fbpx
Wikipedia

Tom Penders

Thomas Vincent Penders (born May 23, 1945) is an American retired college basketball coach, who last coached from 2004 through 2010 at the University of Houston. He is from Stratford, Connecticut[1] and has a 649–437 career record. As a college athlete, Penders played both basketball and baseball for the University of Connecticut, and is one of the few players to have competed in both the NCAA tournament as well as the College World Series.[2]

Tom Penders
Biographical details
Born (1945-05-23) May 23, 1945 (age 78)
Stratford, Connecticut, U.S.
Playing career
1964–1967Connecticut
Position(s)Point guard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1968–1969Bullard-Havens Technical HS
1969–1971Bridgeport Central HS
1971–1974Tufts
1974–1978Columbia
1978–1986Fordham
1986–1988Rhode Island
1988–1998Texas
1998–2001George Washington
2004–2010Houston
Head coaching record
Overall649–437
Tournaments12–10 (NCAA Division I)
1–8 (NIT)
2–2 (CBI)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
MAAC tournament (1983)
3 SWC regular season (1992, 1994, 1995)
2 SWC tournament (1994, 1995)
A-10 regular season (1999)
C-USA tournament (2010)
Awards
A-10 Coach of the Year (1987)
2x SWC Coach of the Year (1994, 1995)
College Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted in 2021

Prior to his last job as Houston's head coach, Penders was a sports analyst for ESPN and Westwood One Radio.[3] He also has been the head coach for Tufts, Columbia, Fordham, Rhode Island, Texas, and George Washington. Coach Penders developed a reputation as both “Turnaround Tom” and “Tournament Tom” because he proved that he could turn basketball programs into consistent winners and get the most out of his players in March. He is one of three coaches to reach three “Sweet 16s” as a double-digit seed in the NCAA basketball tournament, becoming the first NCAA head basketball coach to accomplish that feat with his 1996–97 Texas Longhorns team.

Coaching career edit

High school edit

Penders posted a 59–10 record as a high school coach at Bullard-Havens Tech and Bridgeport Central High School in Connecticut. He led Bullard-Havens to a 14–6 record in his first season as a head coach. The next year, he guided Bridgeport Central to a 23–2 record and a number two ranking in the state. The following year, he was named the New York Daily News Coach of the Year after leading Bridgeport to a 20–1 mark and a number one ranking.[2]

Tufts, Columbia, Fordham edit

Penders began his collegiate coaching career at Tufts University in 1971, and compiled a 54–18 record in three seasons.[2] On October 6, 2006, Penders and his 1972-73 Tufts team were inducted into the New England Basketball Hall of Fame.

He was appointed to succeed Jack Rohan in a similar capacity at Columbia University on April 18, 1974.[4] He led the Lions to back-to-back winning seasons in the final two of his four years there.[2]

After Columbia, Penders moved to Fordham University where he remained for eight years and compiled a 125–114 record. In 1980–81, Penders was named the New York Metropolitan Area Coach of the Year after leading Fordham to a 19–9 record.[2] On January 26, 2013, Penders was inducted into the Fordham Athletic Hall of Fame.[5]

Rhode Island edit

Penders took over Rhode Island's program on October 4, 1986, two weeks before the regular season began. He was named the Atlantic 10 Conference Co-Coach of the Year after guiding the Rams to a 20–10 record and a berth into the NIT his first year.[2]

In 1988, Penders led the Rams to the 1988 NCAA Sweet 16 with wins over Missouri and Syracuse before eventually losing to Duke.[2]

Texas edit

In his 10 seasons at the University of Texas, Penders compiled a 208–110 record. During his time there, he became the winningest basketball coach in school history (although now passed by former Texas and now Tennessee coach Rick Barnes). He led the Longhorns to three Southwest Conference championships and eight NCAA Tournament appearances, including an Elite Eight in 1990, and the Sweet 16 in 1997. His teams at Texas averaged 20.8 wins per season, 87.2 points per game, and forced 19 turnovers per contest.

When Penders was hired in 1988, he inherited a team that won 16 games the year before; the Erwin Center (the Longhorns' home court) averaged 4,028 fans per game (in a 16,231-seat arena). Immediately after his arrival, Penders switched to a more uptempo offense, and called his team the "Runnin' Horns." His first team finished second in the Southwest Conference and earned a bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Longhorns also set 22 school and SWC records while more than doubling their attendance average to 10,011 per game, the largest increase in NCAA Division I.[2]

In his final year at Texas, Penders underwent heart surgery and was unable to coach the first few games of what would end up being a tumultuous season.[6]

Penders resigned as head coach following nearly a month of controversy surrounding the Texas program. On the heels of a 14-17 season and 9th place finish in the conference, three players met with athletic director DeLoss Dodds to voice complaints about Penders and the program. One of those players, Luke Axtell, informed Dodds at the meeting that he intended to transfer. Not long after the meeting, and despite it being the offseason, Axtell was suspended from the team for academic reasons.

