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Oliver Purnell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American former college basketball coach (born 1953)

Oliver Purnell
Purnell as Clemson coach in 2007
Biographical details
Born (1953-05-19)May 19, 1953 (age 71)
Berlin, Maryland, U.S.
Playing career
1972–1975Old Dominion
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1975–1977Old Dominion (GA)
1977–1985Old Dominion (assistant)
1985–1988Maryland (assistant)
1988–1991Radford
1991–1994Old Dominion
1994–2003Dayton
2003–2010Clemson
2010–2015DePaul
Head coaching record
Overall448–386
Tournaments0–6 (NCAA Division I)
10–8 (NIT)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
CAA Tournament (1992)
CAA Regular Season (1993, 1994)
Awards
Atlantic 10 Coach of the Year (1998)
CAA Coach of the Year (1993)
Big South Coach of the Year (1991)
Medal record
Men'sbasketball
Representing United States
Olympic Games
Assistant coach for United States
Bronze medal – third place2004 AthensMen's basketball
FIBA Americas Championship
Assistant coach for United States
Gold medal – first place2003 San JuanMen's basketball

Oliver Gordon Purnell Jr. (born May 19, 1953) is an American formercollege basketball coach. He served as the head men's basketball coach atRadford University from 1988 to 1991,Old Dominion University from 1991 to 1994, theUniversity of Dayton from 1994 to 2003,Clemson University from 2003 to 2010, andDePaul University from 2010 to 2015, compiling a career record of 448–386.

Early years

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Purnell was born inBerlin, Maryland, the second of Oliver Sr. and Phyllis' four children. He attendedStephen Decatur High School, where he played on the boys' basketball team that captured theMaryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association Class B championship in 1970.[1][2] Purnell was recruited to play basketball atOld Dominion University inNorfolk, Virginia. While at Old Dominion, Purnell enjoyed a highly successful playing career, finishing 18th on ODU's all-time scoring list with 1,090 points and leading the Monarchs to the 1975NCAA Division II national championship.[3]That year, Purnell was selected by Converse as an honorable mention Division II All-American.

Purnell averaged 14.4 points a game his senior year and 13.8 as a junior. He scored 25 points against Randolph-Macon in the NCAA South Atlantic Regional Championship game in 1975. As a junior, he averaged 6.7 assists per game and tallied 181 for the season. He was accorded the team MVP honors his senior year.

Purnell also dished out 474 career assists, which placed him sixth on the school's all-time list. He still shares ODU's single game steal record with eight against Washington and Lee in 1975.

Purnell was drafted in the sixth round of the1975 NBA draft by theMilwaukee Bucks.[4]

Purnell was inducted into the Stephen Decatur High School Hall of Fame on September 19, 2008. He was inducted into the ODU Sports Hall of Fame in April 1988.

Coaching career

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Purnell became a graduate assistant coach at ODU in July 1975, eventually becoming a full-time assistant at the university. During Purnell's tenure as a full-time assistant, he helped ODU reach the postseason seven times (3 NCAAs and 4 NITs).[4]Lefty Driesell hired Purnell in 1985 to serve as an assistant on hisMaryland staff. Purnell served three seasons at Maryland before being selected as head coach atRadford University. Purnell is credited with one of the biggest one year turnarounds in NCAA history as his 1990-91 Radford club posted a 22–7 record, a 15-game improvement over the previous season.[4] In 1991, he returned to Old Dominion to take the head coaching position. After another successful stint, in 1994, he accepted a position as head coach at theUniversity of Dayton where he led the Flyers to two NCAA tournament appearances (2000,2003) before accepting the head coaching job atClemson University shortly after the #4 seeded Flyers lost to #13Tulsa in the first round of the 2003 NCAA tournament. Purnell was the head coach of the 1999 USA World University Team and led the squad to an 8–0 record and the gold medal in Brisbane, Australia. He was the recipient of USA Basketball's 1999 Developmental Coach of the Year Award for that accomplishment.[5] He was selected to the board of directors at the 1998 convention for the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC). In 2000, he was appointed by the NABC to serve as a member of USA Basketball Men's Collegiate Committee. That committee is responsible for the selection of collegiate coaches and players for USA Basketball's teams.[5]

