Charlotte 49ers men's basketball: Difference between revisions
GreenC bot (talk | contribs) Move 1 url. Wayback Medic 2.5 per WP:URLREQ#articles.latimes.com |
|||
(43 intermediate revisions by 21 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Men's basketball team of the University of North Carolina}} |
{{Short description|Men's basketball team of the University of North Carolina}} |
||
{{Infobox CBB Team |
{{Infobox CBB Team |
||
|current = |
|current = 2023–24 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team |
||
|name = Charlotte 49ers Men's Basketball |
|name = Charlotte 49ers Men's Basketball |
||
|logo = Charlotte_49ers_logo.svg |
|logo = Charlotte_49ers_logo.svg |
||
|logo_size = 115 |
|logo_size = 115 |
||
|university = [[UNC Charlotte|University of North Carolina at Charlotte]] |
|university = [[UNC Charlotte|University of North Carolina at Charlotte]] |
||
|firstseason = |
|firstseason = 1965–66 |
||
|conference = [[ |
|conference = [[American Athletic Conference|The American]] |
||
|location = [[Charlotte, North Carolina]] |
|location = [[Charlotte, North Carolina]] |
||
|coach = [[ |
|coach = [[Aaron Fearne]] |
||
|tenure = |
|tenure = 1st |
||
|arena = [[Dale F. Halton Arena]] |
|arena = [[Dale F. Halton Arena]] |
||
|capacity = 9,105 |
|capacity = 9,105 |
||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
|NCAAeliteeight = 1977 |
|NCAAeliteeight = 1977 |
||
|NCAAsweetsixteen = 1977 |
|NCAAsweetsixteen = 1977 |
||
|NCAAroundof32 = |
|NCAAroundof32 = 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001 |
||
|NCAAtourneys = 1977, 1988, 1992, 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005 |
|NCAAtourneys = 1977, 1988, 1992, 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005 |
||
|conference_tournament = 1969, 1970 ([[USA South Athletic Conference men's basketball tournament|Dixie]])<br /> 1977, 1988 ([[Sun Belt Conference|Sun Belt]]) <br /> 1992 ([[Metro Conference|Metro]]) <br /> 1999, 2001 ([[Conference USA|CUSA]]) |
|conference_tournament = 1969, 1970 ([[USA South Athletic Conference men's basketball tournament|Dixie]])<br /> 1977, 1988 ([[Sun Belt Conference|Sun Belt]]) <br /> 1992 ([[Metro Conference|Metro]]) <br /> 1999, 2001 ([[Conference USA|CUSA]]) |
||
Line 37: | Line 37: | ||
}} |
}} |
||
The '''Charlotte 49ers men's basketball''' team represents the [[University of North Carolina at Charlotte]] (UNC Charlotte) in [[NCAA Division I]] basketball. The |
The '''Charlotte 49ers men's basketball''' team represents the [[University of North Carolina at Charlotte]] (UNC Charlotte) in [[NCAA Division I]] basketball. Charlotte is a member of the [[American Athletic Conference]] (The American), which they joined in 2023 after 10 seasons in [[Conference USA]].<ref>{{cite press release|url=https://theamerican.org/news/2022/6/15/general-american-announces-entrance-agreements-with-incoming-members-for-2023-24-season.aspx |title=American Announces Entrance Agreements With Incoming Members for 2023-24 Season |publisher=American Athletic Conference |date=June 16, 2022 |access-date=June 16, 2022}}</ref> Charlotte, which had been a charter C-USA member from 1995, returned to that conference in 2013 after leaving in 2005 to join the [[Atlantic 10 Conference]]. The 49ers have also played in the [[Sun Belt Conference]] and were a member of the [[Metro Conference]], which merged with the [[Great Midwest Conference]] to form Conference USA.<ref>[http://www.charlotte49ers.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=23200&ATCLID=205423610] Charlotte 49ers Join Conference USA</ref> |
||
The basketball team has spent the better part of its history in the shadow of the state's four [[Atlantic Coast Conference]] teams. However, the 49ers have carved out a niche of their own, making 11 appearances in the [[NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA tournament]]. In their first appearance, in [[1977 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|1977]], they advanced all the way to the [[Final Four]]—at the time, the deepest run for a first-time tournament participant. They have also earned regular and post-season championships in three different conferences. |
The basketball team has spent the better part of its history in the shadow of the state's four [[Atlantic Coast Conference]] teams. However, the 49ers have carved out a niche of their own, making 11 appearances in the [[NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA tournament]]. In their first appearance, in [[1977 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|1977]], they advanced all the way to the [[Final Four]]—at the time, the deepest run for a first-time tournament participant. They have also earned regular and post-season championships in three different conferences, as well as a victory in the [[College Basketball Invitational]] (CBI) in [[2023 College Basketball Invitational|2023]]. |
||
The 49ers play their home games in [[Dale F. Halton Arena]], an on-campus facility that seats 9,105. |
|||
==History== |
==History== |
||
===Early years (1965–1975)=== |
===Early years (1965–1975)=== |
||
UNC Charlotte first fielded an intercollegiate basketball program in 1965. Chancellor [[Bonnie Cone]] appointed [[Harvey Murphy (basketball)|Harvey Murphy]], previously a physical education instructor and head of the physical education program at the university, as the first head coach in school history. |
UNC Charlotte first fielded an intercollegiate basketball program in 1965. Chancellor [[Bonnie Cone]] appointed [[Harvey Murphy (basketball)|Harvey Murphy]], previously a physical education instructor and head of the physical education program at the university, as the first head coach in school history. Murphy coached the 49ers in the [[National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics|NAIA]] as a member of the [[Dixie Conference]] from 1965 through 1970, winning the conference in 1969 and 1970. |
||
[[Bill Foster (basketball, born 1936)|Bill Foster]] was hired to succeed Harvey Murphy after the 1969–1970 season as the 49ers moved from the NAIA to [[Division I (NCAA)|Division I]] as an independent. Foster notched two 20-win seasons in 1973–1974 and 1974–1975 before moving on to coach at [[Clemson Tigers men's basketball|Clemson]]. Foster's lasting legacy on the program was bringing in two of the most notable players on the team which would advance to the [[1977 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|1977 Final Four]]: [[Cedric Maxwell]] and [[Melvin Watkins]]. |
[[Bill Foster (basketball, born 1936)|Bill Foster]] was hired to succeed Harvey Murphy after the 1969–1970 season as the 49ers moved from the NAIA to [[Division I (NCAA)|Division I]] as an independent. Foster notched two 20-win seasons in 1973–1974 and 1974–1975 before moving on to coach at [[Clemson Tigers men's basketball|Clemson]]. Foster's lasting legacy on the program was bringing in two of the most notable players on the team which would advance to the [[1977 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|1977 Final Four]]: [[Cedric Maxwell]] and [[Melvin Watkins]]. |
||
Line 56: | Line 56: | ||
In their first year in the Sun Belt, the 49ers tallied what is still the best season in school history. They swept the regular season and tournament titles, earning the program's first NCAA Tournament berth. The ensuing [[1977 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA tournament]] run is still one of the most successful ever for a first-time participant. After beating Central Michigan in the first round 91–86, the 49ers dispatched Syracuse 81–59 to advance to the [[Elite Eight]]. The 49ers then took out heavily favored Michigan by a score of 75–68 to advance to the program's first and only [[Final Four]]—the first time that a first-time participant had ever advanced that far. Charlotte would fall to eventual champions Marquette in the national semifinals 51–49. Their final record was 28–5, still a school record for wins in a season. |
In their first year in the Sun Belt, the 49ers tallied what is still the best season in school history. They swept the regular season and tournament titles, earning the program's first NCAA Tournament berth. The ensuing [[1977 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA tournament]] run is still one of the most successful ever for a first-time participant. After beating Central Michigan in the first round 91–86, the 49ers dispatched Syracuse 81–59 to advance to the [[Elite Eight]]. The 49ers then took out heavily favored Michigan by a score of 75–68 to advance to the program's first and only [[Final Four]]—the first time that a first-time participant had ever advanced that far. Charlotte would fall to eventual champions Marquette in the national semifinals 51–49. Their final record was 28–5, still a school record for wins in a season. |
||
Despite the loss of the two leaders of the Final Four team from the previous season, Lee Rose guided the 49ers to a fifth consecutive 20-win season in 1977–1978. |
Despite the loss of the two leaders of the Final Four team from the previous season, Lee Rose guided the 49ers to a fifth consecutive 20-win season in 1977–1978. Rose would then leave to coach at Purdue for the 1978–1979 season. Rose's .800 winning percentage at Charlotte remains the highest in school history. |
||
===Post-Rose years (1978–1985)=== |
===Post-Rose years (1978–1985)=== |
||
[[File:Mike-Pratt.jpg|thumb|right|alt=Mike Pratt after providing radio color commentary for a Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball|Mike Pratt. Charlotte head coach from 1978–1982]]Following Rose's departure, [[Mike Pratt (basketball)|Mike Pratt]], an assistant under Rose at Charlotte, was named the head coach for the 1978–1979 season. |
[[File:Mike-Pratt.jpg|thumb|right|alt=Mike Pratt after providing radio color commentary for a Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball|Mike Pratt. Charlotte head coach from 1978–1982]]Following Rose's departure, [[Mike Pratt (basketball)|Mike Pratt]], an assistant under Rose at Charlotte, was named the head coach for the 1978–1979 season. In his first and only head coaching job, Pratt could not maintain the success of the program under Rose, compiling a 56–52 record over four seasons with no postseason appearances. The best year under Pratt was the 1978–1979 season in which the 49ers earned a 16–11 record and a second place Sun Belt finish. Pratt was dismissed following the 1981–1982 season. |
||
Following Pratt's dismissal, the 49ers hired [[Hal Wissel]] as head basketball coach. |
Following Pratt's dismissal, the 49ers hired [[Hal Wissel]] as head basketball coach. Wissel was previously a successful coach at many levels, but his tenure would be the least successful in the Charlotte's history at the Division 1 level. After three seasons and a 22–62 record, Wissel was dismissed following the 1984–1985 season. |
||
===Jeff Mullins years (1985–1996)=== |
===Jeff Mullins years (1985–1996)=== |
||
Following Wissel's dismissal, [[Jeff Mullins (basketball)|Jeff Mullins]] was hired as both head basketball coach and athletic director. |
Following Wissel's dismissal, [[Jeff Mullins (basketball)|Jeff Mullins]] was hired as both head basketball coach and athletic director. Mullins guided the 49ers through multiple conference changes and kicked off the most successful, sustained run in school history. |
||
Mullins inherited a last place [[Sun Belt Conference|Sun Belt]] team and things didn't improve in his first season with an 8–20 record. |
Mullins inherited a last place [[Sun Belt Conference|Sun Belt]] team and things didn't improve in his first season with an 8–20 record. However, in just his second year he guided the 49ers back above .500 for the first time in five seasons, leading them to an 18–14 record in 1986–1987. Led by Sun Belt Player of the Year [[Byron Dinkins]], Mullins coached the 49ers to the Sun Belt regular season and post-season championships and the program's first [[1988 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA tournament]] berth since their Final Four run. Seeded 13th, the 49ers lost to 4th seed BYU in the first round of the Southeast Regional by a score of 98–92. |