Shortly after the suspension, an Austin radio station that claimed to have obtained a copy of Axtell's transcript read his grades on the air. This touched off a firestorm and an investigation into the source of the unauthorized release of academic records. Penders announced his resignation after the investigation revealed that his assistant coach, Eddie Oran, admitted to faxing the transcript to the radio station.[7] In a deposition connected with a lawsuit Axtell brought against the radio station for releasing his records, Oran testified that Penders instructed him to fax the Axtell transcript to the media (and that a secretary had actually been the faxer).[8] Oran sued Penders for defamation in 2002, claiming that statements Penders made when the scandal broke wrecked his career. However, a jury sided with Penders.[9]

Coach Penders’s departure from Texas was the subject of a book, Burned Orange by Kyle Dalton.[10]

George Washington edit

Penders served as head coach at the George Washington University from 1998 to 2001, where he compiled a 49–42 record and led the Colonials to the NCAA tournament.[2]

Penders' only winning season while directing the Colonials was his first, where he inherited a talented team composed mostly of recruits of former Colonial head coach Mike Jarvis. A number of off-court issues followed.[11] Late in the 2000-2001 season, four players used the long-distance access code of his son and assistant coach, Tommy, Jr., to make $1,400 worth of long-distance calls and star guard SirValiant Brown left after his sophomore year for the NBA because he wouldn't qualify to play at GW the next season for academic reasons.[12] Most seriously, Penders failed to tell athletic director Jack Kvancz that one of his players, Attila Cosby, had been arrested for several serious misdemeanors in January, including forcing a prostitute to perform oral sex at gunpoint and violating her with a broom.[13] Penders ultimately resigned in 2001.[14]

Penders said his resignation was because after 30 years of coaching, it was "time for a sabbatical," and said the resignation was not related to the off-the-court issues.[15] The university honored the rest of Penders' contract, with GW athletic director Jack Kvancz said honoring it "was the class thing to do." When GW's Kvancz was questioned about the payout (in the area of $1M) he refused to comment. "[16]

Houston edit

Penders came to Houston after spending three years as an analyst for ESPN and Westwood One Radio.[3] In his first season at the University of Houston, Penders guided the Cougars to the nation's fourth-best turnaround with an 18–14 overall record and Houston led the nation in turnover margin and set both team and individual school records for most three-point field goals made in a season.[2]

In his second season, Penders led the Cougars to their first 20-win season, first back-to-back winning seasons, and first back-to-back postseason tournament appearances since 1992–93. He also led Houston to back-to-back wins over nationally ranked teams for the first time since the 1984 NCAA Midwest Regional tournament and their first postseason tournament victory since 1988 in his first two years at the school, in the NIT.[2]

Houston finished the 2005-06 campaign with a 2–2 record against nationally ranked teams after beating No. 25 LSU on November 29 and 13th-ranked Arizona December 3 in a nationally televised game on ESPN2. Houston's postseason tournament victory was against BYU in the first round of the 2006 NIT. It also was Penders’ first career victory in the NIT. Houston led the nation in steals with a 12.4 average, and the Cougars finished second in turnover margin with an average margin of +7.5.[2]

Penders led the Houston Cougars to the Conference USA championship game in 2010 where they defeated UTEP for their first NCAA Tournament berth in 18 years.[2] This made him only the 8th coach to take 4 different schools to the NCAA tournament.

Penders resigned as coach of Houston on March 22, 2010, following a first round loss to Maryland in the NCAA tournament.

Playing career edit

Penders played both baseball and basketball at the University of Connecticut, where he starred as a center fielder for the baseball team and a point guard for the basketball team from 1964 to 1967.[2]

He was the 116th overall selection in the eighth round of the 1968 Major League Baseball (MLB) January Draft by the Cleveland Indians.[17] His professional baseball playing experience lasted one year in the Cleveland organization where he split his 1968 season between the Rock Hill Chiefs and Waterbury Indians.[4]

Family edit

In addition to Penders and son Tommy, Jr. serving as basketball coaches, his father was a longtime baseball coach at Stratford High School from 1931 to 1968, and led the school to four state championships. His brother, Jim, is the baseball coach at East Catholic High School, and was named the national high school Coach of the Year in 1996. Like his father, Jim Penders won four state championships.[2]