During his tenure at Clemson, he built the program steadily, improving each subsequent season. He served aspresident of theNational Association of Basketball Coaches in 2006–07.[6] At the conclusion of that season, Purnell took his team to the championship game of theNIT, losing toWest Virginia in the final, following wins againstSyracuse,Air Force, andOle Miss. In 2008, he guided the Tigers to a third-place 10–6 record in theAtlantic Coast Conference and a runner-up position in the ACC Tournament in Charlotte, losing toNorth Carolina by 5 points. The 2007–08 season marked Clemson's first appearance in the NCAA Tournament in ten years. However, Purnell was unable to win an NCAA tournament game (0–6) during his stints with ODU, Dayton and Clemson.

On March 18, 2008, Clemson extended Purnell's contract through 2014 and raised his salary.[7]

On April 6, 2010, Purnell signed a seven-year deal withDePaul University.[8] At the conclusion of the2014–2015 season, Purnell announced his resignation.[9]

Head coaching record

[edit]
Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Radford Highlanders(Big South Conference)(1988–1991)
1988–89Radford15–135–7T–5th
1989–90Radford7–223–97th
1990–91Radford22–712–22nd
Radford:44–42 (.512)20–18 (.526)
Old Dominion Monarchs(Colonial Athletic Association)(1991–1994)
1991–92Old Dominion15–158–6T–3rdNCAA Division I First Round
1992–93Old Dominion21–811–3T–1stNIT Second Round
1993–94Old Dominion21–1010–4T–1stNIT Second Round
Old Dominion:57–33 (.633)29–13 (.690)
Dayton Flyers(Great Midwest Conference)(1994–1995)
1994–95Dayton7–200–127th
Dayton Flyers(Atlantic 10 Conference)(1995–2003)
1995–96Dayton15–146–104th(West)
1996–97Dayton13–146–104th(West)
1997-98Dayton21–1211–53rd(West)NIT Second Round
1998-99Dayton11–175–115th(West)
1999–00Dayton22–911–51st(West)NCAA Division I First Round
2000–01Dayton21–139–76thNIT Quarterfinal
2001–02Dayton21–1110–63rd(West)NIT First Round
2002–03Dayton24–614–22nd(West)NCAA Division I First Round
Dayton:155–116 (.572)72–68 (.514)
Clemson Tigers(Atlantic Coast Conference)(2003–2010)
2003–04Clemson10–183–139th
2004–05Clemson16–165–119thNIT First Round
2005–06Clemson19–157–99thNIT Second Round
2006–07Clemson25–117–9T–8thNIT Runner-Up
2007–08Clemson24–1010–63rdNCAA Division I First Round
2008–09Clemson23–99–7T–5thNCAA Division I First Round
2009–10Clemson21–119–7T–5thNCAA Division I First Round
Clemson:138–90 (.605)50–62 (.446)
DePaul Blue Demons(Big East Conference (original))(2010–2013)
2010–11DePaul7–241–1716th
2011–12DePaul12–193–1516th
2012–13DePaul11–212–1615th
DePaul Blue Demons(Big East Conference)(2013–2015)
2013–14DePaul12–213–1510th
2014–15DePaul12–206–12T–7th
DePaul:54–105 (.340)15–75 (.167)
Total:448–386 (.537)

      National champion        Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion        Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion      Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

References

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  1. ^Morris, Ron. "12 Lives: Purnell leading by example,"The State (Columbia, SC), Sunday, March 28, 2010.
  2. ^2009–10 MPSSAA Winter Record Book – Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association.Archived 2010-03-31 at theWayback Machine
  3. ^"Player Bio: Oliver Purnell :: Men's Basketball". Archived fromthe original on 11 February 2007.
  4. ^abcBiography, Oliver Purnell, retrieved June 4, 2011.
  5. ^ab"DePaul University Athletics".www.depaulbluedemons.com. Retrieved14 September 2023.
  6. ^NABC Presidents – National Association of Basketball Coaches.
  7. ^Clemson rewards Purnell with two-year extension
  8. ^Purnell leaves Clemson for DePaul
  9. ^Nicole Auerbach (14 March 2015)."DePaul's Oliver Purnell resigns after five losing seasons". usatoday.com. Retrieved14 March 2015.

External links

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Links to related articles

# denotes interim head coach

# denotes interim head coach

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