||
The following season the 49ers finished second in the Sun Belt and earned an [[1989 NIT|NIT]] berth. |
The following season the 49ers finished second in the Sun Belt and earned an [[1989 NIT|NIT]] berth. In their final two seasons in the Sun Belt, Mullins led the 49ers to a 30–28 record with no postseason appearances. |
||
====Metro Conference (1992–1995)==== |
====Metro Conference (1992–1995)==== |
||
Prior to the 1992–1993 season the 49ers moved to the [[Metro Conference]]. |
Prior to the 1992–1993 season the 49ers moved to the [[Metro Conference]]. In their four seasons in the Metro Conference, the 49ers never finished lower than 4th in the standings, won one regular season conference title, and one post-season conference title. The success was rewarded with two NCAA Tournament berths, in [[1992 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|1992]] and [[1995 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|1995]], losing in the first round both times. |
||
====Conference USA==== |
====Conference USA==== |
||
After the 1994–1995 season, the 49ers joined [[Conference USA]]. |
After the 1994–1995 season, the 49ers joined [[Conference USA]]. In what would be Mullins' last season, Charlotte went 14–15 in 1995–1996, finishing tied for 6th in the league. Mullins retired following that season as the all-time winningest coach in school history with 182 wins and also had more postseason appearances than all previous coaches combined. |
||
Former on-the-court star and longtime assistant coach for the 49ers [[Melvin Watkins]] took over as head coach for the 1996–1997 season. |
Former on-the-court star and longtime assistant coach for the 49ers [[Melvin Watkins]] took over as head coach for the 1996–1997 season. Watkins had two successful seasons as the Charlotte head coach, leading the team into the second round of the NCAA tournament in both years. He left to take the head coaching job at Texas A&M in 1998. |
||
===Bobby Lutz years (1998–2010)=== |
===Bobby Lutz years (1998–2010)=== |
||
[[File:Bobby Lutz Kuwait (crop).jpg|thumb|right|Bobby Lutz. Charlotte head coach from 1998–2010]] |
[[File:Bobby Lutz Kuwait (crop).jpg|thumb|right|Bobby Lutz. Charlotte head coach from 1998–2010]] |
||
After Watkins left for Texas A&M, Charlotte named [[Bobby Lutz (basketball)|Bobby Lutz]] its new head coach. |
After Watkins left for Texas A&M, Charlotte named [[Bobby Lutz (basketball)|Bobby Lutz]] its new head coach. Lutz was an assistant under both Watkins and Jeff Mullins at Charlotte. Lutz accepted the head coaching job at [[Gardner–Webb Runnin' Bulldogs|Gardner–Webb]] in 1995 only to resign two weeks later to accept the assistant job at his alma mater on Mullin's staff. |
||
Lutz's run of success in Conference USA is arguably the best sustained stretch in Charlotte basketball history. |
Lutz's run of success in Conference USA is arguably the best sustained stretch in Charlotte basketball history. The 49ers reached the NCAA Tournament in 5 of the 7 years they were in Conference USA under Lutz. |
||
In his first season, Lutz guided the 49ers to a 10–6 record in CUSA. |
In his first season, Lutz guided the 49ers to a 10–6 record in CUSA. Seeded fifth in the conference tournament, the 49ers won four games in four days, taking out three of the top four seeds in the process to win the CUSA conference tournament for the first time. This earned Charlotte a 5 seed in the [[1999 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA tournament]]. They defeated [[Rhode Island Rams men's basketball|Rhode Island]] in the first round before falling to 13-seed [[Oklahoma Sooners men's basketball|Oklahoma]] in round two. |
||
The 1999–2000 season would be defined by the passing of Charles Hayward in September 1999. |
The 1999–2000 season would be defined by the passing of Charles Hayward in September 1999. Hayward lost a two-year battle with Leukemia, he would have his jersey retired.<ref>[https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1999-oct-24-sp-25697-story.html] Remembering Hayward</ref> Charlotte would play to a 17–16 record and earn an [[2000 NIT|NIT]] berth. |
||
The 2000–2001 seasons saw the arrival of [[Rodney White]] who would become the top scoring freshman in the country and be named ESPN's National Freshmen of the Year.<ref>[https://archive.today/20120713034817/http://conferenceusa.cstv.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/022801aaa.html] Charlotte 49ers Freshman Rodney White Named ESPN.com's National Freshman of the Year</ref> Led by White, Charlotte would win its second CUSA Tournament Title in three years and earn a 9 seed in the [[2001 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA tournament]] with a 22–11 record. |
The 2000–2001 seasons saw the arrival of [[Rodney White]] who would become the top scoring freshman in the country and be named ESPN's National Freshmen of the Year.<ref>[https://archive.today/20120713034817/http://conferenceusa.cstv.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/022801aaa.html] Charlotte 49ers Freshman Rodney White Named ESPN.com's National Freshman of the Year</ref> Led by White, Charlotte would win its second CUSA Tournament Title in three years and earn a 9 seed in the [[2001 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA tournament]] with a 22–11 record. Charlotte would defeat [[Tennessee Volunteers basketball|Tennessee]] in the first round of the Midwest Regional before falling to #1 seed [[Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball|Illinois]] in the round of 32. White would leave Charlotte for the NBA draft and be selected 9th overall by the Detroit Pistons. |
||
Over the following three seasons the 49ers would earn two additional NCAA tournament bids, in [[2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|2002]] and [[2004 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|2004]], earning #9 seeds and being eliminated in the first round both years. |
Over the following three seasons the 49ers would earn two additional NCAA tournament bids, in [[2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|2002]] and [[2004 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|2004]], earning #9 seeds and being eliminated in the first round both years. |
||
The 2004–2005 season would see the 49ers return to the top 25 behind eventual CUSA Player of the Year [[Eddie Basden]], he would also win CUSA Defensive POY for the second straight season. |
The 2004–2005 season would see the 49ers return to the top 25 behind eventual CUSA Player of the Year [[Eddie Basden]], he would also win CUSA Defensive POY for the second straight season. The promising season would take a turn for the worse in the last few weeks. The 49ers lost a game on senior night at Louisville which would determine the regular season conference champion. They followed that with a loss on an emotional senior night at South Florida. They then drew a Memphis team in the CUSA tournament who had under-performed all year but caught fire at the end of the season. Charlotte was bounced from the first round of the CUSA tournament and had their season ended in round 1 of the NCAA tournament by NC State. |
||
====Atlantic 10==== |
====Atlantic 10==== |
||
Following the exodus of many of the top basketball programs from CUSA to the [[Big East Conference (1979–2013)|Big East]] in 2005, Charlotte was left as a non-football school in an increasingly weak basketball conference despite having the second best record in CUSA history at the time, trailing only Cincinnati. |
Following the exodus of many of the top basketball programs from CUSA to the [[Big East Conference (1979–2013)|Big East]] in 2005, Charlotte was left as a non-football school in an increasingly weak basketball conference despite having the second best record in CUSA history at the time, trailing only Cincinnati. Charlotte eventually joined the [[Atlantic 10]] for all sports along with fellow CUSA member [[Saint Louis Billikens|Saint Louis]]. Lutz was not able to sustain the level of success he achieved in CUSA. Over the course of six seasons in the A10, Lutz's record was 83–75, compared to his record of 135–83 in CUSA. The 49ers earned two NIT bids under Lutz in the A10, going 1–2 in those tournaments. The 49ers fell apart to end the 2009–2010 season. With eight games to go in the regular season, they were 18-5 and in first place in the A10, and appeared well on their way to an NCAA bid. However, they went 1–7 the rest of the way, and didn't even receive an NIT bid. Lutz was dismissed following this collapse.<ref>[https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/news/story?id=4996808] Lutz fired after 12 seasons at Charlotte</ref> |
||
Lutz had more wins (218) and NCAA tournament appearances (5) than any other coach in Charlotte history. |
Lutz had more wins (218) and NCAA tournament appearances (5) than any other coach in Charlotte history. His firing was met with mixed emotions among students and fans.<ref>[http://bleacherreport.com/articles/363187-charlotte-fires-bobby-lutz-an-emotional-day-for-49er-fans] Charlotte Fires Bobby Lutz: An Emotional Day For 49er Fans</ref> |
||
===Alan Major years (2010–2015)=== |
===Alan Major years (2010–2015)=== |
||
On April 12, 2010 [[Alan Major]] was announced as the new head coach of the Charlotte 49ers. |
On April 12, 2010 [[Alan Major]] was announced as the new head coach of the Charlotte 49ers. The coaching search targeted assistants at successful high-level programs, Major was a member of [[Thad Matta]]'s staff at [[Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball|Ohio State]] which included a national title game appearance. Throughout his career Major has a history of helping highly skilled big men develop into great NBA prospects. He coached two future #1 overall draft picks in [[Michael Olowokandi]] and [[Greg Oden]] while at [[Pacific Tigers men's basketball|Pacific]] and Ohio State, respectively. He also came in with A10 experience having been as assistant under Matta at [[Xavier Musketeers men's basketball|Xavier]]. |
||
Major's first season was headlined by the dismissal of one senior big man, Shamarri Spears, in the Fall and another, Phil Jones, not qualifying academically for the Spring semester. |
Major's first season was headlined by the dismissal of one senior big man, Shamarri Spears, in the Fall and another, Phil Jones, not qualifying academically for the Spring semester. The early season schedule was highlighted by a 49–48 victory over #7 ranked [[Tennessee Volunteers basketball|Tennessee]] and a 2OT win at [[Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball|Georgia Tech]]. Following Jones being ruled ineligible, the team was left with just 8 scholarship players for the remainder of the season and would struggle in conference play, finishing with a 2–14 league record and failing to make the A10 conference tournament for the first time. The three-year postseason drought had been the longest for the program since Jeff Mullins took over in 1985. |
||
The 2011–2012 season saw less off-the-court drama, although individual players were benched for disciplinary reasons, but there was little improvement in terms of wins and losses. |
The 2011–2012 season saw less off-the-court drama, although individual players were benched for disciplinary reasons, but there was little improvement in terms of wins and losses. The 49ers would finish with a 13–17 record, 5–11 in conference play. This was an improvement of Major's first year and earned them an A10 tournament spot, a first round loss at St. Joe's. Chris Braswell would average 15.6 points and 7.6 rebounds per game and be named to the A10 All-Conference Third Team. [[Pierriá Henry]] was among the nation's leaders in steals and earned a spot on the A10 All-Rookie Team.<ref>[http://gmine.blogspot.com/2012/03/charlotte-49ers-henry-braswell-pick-up.html] Charlotte 49ers' Henry, Braswell pick up A-10 honors</ref> |