Penders' two nephews also are collegiate baseball coaches. Jim was named the head coach at Connecticut in 2003 after serving seven years as an assistant coach and playing four years for the Huskies. Rob serves as the head baseball coach at St. Edward's University in Austin, Texas.[2]

Head coaching record edit

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Tufts Jumbos (New England Small College Athletic Conference) (1971–1974)
1971–72 Tufts 12–8
1972–73 Tufts 22–4
1973–74 Tufts 20–6
Tufts: 54–18
Columbia Lions (Ivy League) (1974–1978)
1974–75 Columbia 4–22 2–12 T–7th
1975–76 Columbia 8–17 6–8 T–4th
1976–77 Columbia 16–10 8–6 3rd
1977–78 Columbia 15–11 11–3 T–2nd
Columbia: 43–60 27–29
Fordham Rams (NCAA Division I independent) (1978–1981)
1978–79 Fordham 7–22
1979–80 Fordham 11–17
1980–81 Fordham 19–9 NIT first round
Fordham Rams (Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference) (1981–1986)
1981–82 Fordham 18–11 8–2 2nd NIT first round
1982–83 Fordham 19–11 7–3 T–2nd NIT first round
1983–84 Fordham 19–15 7–7 4th NIT first round
1984–85 Fordham 19–12 9–5 2nd NIT first round
1985–86 Fordham 13–17 7–7 T–4th
Fordham: 125–114 38–24
Rhode Island Rams (Atlantic 10 Conference) (1986–1988)
1986–87 Rhode Island 20–10 12–6 3rd NIT first round
1987–88 Rhode Island 28–7 14–4 2nd NCAA Division I Sweet 16
Rhode Island: 48–17 (.739) 26–10
Texas Longhorns (Southwest Conference) (1988–1996)
1988–89 Texas 25–9 12–4 2nd NCAA Division I second round
1989–90 Texas 24–9 12–4 3rd NCAA Division I Elite Eight
1990–91 Texas 23–9 13–3 2nd NCAA Division I second round
1991–92 Texas 23–12 11–3 T–1st NCAA Division I first round
1992–93 Texas 11–17 4–10 7th
1993–94 Texas 26–8 12–2 1st NCAA Division I second round
1994–95 Texas 23–7 11–3 T–1st NCAA Division I second round
1995–96 Texas 21–10 10–4 3rd NCAA Division I second round
Texas Longhorns (Big 12 Conference) (1996–1998)
1996–97 Texas 18–12 10–6 T–3rd NCAA Division I Sweet 16
1997–98 Texas 14–17 6–10 9th
Texas: 208–110 103–48
George Washington Colonials (Atlantic 10 Conference) (1998–2001)
1998–99 George Washington 20–9 13–3 1st (West) NCAA Division I first round
1999–00 George Washington 15–15 9–7 T–2nd (West)
2000–01 George Washington 14–18 6–10 7th
George Washington: 49–42 28–20
Houston Cougars (Conference USA) (2004–2010)
2004–05 Houston 18–14 9–7 T–4th NIT first round
2005–06 Houston 21–10 9–5 4th NIT second round
2006–07 Houston 18–15 10–6 3rd
2007–08 Houston 24–10 11–5 3rd CBI semifinal
2008–09 Houston 21–12 10–6 T–4th CBI first round
2009–10 Houston 19–16 7–9 7th NCAA Division I first round
Houston: 121–77 56–38
Total: 648–438

      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

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2011-01-02.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p . Archived from the original on 2011-06-10.
  3. ^ a b "Houston coach Penders resigns after NCAA run". 22 March 2010.
  4. ^ a b Strauss, Michael. "Penders of Tufts Takes Columbia Basketball Job," The New York Times, Friday, April 19, 1974. Retrieved February 24, 2023.
  5. ^ "New Fordham Athletic Hall of Fame Class to be Inducted on January 26th".
  6. ^ "PLUS: COLLEGE BASKETBALL -- TEXAS; Penders Recovering After Heart Surgery". The New York Times. 10 November 1997.
  7. ^ "Penders Resigns as UT Coach". Associated Press.
  8. ^ "The best little scandal in Texas". 23 August 1999.
  9. ^ Jury clears former Texas coach in defamation suit. Associated Press, 2002-08-13.
  10. ^ Amazon.com
  11. ^ "GW basketball faces NCAA violations," SportsIllustrated.com
  12. ^ "Brown plans jump to NBA", GW Hatchet 2007-12-22 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Lei, Richard (2001-07-16). "Schooled in Scandal". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2022-05-26.
  14. ^ "Penders resigns amid turmoil". 23 April 2001.
  15. ^ "Citing Burnout, Penders Resigns," Washington Post, Mark Asher and Thomas Heath, April 21, 2001.
  16. ^ "Penders resigns amid turmoil", GW Hatchet 2007-12-22 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ 1968 MLB January Draft Pick Transactions, January 27 – Pro Sports Transactions. Retrieved February 24, 2023.

