89-76 at Missouri State to finish with a 23-9 season record. Kennedy was again selected OVC coach of the year.

Texas A&M

Texas A&M hired Kennedy in May 2011 after Mark Turgeon left for the Maryland head coaching job. Kennedy previously coached at A&M from 1990-91. Kennedy stated at the press conference that A&M is his destination job and he plans to retire there. He was given the honors of SEC Men's Basketball Coach of the Year in 2016.

On October 27, 2011, it was announced that Kennedy had been diagnosed with early-stage Parkinson's Disease and would be leaving the team to undergo treatment. Kennedy said he planned to return following treatment and temporarily put Associate Coach Glynn Cyprien in charge of the team.

On November 13, 2011, in A&M's second game of the regular season, Kennedy returned to the bench for the Aggies' game against Southern.

Kennedy led A&M to its first conference title in 30 years when he shared the SEC crown with Kentucky in 2015-16. The Aggies also made the SEC Tournament final before losing to Kentucky in overtime. For his efforts, Kennedy was given a new 5-year contract. Coach Kennedy's squad that year also orchestrated arguably the greatest come-from-behind victory ever in both college and professional basketball history by overcoming a 12 point deficit in the final 44 seconds of the Second Round of the 2016 NCAA tournament. A&M would tie up the game before finally defeating Northern Iowa in double overtime in order to advance to the Sweet 16 against the University of Oklahoma.

References

Billy Kennedy (basketball) Wikipedia