||
[[File:Alan Major in 2009.jpg|thumb|left|Alan Major. Charlotte head coach from 2010–2015]]The [[2012–13 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2012–2013]] season resulted in an improved 21–12 record and a berth in the NIT. |
[[File:Alan Major in 2009.jpg|thumb|left|Alan Major. Charlotte head coach from 2010–2015]]The [[2012–13 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2012–2013]] season resulted in an improved 21–12 record and a berth in the NIT. The season was successful overall, but the 49ers lost four games in a row in February/March which removed them from NCAA tournament consideration. This was followed by a miraculous first round A10 tournament victory over Richmond in which Pierriá Henry took 11 free throws in the final 4.7 seconds of game time to overcome a 3-point deficit. Richmond was called for three technical fouls, one non-shooting foul and one shooting foul in that time.<ref>[https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/recap?gameId=330730257] Charlotte 68, Richmond 63</ref> The 49ers followed this with a blowout loss to St. Louis in the 2nd round. In the NIT the 49ers were eliminated in round 1 at Providence. |
||
Following the 2012–13 season, Darion Clark announced he was leaving the program.<ref>[http://gmine.blogspot.com/2013/04/basketball-football-transfer-news.html] Basketball, Football Transfer News</ref> |
Following the 2012–13 season, Darion Clark announced he was leaving the program.<ref>[http://gmine.blogspot.com/2013/04/basketball-football-transfer-news.html] Basketball, Football Transfer News</ref> Clark saw a total of seven minutes in the 49ers' two A10 tournament games, a large drop from his regular season average. In late April forward E. Victor Nickerson also announced he was transferring, leaving Charlotte with only 6 scholarship players on roster. |
||
====Return to Conference USA==== |
|||
The [[2013–14 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2013–2014]] season, in which the 49ers would rejoin Conference USA and claim the [[Puerto Rico Tip-Off]] Championship by beating a ranked [[2013–14 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team|Michigan]] team; ended with a late season 6 game losing streak in conference play, and the 49ers finishing with a 17–14 record and a second round exit from the C-USA Tournament. |
The [[2013–14 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2013–2014]] season, in which the 49ers would rejoin Conference USA and claim the [[Puerto Rico Tip-Off]] Championship by beating a ranked [[2013–14 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team|Michigan]] team; ended with a late season 6 game losing streak in conference play, and the 49ers finishing with a 17–14 record and a second round exit from the C-USA Tournament. |
||
Having taken a medical leave of absence following the 2013–14 season, Coach Major would take another such leave during the second half of the [[2014–15 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2014–15]] season. Assistant Head Coach [[Ryan Odom]] would coach the team for the remainder of the season. Following the conclusion of the 2014–2015 season it was announced that Major would step down as head coach. His record as 49ers head coach was 67 wins to 70 losses with the program attaining an overall record during his tenure of 75 to 81. Significant milestones included winning the [[2012 Great Alaska Shootout]] and 2013 Puerto Rico Tip-off tournaments and victories over #7 ranked [[2010–11 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team| |
Having taken a medical leave of absence following the 2013–14 season, Coach Major would take another such leave during the second half of the [[2014–15 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2014–15]] season. Assistant Head Coach [[Ryan Odom]] would coach the team for the remainder of the season. Following the conclusion of the 2014–2015 season it was announced that Major would step down as head coach. His record as 49ers head coach was 67 wins to 70 losses with the program attaining an overall record during his tenure of 75 to 81. Significant milestones included winning the [[2012 Great Alaska Shootout]] and 2013 Puerto Rico Tip-off tournaments and victories over #7 ranked [[2010–11 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team|Tennessee]], #10 ranked [[2012–13 Butler Bulldogs men's basketball team|Butler]], and previous [[2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship Game|National Championship runners-up]], #14 ranked Michigan.<ref>[http://www.charlotte49ers.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=23200&ATCLID=209961769] C49ers and Alan Major Mutually Agree to Part Ways</ref> |
||
===Mark Price years (2015–2017)=== |
===Mark Price years (2015–2017)=== |
||
On March 25, 2015, former [[National Basketball Association|NBA]] point guard and NBA [[Charlotte Hornets]] assistant coach, [[Mark Price]] was offered a five-year contract to become the 49ers head coach, which he accepted.<ref>[ |
On March 25, 2015, former [[National Basketball Association|NBA]] point guard and NBA [[Charlotte Hornets]] assistant coach, [[Mark Price]] was offered a five-year contract to become the 49ers head coach, which he accepted.<ref>[https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/story/_/id/12555054/mark-price-become-coach-charlotte-49ers] Mark Price to coach Charlotte 49ers</ref> Price was fired on December 14, 2017 after a 30-42 record in 2 1/2 seasons at Charlotte and was replaced by assistant coach [[Houston Fancher]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.charlotteobserver.com/sports/article189742219.html|title=Charlotte fires basketball coach, former NBA star Mark Price|newspaper=[[The Charlotte Observer]]|first=Steve|last=Reed|date=December 14, 2017|access-date=December 23, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171223042733/http://www.charlotteobserver.com/sports/article189742219.html|archive-date=December 23, 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | On March 19, 2018, [[Ron Sanchez]] was named the 12th head coach in Charlotte 49ers men’s basketball program history. Sanchez was a former volunteer assistant at [[Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball|Indiana]] before going to [[Washington State Cougars men's basketball|Washington State]]. Sanchez was hired by [[Dick Bennett]], and remained on the staff when Bennett’s son Tony took over. Sanchez accompanied [[Tony Bennett (basketball)|Tony Bennett]] to [[Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball|Virginia]] in 2009 as an assistant and was promoted to associate head coach in 2015.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.charlotteobserver.com/sports/college/article205850739.html|website=charlotteobserver.com|title=Charlotte 49ers find next basketball coach on bench of No. 1 NCAA seed|author=Scott, David|date=March 19, 2018|access-date=March 20, 2018}}</ref> |
||
On June 6, 2023, Sanchez resigned to rejoin Bennett's staff at Virginia as associate head coach.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://charlotte49ers.com/news/2023/6/6/mens-basketball-sanchez.aspx | title=Sanchez Steps Down as 49ers Head Coach | date=6 June 2023 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://virginiasports.com/news/2023/06/06/sanchez-returning-to-virginia-as-associate-head-coach/ | title=Sanchez Returning to Virginia as Associate Head Coach | date=6 June 2023 }}</ref> Coincidentally, Sanchez left less than a month before Charlotte's move from C-USA to The American became official. |
|||
On June 15, 2023, associate head coach [[Aaron Fearne]] agreed to lead the team as interim head coach for the 2023–24 inaugural [[American Athletic Conference|AAC]] season.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://charlotte49ers.com/news/2023/6/15/mens-basketball-charlotte-tabs-aaron-fearne-as-interim-head-coach-for-2023-24.aspx| title=Charlotte Tabs Aaron Fearne as Interim Head Coach for 2023-24|date=15 June 2023}}</ref> |
|||
===Aaron Fearne (2023–present)=== |
|||
====The American==== |
|||
On July 1, 2023 all Charlotte 49ers athletics programs joined the [[American Athletic Conference]].<ref>{{cite web|title=American Athletic Conference Welcomes Six New Members|url=https://theamerican.org/news/2023/6/30/general-american-athletic-conference-welcomes-six-new-members.aspx|date=June 30, 2023|access-date=July 3, 2023}}</ref> |
|||
Interim coach [[Aaron Fearne]] picked up his first win when the 49ers when they took down [[Maine Black Bears men's basketball|Maine]].<ref>{{cite web|title= Graves scores 15 points, leads Charlotte in 69-52 win over Maine in season opener|url= https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/recap/_/gameId/401577558|date=November 6, 2023|access-date=January 7, 2024}}</ref> The 49ers won their first game in American Conference play when they defeated number seventeen ranked [[Florida Atlantic Owls men's basketball|Florida Atlantic]].<ref>{{cite web|title= Patterson and Charlotte take down Florida Atlantic 70-68|url= https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/recap/_/gameId/401602062|date=January 6, 2024}}</ref> It was Charlotte’s first win over a ranked team since 2013 and first ranked win over a team at home since 2010.<ref>{{cite web|title= Niners Knock Off #17 Florida Atlantic, 70-68, for First Ranked Win Since 2013|url= https://charlotte49ers.com/news/2024/1/6/mens-basketball-niners-knock-off-17-florida-atlantic-70-68-for-first-ranked-win-since-2013.aspx|date=January 6, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
On February 12, 2024, Fearne was received a contract to become the official head coach of the Charlotte basketball program.<ref>{{cite web|title= Aaron Fearne Named Charlotte's 14th Men's Basketball Head Coach|url= https://charlotte49ers.com/news/2024/2/12/mens-basketball-aaron-fearne-named-charlotte-14th-mens-basketball-coach.aspx|date=February 12, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | On March 19, 2018, [[Ron Sanchez]] was named the 12th head coach in Charlotte 49ers men’s basketball program history. Sanchez was a former volunteer assistant at [[Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball|Indiana]] before going to [[Washington State Cougars men's basketball|Washington State]]. Sanchez was hired by [[Dick Bennett]], and remained on the staff when Bennett’s son Tony took over. Sanchez accompanied [[Tony Bennett (basketball |
||
==Team record== |
==Team record== |
||
Line 195: | Line 211: | ||
| overall = 12–10 |
| overall = 12–10 |
||
| conference = 9–5 |
| conference = 9–5 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–2nd |
||
| postseason = |
| postseason = |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
Line 206: | Line 222: | ||
| overall = 14–16 |
| overall = 14–16 |
||
| conference = 10–4 |
| conference = 10–4 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–2nd |
||
| postseason = NAIA District Playoffs |
| postseason = NAIA District Playoffs |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
Line 279: | Line 295: | ||
| conference = |
| conference = |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = |
||
| postseason = [[1976 NIT|NIT]] |
| postseason = [[1976 NIT|NIT Runner-Up]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 291: | Line 307: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = confboth |
| championship = confboth |
||
| season = 1976–1977 |
| season = [[1976–77 UNC Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|1976–1977]] |
||
| name = Lee Rose |
