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Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball

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University
  
Marshall University

All-time record
  
1,411–1040–2 (.576)

Home
  
Away

Arena/Stadium
  
Cam Henderson Center

Division
  
Division I (NCAA)

Colors
  
Kelly Green, White

First season
  
1907

Student section
  
Marshall Maniacs

Head coach
  
Dan D'Antoni

Conference
  
Conference USA

Mascot
  
Marco the Buffalo

Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball wowkimagesworldnowcomimages601007Gjpg

Nickname
  
Marshall Thundering Herd

Location
  
Huntington, West Virginia, United States

Profiles

Marshall men s basketball east carolina


The Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball team is a basketball team from Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia

Contents

Marshall has advanced to the NCAA Tournament five times through the years, most recently in 1987. The Thundering Herd has also played in the NIT five times, last appearing in 2012. Marshall won the NAIA National Championship in 1947, and is 7-2 all-time in the first collegiate basketball tournament, one year older than the NIT and four years older than the NCAA Tournament.

Notable former Marshall basketball players include NBA and Marshall Hall of Famer Hal Greer, who was named as one of the NBA's 50 best players of all time. Greer was selected to 10 consecutive NBA All-Star games. Greer was named NBA All-Star Game MVP in 1968, one year after leading the Philadelphia 76ers to the NBA title. Additionally, Marshall's Andy Tonkovich was the first overall selection in the BAA (now NBA) draft in 1948. Mike D'Antoni, current head coach of the Houston Rockets and former NBA Coach of the Year winner with the Phoenix Suns, played college basketball at Marshall.

Cam Henderson era

The legendary coach of the Thundering Herd was Cam Henderson. Henderson, acknowledged as the creator of the modern zone defense, won 358 games against just 158 losses between 1935–1955. Henderson led Marshall to three consecutive Buckeye Conference titles from 1936–39, but his greatest team was the 1946–47 team. They set a Marshall school record with 32 wins in a season; a 17–0 start to the season; a 35-game home winning streak; and won the National Championship in the National Association for Intercollegiate Basketball (today's NAIA) in Kansas City in 1947, sweeping five games in six days. Marshall also played in the NAIB Tournament in 1938 and 1948, losing in the quarterfinals. His 1947–48 team won the Helms Foundation Los Angeles Invitational with a 46–44 win over Syracuse, the same year Henderson coached the Marshall football team to the second-ever Tangerine Bowl.

Andy Tonkovich, who played on that team, was the first draft pick of the 1948 BAA draft by Providence. Center Charlie Slack set a still NCAA record of 25.6 rebounds per game for Henderson's final team in 1954–55. Tonkovich, Gene "Goose" James, Bill Hall were First Team NAIB All-Americans in 1947, joined by Bill Toothman on the second team and Mervin Gutshall on honorable mention, meaning all five starters were on the All-American team. Tonkovich repeated on the second team in 1948. Walt Walowac was a first team Helms Foundation Small College All-American for Henderson in 1953, and was third team on the Helms squad in 1954.

Henderson recorded wins over such marquee programs as Syracuse, Virginia, Memphis, Virginia Tech, Pepperdine, Xavier, Dayton, Louisville (No. 19 in the nation in 1950, a 96–72 Marshall win), Indiana State (Henderson was 2–1 versus John Wooden, when the UCLA legend was coaching the Sycamores), BYU, Idaho, Hawaii, Cincinnati, Tennessee, Western Kentucky, Loyola, Maryland, Miami-Florida, Denver, St. Francis, Wichita State, Colorado, Cal, CCNY, Long Island Univ., South Carolina and St. Louis. His 1954–55 team was second in the Mid-American Conference, but was denied a berth in the NIT by the league in the wake of the cheating scandals in New York and other college spots in the early 1950s.