External links edit

  • Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference (Minors)

penders, thomas, vincent, penders, born, 1945, american, retired, college, basketball, coach, last, coached, from, 2004, through, 2010, university, houston, from, stratford, connecticut, career, record, college, athlete, penders, played, both, basketball, base. Thomas Vincent Penders born May 23 1945 is an American retired college basketball coach who last coached from 2004 through 2010 at the University of Houston He is from Stratford Connecticut 1 and has a 649 437 career record As a college athlete Penders played both basketball and baseball for the University of Connecticut and is one of the few players to have competed in both the NCAA tournament as well as the College World Series 2 Tom PendersBiographical detailsBorn 1945 05 23 May 23 1945 age 78 Stratford Connecticut U S Playing career1964 1967ConnecticutPosition s Point guardCoaching career HC unless noted 1968 1969Bullard Havens Technical HS1969 1971Bridgeport Central HS1971 1974Tufts1974 1978Columbia1978 1986Fordham1986 1988Rhode Island1988 1998Texas1998 2001George Washington2004 2010HoustonHead coaching recordOverall649 437Tournaments12 10 NCAA Division I 1 8 NIT 2 2 CBI Accomplishments and honorsChampionshipsMAAC tournament 1983 3 SWC regular season 1992 1994 1995 2 SWC tournament 1994 1995 A 10 regular season 1999 C USA tournament 2010 AwardsA 10 Coach of the Year 1987 2x SWC Coach of the Year 1994 1995 College Basketball Hall of FameInducted in 2021Prior to his last job as Houston s head coach Penders was a sports analyst for ESPN and Westwood One Radio 3 He also has been the head coach for Tufts Columbia Fordham Rhode Island Texas and George Washington Coach Penders developed a reputation as both Turnaround Tom and Tournament Tom because he proved that he could turn basketball programs into consistent winners and get the most out of his players in March He is one of three coaches to reach three Sweet 16s as a double digit seed in the NCAA basketball tournament becoming the first NCAA head basketball coach to accomplish that feat with his 1996 97 Texas Longhorns team Contents 1 Coaching career 1 1 High school 1 2 Tufts Columbia Fordham 1 3 Rhode Island 1 4 Texas 1 5 George Washington 1 6 Houston 2 Playing career 3 Family 4 Head coaching record 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksCoaching career editHigh school edit Penders posted a 59 10 record as a high school coach at Bullard Havens Tech and Bridgeport Central High School in Connecticut He led Bullard Havens to a 14 6 record in his first season as a head coach The next year he guided Bridgeport Central to a 23 2 record and a number two ranking in the state The following year he was named the New York Daily News Coach of the Year after leading Bridgeport to a 20 1 mark and a number one ranking 2 Tufts Columbia Fordham edit Penders began his collegiate coaching career at Tufts University in 1971 and compiled a 54 18 record in three seasons 2 On October 6 2006 Penders and his 1972 73 Tufts team were inducted into the New England Basketball Hall of Fame He was appointed to succeed Jack Rohan in a similar capacity at Columbia University on April 18 1974 4 He led the Lions to back to back winning seasons in the final two of his four years there 2 After Columbia Penders moved to Fordham University where he remained for eight years and compiled a 125 114 record In 1980 81 Penders was named the New York Metropolitan Area Coach of the Year after leading Fordham to a 19 9 record 2 On January 26 2013 Penders was inducted into the Fordham Athletic Hall of Fame 5 Rhode Island edit Penders took over Rhode Island s program on October 4 1986 two weeks before the regular season began He was named the Atlantic 10 Conference Co Coach of the Year after guiding the Rams to a 20 10 record and a berth into the NIT his first year 2 In 1988 Penders led the Rams to the 1988 NCAA Sweet 16 with wins over Missouri and Syracuse before eventually losing to Duke 2 Texas edit In his 10 seasons at the University of Texas Penders compiled a 208 110 record During his time there he became the winningest basketball coach in school history although now passed by former Texas and now Tennessee coach Rick Barnes He led the Longhorns to three Southwest Conference championships and eight NCAA Tournament appearances including an Elite Eight in 1990 and the Sweet 16 in 1997 His teams at Texas averaged 20 8 wins per season 87 2 points per game and forced 19 turnovers per contest When Penders was hired in 1988 he inherited a team that won 16 games the year before the Erwin Center the Longhorns home court averaged 4 028 fans per game in a 16 231 seat arena Immediately after his arrival Penders switched to a more uptempo offense and called his team the Runnin Horns His first team finished second in the Southwest Conference and earned a bid to the NCAA Tournament The Longhorns also set 22 school and SWC records while more than doubling their attendance average to 10 011 per game the largest increase in NCAA Division I 2 In his final year at Texas Penders