| name = Lee Rose |
||
| overall = 28–5 |
| overall = 28–5 |
||
| conference = 5–1 |
| conference = 5–1 |
||
| confstanding = 1st |
| confstanding = 1st |
||
| postseason = [[1977 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[1977 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA Final Four]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 405: | Line 421: | ||
| overall = 18–14 |
| overall = 18–14 |
||
| conference = 6–8 |
| conference = 6–8 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–6th |
||
| postseason = |
| postseason = |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
Line 412: | Line 428: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = confboth |
| championship = confboth |
||
| season = 1987–1988 |
| season = [[1987–88 UNC Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|1987–1988]] |
||
| name = Jeff Mullins |
| name = Jeff Mullins |
||
| overall = 22–9 |
| overall = 22–9 |
||
| conference = 11–3 |
| conference = 11–3 |
||
| confstanding = 1st |
| confstanding = 1st |
||
| postseason = [[1988 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[1988 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 428: | Line 444: | ||
| conference = 10–4 |
| conference = 10–4 |
||
| confstanding = 2nd |
| confstanding = 2nd |
||
| postseason = [[1989 NIT|NIT]] |
| postseason = [[1989 NIT|NIT First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 462: | Line 478: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = conference tournament |
| championship = conference tournament |
||
| season = 1991–1992 |
| season = [[1991–92 UNC Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|1991–1992]] |
||
| name = Jeff Mullins |
| name = Jeff Mullins |
||
| overall = 23–9 |
| overall = 23–9 |
||
| conference = 7–5 |
| conference = 7–5 |
||
| confstanding = 2nd |
| confstanding = 2nd |
||
| postseason = [[1992 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[1992 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 477: | Line 493: | ||
| overall = 15–13 |
| overall = 15–13 |
||
| conference = 6–6 |
| conference = 6–6 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–4th |
||
| postseason = |
| postseason = |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
Line 488: | Line 504: | ||
| overall = 16–13 |
| overall = 16–13 |
||
| conference = 7–5 |
| conference = 7–5 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–2nd |
||
| postseason = [[1994 NIT|NIT]] |
| postseason = [[1994 NIT|NIT First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 500: | Line 516: | ||
| conference = 8–4 |
| conference = 8–4 |
||
| confstanding = 1st |
| confstanding = 1st |
||
| postseason = [[1995 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[1995 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 516: | Line 532: | ||
| overall = 14–15 |
| overall = 14–15 |
||
| conference = 6–8 |
| conference = 6–8 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–6th |
||
| postseason = |
| postseason = |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
Line 523: | Line 539: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = division |
| championship = division |
||
| season = 1996–1997 |
| season = [[1996–97 UNC Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|1996–1997]] |
||
| name = [[Melvin Watkins]] |
| name = [[Melvin Watkins]] |
||
| overall = 22–9 |
| overall = 22–9 |
||
| conference = 10–4 |
| conference = 10–4 |
||
| confstanding = 3rd |
| confstanding = 3rd |
||
| postseason = [[1997 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[1997 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA Second Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 534: | Line 550: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = 1997–1998 |
| season = [[1997–98 UNC Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|1997–1998]] |
||
| name = Melvin Watkins |
| name = Melvin Watkins |
||
| overall = 20–11 |
| overall = 20–11 |
||
| conference = 13–3 |
| conference = 13–3 |
||
| confstanding = 2nd |
| confstanding = 2nd |
||
| postseason = [[1998 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[1998 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA Second Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 545: | Line 561: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = conference tournament |
| championship = conference tournament |
||
| season = 1998–1999 |
| season = [[1998–99 UNC Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|1998–1999]] |
||
| name = [[Bobby Lutz (basketball)|Bobby Lutz]] |
| name = [[Bobby Lutz (basketball)|Bobby Lutz]] |
||
| overall = 23–11 |
| overall = 23–11 |
||
| conference = 10–6 |
| conference = 10–6 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–3rd |
||
| postseason = [[1999 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[1999 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA Second Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 560: | Line 576: | ||
| overall = 17–16 |
| overall = 17–16 |
||
| conference = 7–9 |
| conference = 7–9 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–5th |
||
| postseason = [[2000 NIT|NIT]] |
| postseason = [[2000 NIT|NIT First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 572: | Line 588: | ||
| conference = 10–6 |
| conference = 10–6 |
||
| confstanding = 2nd |
| confstanding = 2nd |
||
| postseason = [[2001 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[2001 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA Second Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 583: | Line 599: | ||
| conference = 11–5 |
| conference = 11–5 |
||
| confstanding = 3rd |
| confstanding = 3rd |
||
| postseason = [[2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 605: | Line 621: | ||
| conference = 12–4 |
| conference = 12–4 |
||
| confstanding = 1st |
| confstanding = 1st |
||
| postseason = [[2004 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[2004 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 616: | Line 632: | ||
| conference = 12–4 |
| conference = 12–4 |
||
| confstanding = 2nd |
| confstanding = 2nd |
||
| postseason = [[2005 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA |
| postseason = [[2005 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 633: | Line 649: | ||
| conference = 11–5 |
| conference = 11–5 |
||
| confstanding = 2nd |
| confstanding = 2nd |
||
| postseason = [[2006 NIT|NIT]] |
| postseason = [[2006 NIT|NIT First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 654: | Line 670: | ||
| overall = 20–14 |
| overall = 20–14 |
||
| conference = 9–7 |
| conference = 9–7 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–4th |
||
| postseason = [[2008 NIT|NIT]] |
| postseason = [[2008 NIT|NIT First Round]] |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
| ranking2 = no |
| ranking2 = no |
||
Line 672: | Line 688: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = [[2009–10 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2009–2010]] |
|||
| season = 2009–2010 |
|||
| name = Bobby Lutz |
| name = Bobby Lutz |
||
| overall = 19–12 |
| overall = 19–12 |
||
Line 705: | Line 721: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = [[2012–13 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2012–2013]] |
|||
| season = 2012–2013 |
|||
| name = Alan Major |
| name = Alan Major |
||
| overall = 21–12 |
| overall = 21–12 |
||
| conference = 8–8 |
| conference = 8–8 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–8th |
||
| postseason = NIT |
| postseason = [[2013 National Invitation Tournament|NIT First Round]] |
||
| ranking = |
| ranking = |
||
| ranking2 = |
| ranking2 = |
||
Line 717: | Line 733: | ||
|name=[[Conference USA]] |
|name=[[Conference USA]] |
||
|startyear=2013 |
|startyear=2013 |
||
|conference=[[Division I |
|conference=[[NCAA Division I|Division I]] |
||
|endyear= |
|endyear=2023 |
||
|}} |
|}} |
||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = [[2013–14 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2013–2014]] |
|||
| season = 2013–2014 |
|||
| name = Alan Major |
| name = Alan Major |
||
| overall = 17–14 |
| overall = 17–14 |
||
Line 733: | Line 749: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = 2014–2015 |
| season = [[2014–15 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2014–2015]] |
||
| name = Alan Major |
| name = Alan Major |
||
| overall = 14–18 |
| overall = 14–18 |
||
Line 744: | Line 760: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = [[2015–16 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2015–2016]] |
|||
| season = 2015–2016 |
|||
| name = [[Mark Price]] |
| name = [[Mark Price]] |
||
| overall = 14–19 |
| overall = 14–19 |
||
Line 755: | Line 771: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = 2016–2017 |
| season = [[2016–17 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2016–2017]] |
||
| name = Mark Price |
| name = Mark Price |
||
| overall = 13–17 |
| overall = 13–17 |
||
Line 766: | Line 782: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = [[2017–18 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2017–2018]] |
|||
| season = 2017–2018 |
|||
| name = Mark Price, [[Houston Fancher]] (Interim) |
| name = Mark Price, [[Houston Fancher]] (Interim) |
||
| overall = 6–23 |
| overall = 6–23 |
||
Line 777: | Line 793: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = [[2018–19 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2018–2019]] |
|||
| season = 2018–2019 |
|||
| name = [[Ron Sanchez]] |
| name = [[Ron Sanchez]] |
||
| overall = 8–21 |
| overall = 8–21 |
||
Line 788: | Line 804: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = [[2019–20 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2019–2020]] |
|||
| season = 2019–2020 |
|||
| name = Ron Sanchez |
| name = Ron Sanchez |
||
| overall = 16–13 |
| overall = 16–13 |
||
| conference = |
| conference = 10–8 |
||
| confstanding = |
| confstanding = T–4th |
||
| postseason = |
| postseason = |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
Line 799: | Line 815: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = [[2020–21 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2020–2021]] |
|||
| season = 2020–2021 |
|||
| name = Ron Sanchez |
| name = Ron Sanchez |
||
| overall = 9–16 |
| overall = 9–16 |
||
Line 810: | Line 826: | ||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
||
| championship = |
| championship = |
||
| season = 2021–2022 |
| season = [[2021–22 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2021–2022]] |
||
| name = Ron Sanchez |
| name = Ron Sanchez |
||
| overall = 17–14 |
| overall = 17–14 |
||
| conference = 10–8 |
| conference = 10–8 |
||
| confstanding = 4th East |
| confstanding = 4th East |
||
| postseason = |
|||
| ranking = no |
|||
| ranking2 = no |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
|||
| championship = postseason |
|||
| season = [[2022–23 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2022–2023]] |
|||
| name = Ron Sanchez |
|||
| overall = 22–14 |
|||
| conference = 9–11 |
|||
| confstanding = 5th |
|||
| postseason = [[2023 College Basketball Invitational|CBI Champion]] |
|||
| ranking = no |
|||
| ranking2 = no |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CBB Yearly Record Subhead |
|||
|name = [[American Athletic Conference]] |
|||
|startyear = 2023 |
|||
|conference = [[NCAA Division I|Division I]] |
|||
|endyear = |
|||
|}} |
|||
{{CBB Yearly Record Entry |
|||
| championship = |
|||
| season = [[2023–24 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team|2023–24]] |
|||
| name = [[Aaron Fearne]] |
|||
| overall = 19-12 |
|||
| conference = 13-5 |
|||
| confstanding = 3rd |
|||
| postseason = |
| postseason = |
||
| ranking = no |
| ranking = no |
||
Line 820: | Line 864: | ||
}} |
}} |
||
{{CBB Yearly Record End |
{{CBB Yearly Record End |
||
| overall = |
| overall = 891–748 ({{Winning percentage|891|748}}) |
||