Jule Rivlin era

Henderson's first basketball All-American, Jule Rivlin, coached the 1955–56 Herd to its only MAC title and first-ever NCAA Tournament. Rivlin's 1958 Herd led the nation in scoring, with Hal Greer and Leo Byrd, scoring 88.1 points per game and topping the Jerry West-led Mountaineers of West Virginia University who averaged 88.0 points per game. Byrd was an All-American in 1959, first team on the Chuck Taylor/Converse team and second team on UPI and Helms Foundation. Henderson and Tonkovich are both members of the Helms Foundation NAIA Hall of Fame.

Ellis Johnson era

Marshall was coached to the NIT by Ellis T. Johnson (the first All-American for legendary Kentucky coach Adolph Rupp) in 1967, advancing to the semifinals thanks in part to George Stone scoring 46 points versus Nebraska before his five-years in the ABA. Johnson brought the Herd back to the NIT in 1968 behind point guard Dan D'Antoni.

Carl Tacy era

Carl Tacy coached the Herd to a 23–4 season in 1971–72, losing to Southwest Louisiana, 112–101 in the NCAA Tournament. Marshall was ranked at high at No. 8 in the nation that season, and finished 12th in the nation. Russell Lee was a Converse All-American in 1972, and was selected in the first round of the ABA Draft and second round by the Milwaukee Bucks of the NBA, playing for that team for a couple of seasons.

Bob Daniels era

Bob Daniels was the Herd coach beginning in the 1972–73 season for the NIT appearance. Mike D'Antoni was the point guard for the NCAA Tournament team in 1972 and the NIT team in 1973, and was a CoSIDA Academic All-American both seasons and awarded an NCAA post-graduate scholarship. He was drafted by the Royals, played four seasons in the NBA before moving to greater glory in the Italian League, winning titles as a player and coach. Kobe Bryant wore No. 8 his first few seasons in the NBA because that's the number D'Antoni wore when he played with Kobe's father in Italy.

Bob Zuffelato era

Marshall advanced to the school's first conference title game in 1978, falling to Furman in the title game under charismatic coach Stu Aberdeen. Bob Zuffelato took the Herd to the Southern Conference finals in 1979–80, falling again to Furman, after Aberdeen died during the summer of 1979 while on vacation. The 1980–81 team saw Marshall post its first-ever win over West Virginia at the WVU Coliseum in Morgantown, West Virginia. Marshall won the first game played against WVU in Huntington in 1982–83. Marshall would go on to be 5–0 versus the Mountaineers in Huntington before the series moved permanently to the Charleston Civic Center in the state capital.

Rick Huckabay era

Rick Huckabay led Marshall to four Southern Conference titles, three NCAA Tournaments and an NIT berth from 1983–89. John Taft and Skip Henderson were both recruited by Huckabay and are one-two in scoring at Marshall all-time.

Billy Donovan era

When Billy Donovan was hired in 1994, he was 28 years old and the youngest head coach in NCAA Division I. Donovan helped land West Virginia native Jason Williams after originally signing with Providence. When Donovan left to become the head coach of the University of Florida in 1996, Williams followed him to the Gators. Donovan lead the Thundering Herd to the SoCon North division title in the 1994–95 season. He went 35–20 in two seasons at Marshall.

Notable assistant coaches at Marshall under Donovan included Anthony Grant and John Pelphrey.

Greg White era

Keith Veney set an NCAA record with 15 three-pointers in Marshall's Henderson Center arena against Morehead State University on December 14, 1996, for new head coach Greg White, who was Marshall's point guard from 1977–81. White followed in the great Marshall tradition of outstanding players from the Mullens, West Virginia, area including both Mike and Danny D'Antoni and their uncle, Andy D'Antoni, a Marshall quarterback for Henderson in 1938–40. His basketball camps were the largest sports camps in the history of Marshall"s athletics peaking at over 1000 per summer. He ended his career as Marshall's third winningnest coach (29 coaches).

