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Mike Budenholzer

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League
  
NBA

Role
  
Coach

Nationality
  
American

Team
  
Atlanta Hawks


Coaching career
  
1993–present

Spouse
  
Mary Beth Budenholzer

Name
  
Mike Budenholzer

Education
  
Pomona College

Mike Budenholzer Mike Budenholzer and Staff to Coach Eastern Conference All


Position
  
Head coach/President of Basketball Operations

Born
  
August 6, 1969 (age 54) Holbrook, Arizona (
1969-08-06
)

High school
  
Holbrook (Holbrook, Arizona)

1993–1994
  
Vejle BK (Denmark) (youth teams)

Teams coached
  
Atlanta Hawks (Head coach, since 2013), San Antonio Spurs (Assistant Coach, 1996–2013)

Awards
  
NBA Coach of the Year Award

Similar People
  
Jeff Teague, Al Horford, Paul Millsap, Gregg Popovich, Kyle Korver

Atlanta hawks coach mike budenholzer on his offense


Michael Vincent Budenholzer (born August 6, 1969) is the current head coach of the Atlanta Hawks in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Before joining Atlanta, Budenholzer spent 18 seasons with the San Antonio Spurs, serving as a video coordinator for the first two seasons and then as an assistant coach under head coach Gregg Popovich.

Contents

Mike Budenholzer HolbrookNative Mike Budenholzer Wins NBA Coach Of The

Stephen Curry Talks With Coach Mike Budenholzer | February 16, 2019 NBA All-Star Practice


Career

Mike Budenholzer Report Hawks coach Mike Budenholzer arrested on DUI

A native of Holbrook, Arizona, Budenholzer attended Pomona College, where he was a four-year letterman in basketball and golf and was named the Outstanding Senior Athlete in 1993. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy, politics, and economics. After college, he spent the 1993–94 season in Denmark, playing professionally for Vejle Basketball Klub, where he averaged a team-high 27.5 points per game while also serving as head coach for two teams of the club's youth system.

Mike Budenholzer 1369773381000XXXs1301251830130528163734jpg

At the start of the 1994–95 season, Budenholzer was hired by the San Antonio Spurs of the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a video coordinator. He held that position for two years before being named an assistant coach under head coach Gregg Popovich at the beginning of the 1996–97 season. Budenholzer was part of a staff that won four NBA championships while with the Spurs.

Mike Budenholzer Mike Budenholzer DUI Situation Should Not Be a Red Flag

Budenholzer left San Antonio at the end of the 2013 NBA Playoffs to begin his new career as the head coach of the Atlanta Hawks. The Hawks would qualify for the Eastern Conference playoffs as the 8th seed in his first season as head coach but would lose to the one-seeded Indiana Pacers in the first round.

Mike Budenholzer Wojnarowski National Basketball Referees Association

Budenholzer was named the December 2014 Eastern Conference Coach of the Month after leading the Hawks to a 14-2 record in the month. He was named the head coach of the Eastern Conference team at the 2015 NBA All-Star Game by virtue of Atlanta being in first place in the conference by the break. Budenholzer won the January 2015 Eastern Conference Coach of the Month award after leading the Hawks to the first 17-0 record in a month in NBA history. He went on to lead the Hawks to a franchise record 60 wins, as well as their deepest playoff run in 48 years. On April 21, he was named the recipient of the Red Auerbach Trophy as the 2014–15 NBA Coach of the Year.

On June 30, 2015, Budenholzer was promoted to president of basketball operations in addition to his duties as head coach. While Wes Wilcox was promoted to general manager, Budenholzer has the final say in all basketball matters.

On August 1, 2015, Budenholzer served as Team Africa's assistant coach at the 2015 NBA Africa exhibition game.

On September 19, 2015, Budenholzer was inducted into the Pomona Pitzer Hall of Fame.

On May 5, 2017, Budenholzer resigned from his position as president of basketball operations for the Hawks.

Personal life

Budenholzer is the youngest of seven children born to Vince and Libby Budenholzer. He is of German descent. His father was also a basketball coach and spent 25 years coaching high school and college teams in Arizona before retiring in 1997. Budenholzer is married to Mary Beth; the couple has four children: William Vincent, Savoia Elizabeth, Hanna Louise and John Bent.

Budenholzer was arrested in Atlanta for driving under the influence on August 28, 2013. He was found not guilty of the charge 34 months later by a Fulton County State Court jury on June 27, 2016.

References

Mike Budenholzer Wikipedia


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