| poll = no |
| poll = no |
||
| polltype = |
| polltype = |
||
Line 886: | Line 930: | ||
===CBI results=== |
===CBI results=== |
||
The 49ers have appeared in the [[College Basketball Invitational]] (CBI) once |
The 49ers have appeared in the [[College Basketball Invitational]] (CBI) once in [[2023 College Basketball Invitational|2023]], winning the tournament. Their combined record is 4–0. |
||
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="width: 35%" |
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="width: 35%" |
||
Line 894: | Line 938: | ||
!style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Charlotte 49ers|border=0}}"|Result |
!style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Charlotte 49ers|border=0}}"|Result |
||
|- align="center" |
|- align="center" |
||
| [[2023 College Basketball Invitational|2023]] || First Round<br />Quarterfinals<br />Semifinals<br />Finals || {{nowrap|Western Carolina}}<br />Milwaukee<br />Radford<br />{{nowrap|Eastern Kentucky}} || '''W''' 65–56<br />'''W''' 76–65<br />'''W''' 63–56<br />'''W''' 71{{ndash}}68 |
| [[2023 College Basketball Invitational|2023]] || First Round<br />Quarterfinals<br />Semifinals<br />Finals || {{nowrap|[[2022–23 Western Carolina Catamounts men's basketball team|Western Carolina]]}}<br />[[2022–23 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team|Milwaukee]]<br />[[2022–23 Radford Highlanders men's basketball team|Radford]]<br />{{nowrap|[[2022–23 Eastern Kentucky Colonels men's basketball team|Eastern Kentucky]]}} || '''W''' 65–56<br />'''W''' 76–65<br />'''W''' 63–56<br />'''W''' 71{{ndash}}68 |
||
|} |
|} |
||
Line 905: | Line 949: | ||
!style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Charlotte 49ers|border=0}}"|Position |
!style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Charlotte 49ers|border=0}}"|Position |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[ |
| [[Aaron Fearne]] || Head coach |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| Conner Henry || Associate Head Coach |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| Vic Sfera || Assistant coach |
| Vic Sfera || Assistant coach |
||
Line 948: | Line 992: | ||
| 2017–18 || [[Houston Fancher]] || 1 || 3–17 || .150 |
| 2017–18 || [[Houston Fancher]] || 1 || 3–17 || .150 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 2018–2023 || [[Ron Sanchez]] || 5 || 72-78 || .480 |
||
|- |
|||
| 2024–Present || [[Aaron Fearne]] || 1 || 4-4 || .500 |
|||
|- style="font-weight:bold; {{CollegePrimaryStyle|Charlotte 49ers|border=0}};" |
|- style="font-weight:bold; {{CollegePrimaryStyle|Charlotte 49ers|border=0}};" |
||
|Totals |
|Totals |
||
| |
|14 Coaches |
||
| |
|62 Seasons |
||
| |
|922-789 |
||
|. |
|.539 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
: An asterisk (*) denotes a season currently in progress.<ref name="ESPN">{{cite web |
: An asterisk (*) denotes a season currently in progress.<ref name="ESPN">{{cite web |
||
|url= |
|url=https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/team/_/id/2429/charlotte-49ers |
||
|title=Charlotte |
|title=Charlotte |
||
|work=ESPN.com |
|work=ESPN.com |
||
Line 1,037: | Line 1,083: | ||
===Hornet's Nest Trophy=== |
===Hornet's Nest Trophy=== |
||
Charlotte's 29-year rivalry with the [[Davidson Wildcats men's basketball|Davidson Wildcats]] sees [[Mecklenburg County, North Carolina|Mecklenburg County]]'s only two Division I schools go head-to-head for the Hornet's Nest Trophy. The Hornets' Nest series began in the 1979-80 season. The teams have met 46 times. Charlotte leads the all-time series, 29-17.<ref>{{Cite web|title=OrthoCarolina Sponsors Battle for Hornets' Nest Game - Charlotte Athletics|url=https://charlotte49ers.com/news/2017/11/21/mens-basketball-orthocarolina-sponsors-battle-for-hornets-nest-game.aspx|access-date=2020-08-08|website=Charlotte 49ers|language=en}}</ref> Although, in recent years Davidson has been the better team. |
Charlotte's 29-year rivalry with the [[Davidson Wildcats men's basketball|Davidson Wildcats]] sees [[Mecklenburg County, North Carolina|Mecklenburg County]]'s only two Division I schools go head-to-head for the Hornet's Nest Trophy. The Hornets' Nest series began in the 1979-80 season. The teams have met 46 times. Charlotte leads the all-time series, 29-17.<ref>{{Cite web|title=OrthoCarolina Sponsors Battle for Hornets' Nest Game - Charlotte Athletics|url=https://charlotte49ers.com/news/2017/11/21/mens-basketball-orthocarolina-sponsors-battle-for-hornets-nest-game.aspx|access-date=2020-08-08|website=Charlotte 49ers|date=21 November 2017 |language=en}}</ref> Although, in recent years Davidson has been the better team. |
||
On November 12, 2019, Charlotte won back the Hornets Nest, winning 71-58, and snapping a 6 game losing streak. |
On November 12, 2019, Charlotte won back the Hornets Nest, winning 71-58, and snapping a 6 game losing streak. |
||
Line 1,043: | Line 1,089: | ||
===Past rivalries=== |
===Past rivalries=== |
||
Charlotte has had its fair share of intense rivalries. One of the most heated and intense rivalries was with the [[Bob Huggins]]-coached [[Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball|Cincinnati Bearcats]] of [[Conference USA]]. Throughout a ten-year period from 1995–96 to 2004–05, Charlotte managed to upset Cincinnati teams ranked #3, #8, #18, #20 in the country. Fueled by "Huggins swallows" pregame chants what became known as the Cincinnati Incident, a brawl broke out between Cincinnati and the Charlotte student section, when a Cincinnati player threw the basketball into the stands.{{ |
Charlotte has had its fair share of intense rivalries. One of the most heated and intense rivalries was with the [[Bob Huggins]]-coached [[Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball|Cincinnati Bearcats]] of [[Conference USA]]. Throughout a ten-year period from 1995–96 to 2004–05, Charlotte managed to upset Cincinnati teams ranked #3, #8, #18, #20 in the country. Fueled by "Huggins swallows" pregame chants what became known as the Cincinnati Incident, a brawl broke out between Cincinnati and the Charlotte student section, when a Cincinnati player threw the basketball into the stands.<ref>{{Cite web |title=North Carolina Charlotte receives reprimand from league for melee |url=https://apnews.com/article/81175b3d47087b4c96865871e93a67df |access-date=2023-04-24 |website=AP NEWS |language=en}}</ref> This led to the creation of a 'buffer zone' being implemented behind the visiting team's bench. [[ESPN]] commentator [[Andy Katz]] provided this explanation on why Charlotte-Cincinnati was one of the juiciest rivalries in the country: "The games are hotly contested usually and the fans in Charlotte don't like Cincinnati. They get up for this game more than any other."<ref>{{Cite web |title=ESPN.com - These eight rivalries have juice |url=https://www.espn.com/espn/print?id=1972038 |access-date=2023-04-24 |website=[[ESPN]]}}</ref> |
||
==Records== |
==Records== |
||
Line 1,058: | Line 1,104: | ||
| 1 || [[Henry Williams (basketball)|Henry Williams]] || 1988–1992 || 2383 |
| 1 || [[Henry Williams (basketball)|Henry Williams]] || 1988–1992 || 2383 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 2 || Jon Davis || |
| 2 || Jon Davis || 2015–2019 || 2113 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 3 || [[Lew Massey]] || 1974–1978 || 2149 |
| 3 || [[Lew Massey]] || 1974–1978 || 2149 |
||
Line 1,106: | Line 1,152: | ||
| 1 || [[Pierriá Henry]] || 2011–2015 || 555 |
| 1 || [[Pierriá Henry]] || 2011–2015 || 555 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 2 || Jon Davis || |
| 2 || Jon Davis ||2015–2019 || 547 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 3 || [[Keith Williams (basketball, born 1965)|Keith Williams]] || 1983–1987 || 515 |
| 3 || [[Keith Williams (basketball, born 1965)|Keith Williams]] || 1983–1987 || 515 |
||
Line 1,236: | Line 1,282: | ||
{{Charlotte 49ers men's basketball navbox}} |
{{Charlotte 49ers men's basketball navbox}} |
||
{{University of North Carolina at Charlotte}} |
{{University of North Carolina at Charlotte}} |
||
{{ |
{{American Athletic Conference men's basketball navbox}} |
||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Charlotte 49ers Men's Basketball}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Charlotte 49ers Men's Basketball}} |
Latest revision as of 00:16, 15 August 2024
Charlotte 49ers Men's Basketball | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
University | University of North Carolina at Charlotte | |||
First season | 1965–66 | |||
All-time record | 792–661 (.545)[1] | |||
Head coach | Aaron Fearne (1st season) | |||
Conference | The American | |||
Standort | Charlotte, North Carolina | |||
Arena | Dale F. Halton Arena (capacity: 9,105) | |||
Nickname | 49ers | |||
Student section | Niner Nation | |||
Colors | Green and white[2] | |||
Uniforms | ||||
| ||||
NCAA tournament Final Four | ||||
1977 | ||||
NCAA tournament Elite Eight | ||||
1977 | ||||
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen | ||||
1977 | ||||
NCAA tournament round of 32 | ||||
1997, 1998, 1999, 2001 | ||||
NCAA tournament appearances | ||||
1977, 1988, 1992, 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005 | ||||
Conference tournament champions | ||||
1969, 1970 (Dixie) 1977, 1988 (Sun Belt) 1992 (Metro) 1999, 2001 (CUSA) | ||||
Conference regular season champions | ||||
1977, 1978, 1988 (Sun Belt) 1995 (Metro) 2004 (CUSA) |
The Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team represents the University of North Carolina at Charlotte (UNC Charlotte) in NCAA Division I basketball. Charlotte is a member of the American Athletic Conference (The American), which they joined in 2023 after 10 seasons in Conference USA.[3] Charlotte, which had been a charter C-USA member from 1995, returned to that conference in 2013 after leaving in 2005 to join the Atlantic 10 Conference. The 49ers have also played in the Sun Belt Conference and were a member of the Metro Conference, which merged with the Great Midwest Conference to form Conference USA.[4]
The basketball team has spent the better part of its history in the shadow of the state's four Atlantic Coast Conference teams. However, the 49ers have carved out a niche of their own, making 11 appearances in the NCAA tournament. In their first appearance, in 1977, they advanced all the way to the Final Four—at the time, the deepest run for a first-time tournament participant. They have also earned regular and post-season championships in three different conferences, as well as a victory in the College Basketball Invitational (CBI) in 2023.
The 49ers play their home games in Dale F. Halton Arena, an on-campus facility that seats 9,105.
History
[edit]Early years (1965–1975)
[edit]UNC Charlotte first fielded an intercollegiate basketball program in 1965. Chancellor Bonnie Cone appointed Harvey Murphy, previously a physical education instructor and head of the physical education program at the university, as the first head coach in school history. Murphy coached the 49ers in the NAIA as a member of the Dixie Conference from 1965 through 1970, winning the conference in 1969 and 1970.
Bill Foster was hired to succeed Harvey Murphy after the 1969–1970 season as the 49ers moved from the NAIA to Division I as an independent. Foster notched two 20-win seasons in 1973–1974 and 1974–1975 before moving on to coach at Clemson. Foster's lasting legacy on the program was bringing in two of the most notable players on the team which would advance to the 1977 Final Four: Cedric Maxwell and Melvin Watkins.
Lee Rose years (1975–1977)
[edit]After Bill Foster left for Clemson, Lee Rose was hired as the head coach in 1975. Rose inherited a team coming off of two 20-win seasons and led them to the NIT championship game in his first year. The following season the 49ers became a charter member of the Sun Belt Conference.