White coached his first Marshall team to its final Southern Conference Tournament title game in 1996–97, falling to UT-Chattanooga on a last-second stick-back. Marshall joined the Mid-American Conference for the second time in 1997–98, and the Herd was 21-9 in 1999–2000 under White, falling the MAC semi-finals to Miami, Ohio. Ron Jirsa coached Marshall from 2003–07 after White stepped down to become head coach at Division II University of Charleston (West Virginia), as well as a special assistant to the President of UC. He left coaching in 2011 and started a motivational speaking firm and is ultra successful in both the corporate and college/university markets. In 2011, he also became partners with Jeff Schneider with Big Shots which is the nations largest basketball company in the United States serving high school and junior high age boys basketball players with AAU basketball tournaments and camps. In 2015, Big Shots had 35,900 players participate and over 3000 AAU teams with kids from all over the United States and Europe.

Donnie Jones era

Before Donnie Jones came to coach Marshall from 2007–2010, he was an assistant with the Florida Gators for 11 years and helped Billy Donovan coach the Gators to consecutive national championships in 2006 and 2007. Jones got Marshall to a winning record for the first time since 2001 with a 16–14 mark in his first season

In 2010, Jones coached Marshall to the CIT, which was their first post-season tournament since 1988. Marshall fell to Appalachian State in the CIT quarterfinals.

Following the 2010 season, and amid growing fan concern over Marshall's performance in the 2010 CUSA and CIT tournament, Donnie Jones left Marshall to coach conference rival UCF. Considering Jones' success at Marshall and his local ties to the Huntington area, many Marshall fans considered his departure a betrayal, further fueling the Marshall-UCF rivalry.

Tom Herrion era

In 2010, Marshall hired former College of Charleston head coach, Tom Herrion, to lead the Thundering Herd. In 2012, Herrion coached the Thundering Herd to the National Invitational Tournament for the first time since 1988. However, after back-to-back losing seasons in 2013 and 2014, Marshall bought out the remaining two years of his contract.

In four season as head coach, Herrion's record was .500 going 67–67.

Dan D'Antoni era

On April 24, 2014, Marshall University Atletic Director Mike Hamrick announced Mullens native and Los Angeles Lakers assistant coach, Dan D'Antoni, as the next head coach of the Thundering Herd.

D'Antoni is a Marshall alum, and played point guard for The Herd from 1966–1970 where he led the team in scoring with a 17.5 scoring average in 1968–69, He led the 1967 team to the Semi-Finals of the National Invitation Tournaments getting beat by Marquette 83-78 and then getting beat by Rutgers 93–76 in the 3rd place game. In 1968 He led the team to the National Invitation Tournaments but got beat by St. Peters 102–93 in the First Round. and is one of 49 Marshall players to score 1,000 points, tallying 1,109. In 1990, he was inducted into the Marshall University Athletic Hall of Fame.

NCAA Tournament results

Marshall has been to the tournament five times. Their combined record is 0–5.

National Invitation Tournament results

Marshall has been selected to participate in five National Invitation Tournaments. Their combined record is 2–6.

CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament results

Marshall has been selected to participate in two CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournaments. Their combined record is 1–2.

NAIA tournament results

The Thundering Herd have appeared in the NAIA Tournament three times. Their combined record is 7–2. They were NAIA National Champions in 1947.

Home venues

  • Veterans Memorial Fieldhouse (1950–1981)
  • Cam Henderson Center (1981–present)
  • Herd in the NBA

    Current player in bold

  • Bob Allen – San Francisco Warriors
  • Mike D'Antoni – Kansas City–Omaha Kings, San Antonio Spurs
  • Hal Greer – Syracuse Nationals/Philadelphia 76ers
  • Gene James – New York Knicks, Baltimore Bullets
  • Jerry Kelly – Boston Celtics, Providence Steamrollers
  • Russ Lee – Milwaukee Bucks, New Orleans Jazz
  • Bucky McConnell – Milwaukee Hawks
  • Tamar Slay – New Jersey Nets, Charlotte Bobcats
  • Andy Tonkovich – Providence Steamrollers
  • Hassan Whiteside – Sacramento Kings, Miami Heat
  • References

    Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball Wikipedia