Final Four
[edit]In their first year in the Sun Belt, the 49ers tallied what is still the best season in school history. They swept the regular season and tournament titles, earning the program's first NCAA Tournament berth. The ensuing NCAA tournament run is still one of the most successful ever for a first-time participant. After beating Central Michigan in the first round 91–86, the 49ers dispatched Syracuse 81–59 to advance to the Elite Eight. The 49ers then took out heavily favored Michigan by a score of 75–68 to advance to the program's first and only Final Four—the first time that a first-time participant had ever advanced that far. Charlotte would fall to eventual champions Marquette in the national semifinals 51–49. Their final record was 28–5, still a school record for wins in a season.
Despite the loss of the two leaders of the Final Four team from the previous season, Lee Rose guided the 49ers to a fifth consecutive 20-win season in 1977–1978. Rose would then leave to coach at Purdue for the 1978–1979 season. Rose's .800 winning percentage at Charlotte remains the highest in school history.
Post-Rose years (1978–1985)
[edit]Following Rose's departure, Mike Pratt, an assistant under Rose at Charlotte, was named the head coach for the 1978–1979 season. In his first and only head coaching job, Pratt could not maintain the success of the program under Rose, compiling a 56–52 record over four seasons with no postseason appearances. The best year under Pratt was the 1978–1979 season in which the 49ers earned a 16–11 record and a second place Sun Belt finish. Pratt was dismissed following the 1981–1982 season.
Following Pratt's dismissal, the 49ers hired Hal Wissel as head basketball coach. Wissel was previously a successful coach at many levels, but his tenure would be the least successful in the Charlotte's history at the Division 1 level. After three seasons and a 22–62 record, Wissel was dismissed following the 1984–1985 season.
Jeff Mullins years (1985–1996)
[edit]Following Wissel's dismissal, Jeff Mullins was hired as both head basketball coach and athletic director. Mullins guided the 49ers through multiple conference changes and kicked off the most successful, sustained run in school history.
Mullins inherited a last place Sun Belt team and things didn't improve in his first season with an 8–20 record. However, in just his second year he guided the 49ers back above .500 for the first time in five seasons, leading them to an 18–14 record in 1986–1987. Led by Sun Belt Player of the Year Byron Dinkins, Mullins coached the 49ers to the Sun Belt regular season and post-season championships and the program's first NCAA tournament berth since their Final Four run. Seeded 13th, the 49ers lost to 4th seed BYU in the first round of the Southeast Regional by a score of 98–92.
The following season the 49ers finished second in the Sun Belt and earned an NIT berth. In their final two seasons in the Sun Belt, Mullins led the 49ers to a 30–28 record with no postseason appearances.
Metro Conference (1992–1995)
[edit]Prior to the 1992–1993 season the 49ers moved to the Metro Conference. In their four seasons in the Metro Conference, the 49ers never finished lower than 4th in the standings, won one regular season conference title, and one post-season conference title. The success was rewarded with two NCAA Tournament berths, in 1992 and 1995, losing in the first round both times.
Conference USA
[edit]After the 1994–1995 season, the 49ers joined Conference USA. In what would be Mullins' last season, Charlotte went 14–15 in 1995–1996, finishing tied for 6th in the league. Mullins retired following that season as the all-time winningest coach in school history with 182 wins and also had more postseason appearances than all previous coaches combined.
Former on-the-court star and longtime assistant coach for the 49ers Melvin Watkins took over as head coach for the 1996–1997 season. Watkins had two successful seasons as the Charlotte head coach, leading the team into the second round of the NCAA tournament in both years. He left to take the head coaching job at Texas A&M in 1998.
Bobby Lutz years (1998–2010)
[edit]After Watkins left for Texas A&M, Charlotte named Bobby Lutz its new head coach. Lutz was an assistant under both Watkins and Jeff Mullins at Charlotte. Lutz accepted the head coaching job at Gardner–Webb in 1995 only to resign two weeks later to accept the assistant job at his alma mater on Mullin's staff.
Lutz's run of success in Conference USA is arguably the best sustained stretch in Charlotte basketball history. The 49ers reached the NCAA Tournament in 5 of the 7 years they were in Conference USA under Lutz.
In his first season, Lutz guided the 49ers to a 10–6 record in CUSA. Seeded fifth in the conference tournament, the 49ers won four games in four days, taking out three of the top four seeds in the process to win the CUSA conference tournament for the first time. This earned Charlotte a 5 seed in the NCAA tournament. They defeated Rhode Island in the first round before falling to 13-seed Oklahoma in round two.
The 1999–2000 season would be defined by the passing of Charles Hayward in September 1999. Hayward lost a two-year battle with Leukemia, he would have his jersey retired.[5] Charlotte would play to a 17–16 record and earn an NIT berth.
The 2000–2001 seasons saw the arrival of Rodney White who would become the top scoring freshman in the country and be named ESPN's National Freshmen of the Year.[6] Led by White, Charlotte would win its second CUSA Tournament Title in three years and earn a 9 seed in the NCAA tournament with a 22–11 record. Charlotte would defeat Tennessee in the first round of the Midwest Regional before falling to #1 seed Illinois in the round of 32. White would leave Charlotte for the NBA draft and be selected 9th overall by the Detroit Pistons.
Over the following three seasons the 49ers would earn two additional NCAA tournament bids, in 2002 and 2004, earning #9 seeds and being eliminated in the first round both years.
The 2004–2005 season would see the 49ers return to the top 25 behind eventual CUSA Player of the Year Eddie Basden, he would also win CUSA Defensive POY for the second straight season. The promising season would take a turn for the worse in the last few weeks. The 49ers lost a game on senior night at Louisville which would determine the regular season conference champion. They followed that with a loss on an emotional senior night at South Florida. They then drew a Memphis team in the CUSA tournament who had under-performed all year but caught fire at the end of the season. Charlotte was bounced from the first round of the CUSA tournament and had their season ended in round 1 of the NCAA tournament by NC State.
Atlantic 10
[edit]Following the exodus of many of the top basketball programs from CUSA to the Big East in 2005, Charlotte was left as a non-football school in an increasingly weak basketball conference despite having the second best record in CUSA history at the time, trailing only Cincinnati. Charlotte eventually joined the Atlantic 10 for all sports along with fellow CUSA member Saint Louis. Lutz was not able to sustain the level of success he achieved in CUSA. Over the course of six seasons in the A10, Lutz's record was 83–75, compared to his record of 135–83 in CUSA. The 49ers earned two NIT bids under Lutz in the A10, going 1–2 in those tournaments. The 49ers fell apart to end the 2009–2010 season. With eight games to go in the regular season, they were 18-5 and in first place in the A10, and appeared well on their way to an NCAA bid. However, they went 1–7 the rest of the way, and didn't even receive an NIT bid. Lutz was dismissed following this collapse.[7]
Lutz had more wins (218) and NCAA tournament appearances (5) than any other coach in Charlotte history. His firing was met with mixed emotions among students and fans.[8]
Alan Major years (2010–2015)
[edit]On April 12, 2010 Alan Major was announced as the new head coach of the Charlotte 49ers. The coaching search targeted assistants at successful high-level programs, Major was a member of Thad Matta's staff at Ohio State which included a national title game appearance. Throughout his career Major has a history of helping highly skilled big men develop into great NBA prospects. He coached two future #1 overall draft picks in Michael Olowokandi and Greg Oden while at Pacific and Ohio State, respectively. He also came in with A10 experience having been as assistant under Matta at Xavier.
Major's first season was headlined by the dismissal of one senior big man, Shamarri Spears, in the Fall and another, Phil Jones, not qualifying academically for the Spring semester. The early season schedule was highlighted by a 49–48 victory over #7 ranked Tennessee and a 2OT win at Georgia Tech. Following Jones being ruled ineligible, the team was left with just 8 scholarship players for the remainder of the season and would struggle in conference play, finishing with a 2–14 league record and failing to make the A10 conference tournament for the first time. The three-year postseason drought had been the longest for the program since Jeff Mullins took over in 1985.
The 2011–2012 season saw less off-the-court drama, although individual players were benched for disciplinary reasons, but there was little improvement in terms of wins and losses. The 49ers would finish with a 13–17 record, 5–11 in conference play. This was an improvement of Major's first year and earned them an A10 tournament spot, a first round loss at St. Joe's. Chris Braswell would average 15.6 points and 7.6 rebounds per game and be named to the A10 All-Conference Third Team. Pierriá Henry was among the nation's leaders in steals and earned a spot on the A10 All-Rookie Team.[9]
The 2012–2013 season resulted in an improved 21–12 record and a berth in the NIT. The season was successful overall, but the 49ers lost four games in a row in February/March which removed them from NCAA tournament consideration. This was followed by a miraculous first round A10 tournament victory over Richmond in which Pierriá Henry took 11 free throws in the final 4.7 seconds of game time to overcome a 3-point deficit. Richmond was called for three technical fouls, one non-shooting foul and one shooting foul in that time.[10] The 49ers followed this with a blowout loss to St. Louis in the 2nd round. In the NIT the 49ers were eliminated in round 1 at Providence.
Following the 2012–13 season, Darion Clark announced he was leaving the program.[11] Clark saw a total of seven minutes in the 49ers' two A10 tournament games, a large drop from his regular season average. In late April forward E. Victor Nickerson also announced he was transferring, leaving Charlotte with only 6 scholarship players on roster.
Return to Conference USA
[edit]The 2013–2014 season, in which the 49ers would rejoin Conference USA and claim the Puerto Rico Tip-Off Championship by beating a ranked Michigan team; ended with a late season 6 game losing streak in conference play, and the 49ers finishing with a 17–14 record and a second round exit from the C-USA Tournament.
Having taken a medical leave of absence following the 2013–14 season, Coach Major would take another such leave during the second half of the 2014–15 season. Assistant Head Coach Ryan Odom would coach the team for the remainder of the season. Following the conclusion of the 2014–2015 season it was announced that Major would step down as head coach. His record as 49ers head coach was 67 wins to 70 losses with the program attaining an overall record during his tenure of 75 to 81. Significant milestones included winning the 2012 Great Alaska Shootout and 2013 Puerto Rico Tip-off tournaments and victories over #7 ranked Tennessee, #10 ranked Butler, and previous National Championship runners-up, #14 ranked Michigan.[12]
Mark Price years (2015–2017)
[edit]On March 25, 2015, former NBA point guard and NBA Charlotte Hornets assistant coach, Mark Price was offered a five-year contract to become the 49ers head coach, which he accepted.[13] Price was fired on December 14, 2017 after a 30-42 record in 2 1/2 seasons at Charlotte and was replaced by assistant coach Houston Fancher.[14]
Ron Sanchez years (2018–2023)
[edit]On March 19, 2018, Ron Sanchez was named the 12th head coach in Charlotte 49ers men’s basketball program history. Sanchez was a former volunteer assistant at Indiana before going to Washington State. Sanchez was hired by Dick Bennett, and remained on the staff when Bennett’s son Tony took over. Sanchez accompanied Tony Bennett to Virginia in 2009 as an assistant and was promoted to associate head coach in 2015.[15]
On June 6, 2023, Sanchez resigned to rejoin Bennett's staff at Virginia as associate head coach.[16][17] Coincidentally, Sanchez left less than a month before Charlotte's move from C-USA to The American became official.
On June 15, 2023, associate head coach Aaron Fearne agreed to lead the team as interim head coach for the 2023–24 inaugural AAC season.[18]
Aaron Fearne (2023–present)
[edit]The American
[edit]On July 1, 2023 all Charlotte 49ers athletics programs joined the American Athletic Conference.[19]
Interim coach Aaron Fearne picked up his first win when the 49ers when they took down Maine.[20] The 49ers won their first game in American Conference play when they defeated number seventeen ranked Florida Atlantic.[21] It was Charlotte’s first win over a ranked team since 2013 and first ranked win over a team at home since 2010.[22]
On February 12, 2024, Fearne was received a contract to become the official head coach of the Charlotte basketball program.[23]
Team record
[edit]Season | Coach | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dixie Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (NAIA) (1963–1970) | |||||||||
1963–1964 | Irv Edelman | 5–5 | 4th | ||||||
1964–1965 | Irv Edelman | 9–1 | 1st | ||||||
1965–1966 | Harvey Murphy | 6–17 | 4–6 | 4th | |||||
1966–1967 | Harvey Murphy | 7–21 | 7–5 | 3rd | |||||
1967–1968 | Harvey Murphy | 5–17 | 3–9 | 6th | |||||
1968–1969 | Harvey Murphy | 12–10 | 9–5 | T–2nd | |||||
1969–1970 | Harvey Murphy | 14–16 | 10–4 | T–2nd | NAIA District Playoffs | ||||
Independent (Division I) (1970–1976) | |||||||||
1970–1971 | Bill Foster | 15–8 | |||||||
1971–1972 | Bill Foster | 14–11 | |||||||
1972–1973 | Bill Foster | 14–12 | |||||||
1973–1974 | Bill Foster | 22–4 | |||||||
1974–1975 | Bill Foster | 23–3 | |||||||
1975–1976 | Lee Rose | 24–6 | NIT Runner-Up | ||||||
Sun Belt Conference (Division I) (1976–1991) | |||||||||
1976–1977 | Lee Rose | 28–5 | 5–1 | 1st | NCAA Final Four | ||||
1977–1978 | Lee Rose | 20–7 | 9–1 | 1st | |||||
1978–1979 | Mike Pratt | 16–11 | 6–4 | 2nd | |||||
1979–1980 | Mike Pratt | 15–12 | 9–5 | 4th | |||||
1980–1981 | Mike Pratt | 10–17 | 3–9 | 6th | |||||
1981–1982 | Mike Pratt | 15–12 | 3–7 | 5th | |||||
1982–1983 | Hal Wissel | 8–20 | 5–9 | 6th | |||||
1983–1984 | Hal Wissel | 9–19 | 2–12 | 8th | |||||
1984–1985 | Hal Wissel | 5–23 | 1–13 | 8th | |||||
1985–1986 | Jeff Mullins | 8–20 | 1–13 | 8th | |||||
1986–1987 | Jeff Mullins | 18–14 | 6–8 | T–6th | |||||
1987–1988 | Jeff Mullins | 22–9 | 11–3 | 1st | NCAA First Round | ||||
1988–1989 | Jeff Mullins | 17–12 | 10–4 | 2nd | NIT First Round | ||||
1989–1990 | Jeff Mullins | 16–14 | 6–8 | 5th | |||||
1990–1991 | Jeff Mullins | 14–14 | 6–8 | 6th | |||||
Metro Conference (Division I) (1991–1995) | |||||||||
1991–1992 | Jeff Mullins | 23–9 | 7–5 | 2nd | NCAA First Round | ||||
1992–1993 | Jeff Mullins | 15–13 | 6–6 | T–4th | |||||
1993–1994 | Jeff Mullins | 16–13 | 7–5 | T–2nd | NIT First Round | ||||
1994–1995 | Jeff Mullins | 19–9 | 8–4 | 1st | NCAA First Round | ||||
Conference USA (Division I) (1995–2005) | |||||||||
1995–1996 | Jeff Mullins | 14–15 | 6–8 | T–6th | |||||
1996–1997 | Melvin Watkins | 22–9 | 10–4 | 3rd | NCAA Second Round | ||||
1997–1998 | Melvin Watkins | 20–11 | 13–3 | 2nd | NCAA Second Round | ||||
1998–1999 | Bobby Lutz | 23–11 | 10–6 | T–3rd | NCAA Second Round | ||||
1999–2000 | Bobby Lutz | 17–16 | 7–9 | T–5th | NIT First Round | ||||
2000–2001 | Bobby Lutz | 22–11 | 10–6 | 2nd | NCAA Second Round | ||||
2001–2002 | Bobby Lutz | 18–12 | 11–5 | 3rd | NCAA First Round | ||||
2002–2003 | Bobby Lutz | 13–16 | 8–8 | 5th | |||||
2003–2004 | Bobby Lutz | 21–9 | 12–4 | 1st | NCAA First Round | ||||
2004–2005 | Bobby Lutz | 21–8 | 12–4 | 2nd | NCAA First Round | ||||
Atlantic 10 Conference (Division I) (2005–2013) | |||||||||
2005–2006 | Bobby Lutz | 19–13 | 11–5 | 2nd | NIT First Round | ||||
2006–2007 | Bobby Lutz | 14–16 | 7–9 | 9th | |||||
2007–2008 | Bobby Lutz | 20–14 | 9–7 | T–4th | NIT First Round | ||||
2008–2009 | Bobby Lutz | 11–20 | 5–11 | 12th | |||||
2009–2010 | Bobby Lutz | 19–12 | 9–7 | 6th | |||||
2010–2011 | Alan Major | 10–20 | 2–14 | 13th | |||||
2011–2012 | Alan Major | 13–17 | 5–11 | 11th | |||||
2012–2013 | Alan Major | 21–12 | 8–8 | T–8th | NIT First Round | ||||
Conference USA (Division I) (2013–2023) | |||||||||
2013–2014 | Alan Major | 17–14 | 7–9 | T-5th | |||||
2014–2015 | Alan Major | 14–18 | 7–11 | 11th | |||||
2015–2016 | Mark Price | 14–19 | 9–9 | 7th | |||||
2016–2017 | Mark Price | 13–17 | 7–11 | 7th | |||||
2017–2018 | Mark Price, Houston Fancher (Interim) | 6–23 | 2–16 | 14th | |||||
2018–2019 | Ron Sanchez | 8–21 | 5–13 | 13th | |||||
2019–2020 | Ron Sanchez | 16–13 | 10–8 | T–4th | |||||
2020–2021 | Ron Sanchez | 9–16 | 5–11 | 5th East | |||||
2021–2022 | Ron Sanchez | 17–14 | 10–8 | 4th East | |||||
2022–2023 | Ron Sanchez | 22–14 | 9–11 | 5th | CBI Champion | ||||
American Athletic Conference (Division I) (2023–present) | |||||||||
2023–24 | Aaron Fearne | 19-12 | 13-5 | 3rd | |||||
Total: | 891–748 (.544) | ||||||||
National champion
Postseason invitational champion
|
Postseason
[edit]NCAA tournament results
[edit]The 49ers have appeared in the NCAA tournament 11 times. Their combined record is 7–12.
Year | Seed | Round | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1977 | First Round Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight Final Four National 3rd Place Game |
Central Michigan Syracuse Michigan Marquette UNLV |
W 91–86OT W 81–59 W 75–68 L 49–51 L 94–106 | |
1988 | #13 | First Round | #4 BYU | L 92–98OT |
1992 | #7 | First Round | #10 Iowa State | L 74–76 |
1995 | #7 | First Round | #10 Stanford | L 68–70 |
1997 | #7 | First Round Second Round |
#10 Georgetown #2 Utah |
W 79–67 L 58–77 |
1998 | #8 | First Round Second Round |
#9 UIC #1 North Carolina |
W 77–62 L 83–93OT |
1999 | #5 | First Round Second Round |
#12 Rhode Island #13 Oklahoma |
W 81–70 L 72–85 |
2001 | #9 | First Round Second Round |
#8 Tennessee #1 Illinois |
W 70–63 L 61–79 |
2002 | #9 | First Round | #8 Notre Dame | L 63–82 |
2004 | #9 | First Round | #8 Texas Tech | L 73–76 |
2005 | #7 | First Round | #10 NC State | L 63–75 |
NIT results
[edit]The 49ers have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) seven times. Their combined record is 4–7.
Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1976 | First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals |
San Francisco Oregon NC State Kentucky |
W 79–74 W 79–72 W 80–79 L 67–71 |
1989 | First Round | Connecticut | L 62–67 |
1994 | First Round | Duquesne | L 73–75 |
2000 | First Round | Ole Miss | L 45–62 |
2006 | Opening Round First Round |
Georgia Southern Cincinnati |
W 77–61 L 80–86 |
2008 | First Round | Nebraska | L 48–67 |
2013 | First Round | Providence | L 66–75 |
CBI results
[edit]The 49ers have appeared in the College Basketball Invitational (CBI) once in 2023, winning the tournament. Their combined record is 4–0.
Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2023 | First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals |
Western Carolina Milwaukee Radford Eastern Kentucky |
W 65–56 W 76–65 W 63–56 W 71–68 |
Coaches
[edit]Current coaching staff
[edit]Name | Position |
---|---|
Aaron Fearne | Head coach |
Conner Henry | Associate Head Coach |
Vic Sfera | Assistant coach |
Kevin Smith | Assistant coach |
Head coach history
[edit]Tenure | Coach | Years | Record | Pct. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1963–65 | Irv Edelman | 2 | 14–6 | .700 |
1965–70 | Harvey Murphy | 5 | 44–71 | .383 |
1970–75 | Bill Foster | 5 | 88–38 | .698 |
1975–78 | Lee Rose | 3 | 72–18 | .800 |
1978–82 | Mike Pratt | 4 | 56–52 | .519 |
1982–85 | Hal Wissel | 3 | 22–62 | .262 |
1985–96 | Jeff Mullins | 11 | 182–142 | .507 |
1996–98 | Melvin Watkins | 2 | 42–20 | .677 |
1998–2010 | Bobby Lutz | 12 | 218–158 | .580 |
2010–15 | Alan Major | 5 | 75–81 | .481 |
2015–17 | Mark Price | 3 | 30–42 | .417 |
2017–18 | Houston Fancher | 1 | 3–17 | .150 |
2018–2023 | Ron Sanchez | 5 | 72-78 | .480 |
2024–Present | Aaron Fearne | 1 | 4-4 | .500 |
Totals | 14 Coaches | 62 Seasons | 922-789 | .539 |
- An asterisk (*) denotes a season currently in progress.[26]
List of Charlotte 49ers men's basketball head coaches [27]
Notable players
[edit]Retired numbers
[edit]No. | Player | Career | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
4 | Byron Dinkins | 1985–1989 | [28] |
DeMarco Johnson | 1994–1998 | ||
13 | Eddie Basden | 2002–2005 | [29] |
23 | Jarvis Lang | 1990–1991; 1992–1995 | [30] |
32 | Melvin Watkins | 1973–1977 | [31] |
33 | Cedric Maxwell | 1973–1977 | [32] |
34 | Henry Williams | 1988–1992 | [33] |
45 | Charles Hayward | 1997–1999 | [34] |
Conference Player of the Year winners
[edit]Conference | Player | Season |
---|---|---|
Sun Belt | Cedric Maxwell | 1976–1977 |
Sun Belt | Byron Dinkins | 1987–1988 |
Metro | Jarvis Lang | 1994–1995 |
Conference USA | DeMarco Johnson | 1997–1998 |
Conference USA | Eddie Basden | 2004–2005 |
Professional players
[edit]The following Charlotte basketball players appeared in at least one game in the NBA:
- Cedric Ball (1990)
- Eddie Basden (2005–2006)
- Sean Colson (2000–2001)
- Byron Dinkins (1990–1991)
- DeMarco Johnson (1999–2000)
- Chad Kinch (1980–1981)
- Cedric Maxwell (1977–1988)
- Rodney White (2001–2005)
Home venues
[edit]- Local high school gymnasiums (1963–1970)
- Belk Gymnasium (full-time 1970–1976, part-time 1976–1996)
- Bojangles Coliseum (1976–1988, 1993–1996)
- Charlotte Coliseum (1988–1993)
- Dale F. Halton Arena (1996–present)
- Spectrum Center (occasional, 2007–present)
Rivalries
[edit]Hornet's Nest Trophy
[edit]Charlotte's 29-year rivalry with the Davidson Wildcats sees Mecklenburg County's only two Division I schools go head-to-head for the Hornet's Nest Trophy. The Hornets' Nest series began in the 1979-80 season. The teams have met 46 times. Charlotte leads the all-time series, 29-17.[35] Although, in recent years Davidson has been the better team.
On November 12, 2019, Charlotte won back the Hornets Nest, winning 71-58, and snapping a 6 game losing streak.
Past rivalries
[edit]Charlotte has had its fair share of intense rivalries. One of the most heated and intense rivalries was with the Bob Huggins-coached Cincinnati Bearcats of Conference USA. Throughout a ten-year period from 1995–96 to 2004–05, Charlotte managed to upset Cincinnati teams ranked #3, #8, #18, #20 in the country. Fueled by "Huggins swallows" pregame chants what became known as the Cincinnati Incident, a brawl broke out between Cincinnati and the Charlotte student section, when a Cincinnati player threw the basketball into the stands.[36] This led to the creation of a 'buffer zone' being implemented behind the visiting team's bench. ESPN commentator Andy Katz provided this explanation on why Charlotte-Cincinnati was one of the juiciest rivalries in the country: "The games are hotly contested usually and the fans in Charlotte don't like Cincinnati. They get up for this game more than any other."[37]
Records
[edit]All-Time leaders
[edit]Rank | Player | Years | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Henry Williams | 1988–1992 | 2383 |
2 | Jon Davis | 2015–2019 | 2113 |
3 | Lew Massey | 1974–1978 | 2149 |
4 | Chad Kinch | 1976–1980 | 2020 |
5 | DeMarco Johnson | 1994–1998 | 2005 |
6 | Jarvis Lang | 1990–1991, 1992–1995 | 1855 |
7 | Cedric Maxwell | 1973–1977 | 1824 |
8 | Curtis Withers | 2003–2006 | 1750 |
9 | Jobey Thomas | 1998–2001 | 1737 |
10 | Leemire Goldwire | 2005–2008 | 1677 |
Rank | Player | Years | Rebounds |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Cedric Maxwell | 1973–1977 | 1117 |
2 | Jarvis Lang | 1990–1991, 1992–1995 | 1047 |
3 | Curtis Withers | 2003–2006 | 1042 |
4 | DeMarco Johnson | 1994–1998 | 926 |
5 | Norris Dae | 1968–1972 | 858 |
Rank | Player | Years | Assists |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Pierriá Henry | 2011–2015 | 555 |
2 | Jon Davis | 2015–2019 | 547 |
3 | Keith Williams | 1983–1987 | 515 |
4 | Byron Dinkins | 1985–1989 | 513 |
5 | Delano Johnson | 1989–1992, 1993–1994 | 496 |
Rank | Player | Years | Steals |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Pierriá Henry | 2011–2015 | 293 |
2 | Eddie Basden | 2001–2005 | 264 |
3 | Keith Williams | 1983–1987 | 236 |
4 | Phil Ward | 1978–1982 | 221 |
5 | Leemire Goldwire | 2005–2008 | 190 |
6 | Delano Johnson | 1989–1992, 1993–1994 | 189 |
7 | Henry Williams | 1988–1992 | 181 |
8 | Jeff West | 1985–1989 | 150 |
T – 9 | Demon Brown | 2001–2004 | 149 |
T – 9 | Jarvis Lang | 1990–1991, 1992–1995 | 149 |
Rank | Player | Years | Blocks |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Ray Gromlowicz | 1983–1987 | 194 |
2 | Jermain Parker | 1992–1995 | 177 |
3 | Phil Jones | 2008–2010 | 158 |
4 | Jarvis Lang | 1990–1991, 1992–1995 | 103 |
5 | Rodney Odom | 1991–1993 | 94 |
Rank | Player | Years | Games |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jobey Thomas | 1998–2001 | 130 |
2 | Leemire Goldwire | 2005–2008 | 125 |
3-T | Mitchell Baldwin | 2001–2006 | 124 |
3-T | Diego Guevara | 1997–2001 | 124 |
4 | Tremaine Gardiner | 1995–1997, 1998–2000 | 123 |
Rank | Player | Years | Three Pointers Made |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jobey Thomas | 1998–2001 | 346 |
2 | Leemire Goldwire | 2005–2008 | 343 |
3 | Demon Brown | 2001–2004 | 341 |
4 | Henry Williams | 1988–1992 | 308 |
5 | Diego Guevara | 1997–2001 | 235 |
Single game records
[edit]Stat | Player | Date | Record | Opponent |
---|---|---|---|---|
Points | George Jackson | 2/8/1975 | 44 | Samford |
Free Throws Made | Sean Colson & DeMarco Johnson | 12/20/1997 & 2/9/1998 | 16 | G. Washington & Tulane |
Rebounds | Ben Basinger & Cedric Maxwell | 12/3/1970 & 2/19/1977 | 24 | Florida Presbyterian & Seton Hall |
Assists | Sean Colson | 2/28/1998 | 18 | Houston |
Steals | Eddie Basden (twice), 7 other players | 2/2/2008 (latest, Charlie Coley) | 7 | Richmond (latest) |
Blocks | Lew Massey | 12/9/1975 | 10 | Wofford |
Minutes Played | Phil Ward | 1/5/1981 | 53 | Jacksonville |
Three Pointers Made | Brendan Plavich | 11/26/2003 | 10 | Syracuse |
References
[edit]- ^ "Charlotte 49ers Index".
- ^ "49ers Color System". Charlotte 49ers Brand Standards (PDF). June 23, 2020. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
- ^ "American Announces Entrance Agreements With Incoming Members for 2023-24 Season" (Press release). American Athletic Conference. June 16, 2022. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
- ^ [1] Charlotte 49ers Join Conference USA
- ^ [2] Remembering Hayward
- ^ [3] Charlotte 49ers Freshman Rodney White Named ESPN.com's National Freshman of the Year
- ^ [4] Lutz fired after 12 seasons at Charlotte
- ^ [5] Charlotte Fires Bobby Lutz: An Emotional Day For 49er Fans
- ^ [6] Charlotte 49ers' Henry, Braswell pick up A-10 honors
- ^ [7] Charlotte 68, Richmond 63
- ^ [8] Basketball, Football Transfer News
- ^ [9] C49ers and Alan Major Mutually Agree to Part Ways
- ^ [10] Mark Price to coach Charlotte 49ers
- ^ Reed, Steve (December 14, 2017). "Charlotte fires basketball coach, former NBA star Mark Price". The Charlotte Observer. Archived from the original on December 23, 2017. Retrieved December 23, 2017.
- ^ Scott, David (March 19, 2018). "Charlotte 49ers find next basketball coach on bench of No. 1 NCAA seed". charlotteobserver.com. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
- ^ "Sanchez Steps Down as 49ers Head Coach". 6 June 2023.
- ^ "Sanchez Returning to Virginia as Associate Head Coach". 6 June 2023.
- ^ "Charlotte Tabs Aaron Fearne as Interim Head Coach for 2023-24". 15 June 2023.
- ^ "American Athletic Conference Welcomes Six New Members". June 30, 2023. Retrieved July 3, 2023.
- ^ "Graves scores 15 points, leads Charlotte in 69-52 win over Maine in season opener". November 6, 2023. Retrieved January 7, 2024.
- ^ "Patterson and Charlotte take down Florida Atlantic 70-68". January 6, 2024.
- ^ "Niners Knock Off #17 Florida Atlantic, 70-68, for First Ranked Win Since 2013". January 6, 2024.
- ^ "Aaron Fearne Named Charlotte's 14th Men's Basketball Head Coach". February 12, 2024.
- ^ [11] 2010–11 Charlotte Men's Basketball Media guide
- ^ [12] Charlotte 49ers
- ^ "Charlotte". ESPN.com. Retrieved 2015-03-18.
- ^ [13] Charlotte Men's Basketball Won/Loss History
- ^ Byron Dinkins Named Director of Player Development at Charlotte at hoopdirt.com, 10 May 2018
- ^ Charlotte 49ers Jersey Retirement: Eddie Basden - Charlotte 49ers, Feb 18, 2009 at charlotte49ers.com
- ^ Lang bio at aussiehoopla
- ^ Aggies Name Watkins Head Basketball Coach at 12thman.com - 1 Apr 1998
- ^ Cedric Maxwell bio at charlotte49ers.com
- ^ Niners Legend Henry Williams Has Passed Away, 14 Mar 2018 at charlotte49ers.com
- ^ This Week in 49ers History: Charles Hayward, 11 Sep 2020 at charlotte49ers.com
- ^ "OrthoCarolina Sponsors Battle for Hornets' Nest Game - Charlotte Athletics". Charlotte 49ers. 21 November 2017. Retrieved 2020-08-08.
- ^ "North Carolina Charlotte receives reprimand from league for melee". AP NEWS. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
- ^ "ESPN.com - These eight rivalries have juice". ESPN. Retrieved 2023-04-24.