underwent heart surgery and was unable to coach the first few games of what would end up being a tumultuous season 6 Penders resigned as head coach following nearly a month of controversy surrounding the Texas program On the heels of a 14 17 season and 9th place finish in the conference three players met with athletic director DeLoss Dodds to voice complaints about Penders and the program One of those players Luke Axtell informed Dodds at the meeting that he intended to transfer Not long after the meeting and despite it being the offseason Axtell was suspended from the team for academic reasons Shortly after the suspension an Austin radio station that claimed to have obtained a copy of Axtell s transcript read his grades on the air This touched off a firestorm and an investigation into the source of the unauthorized release of academic records Penders announced his resignation after the investigation revealed that his assistant coach Eddie Oran admitted to faxing the transcript to the radio station 7 In a deposition connected with a lawsuit Axtell brought against the radio station for releasing his records Oran testified that Penders instructed him to fax the Axtell transcript to the media and that a secretary had actually been the faxer 8 Oran sued Penders for defamation in 2002 claiming that statements Penders made when the scandal broke wrecked his career However a jury sided with Penders 9 Coach Penders s departure from Texas was the subject of a book Burned Orange by Kyle Dalton 10 George Washington edit Penders served as head coach at the George Washington University from 1998 to 2001 where he compiled a 49 42 record and led the Colonials to the NCAA tournament 2 Penders only winning season while directing the Colonials was his first where he inherited a talented team composed mostly of recruits of former Colonial head coach Mike Jarvis A number of off court issues followed 11 Late in the 2000 2001 season four players used the long distance access code of his son and assistant coach Tommy Jr to make 1 400 worth of long distance calls and star guard SirValiant Brown left after his sophomore year for the NBA because he wouldn t qualify to play at GW the next season for academic reasons 12 Most seriously Penders failed to tell athletic director Jack Kvancz that one of his players Attila Cosby had been arrested for several serious misdemeanors in January including forcing a prostitute to perform oral sex at gunpoint and violating her with a broom 13 Penders ultimately resigned in 2001 14 Penders said his resignation was because after 30 years of coaching it was time for a sabbatical and said the resignation was not related to the off the court issues 15 The university honored the rest of Penders contract with GW athletic director Jack Kvancz said honoring it was the class thing to do When GW s Kvancz was questioned about the payout in the area of 1M he refused to comment 16 Houston edit Penders came to Houston after spending three years as an analyst for ESPN and Westwood One Radio 3 In his first season at the University of Houston Penders guided the Cougars to the nation s fourth best turnaround with an 18 14 overall record and Houston led the nation in turnover margin and set both team and individual school records for most three point field goals made in a season 2 In his second season Penders led the Cougars to their first 20 win season first back to back winning seasons and first back to back postseason tournament appearances since 1992 93 He also led Houston to back to back wins over nationally ranked teams for the first time since the 1984 NCAA Midwest Regional tournament and their first postseason tournament victory since 1988 in his first two years at the school in the NIT 2 Houston finished the 2005 06 campaign with a 2 2 record against nationally ranked teams after beating No 25 LSU on November 29 and 13th ranked Arizona December 3 in a nationally televised game on ESPN2 Houston s postseason tournament victory was against BYU in the first round of the 2006 NIT It also was Penders first career victory in the NIT Houston led the nation in steals with a 12 4 average and the Cougars finished second in turnover margin with an average margin of 7 5 2 Penders led the Houston Cougars to the Conference USA championship game in 2010 where they defeated UTEP for their first NCAA Tournament berth in 18 years 2 This made him only the 8th coach to take 4 different schools to the NCAA tournament Penders resigned as coach of Houston on March 22 2010 following a first round loss to Maryland in the NCAA tournament Playing career editPenders played both baseball and basketball at the University of Connecticut where he starred as a center fielder for the baseball team and a point guard for the basketball team from 1964 to 1967 2 He was the 116th overall selection in the eighth round of the 1968 Major League Baseball MLB January Draft by the Cleveland Indians 17 His professional baseball playing experience lasted one year in the Cleveland organization where he split his 1968 season between the Rock Hill Chiefs and Waterbury Indians 4 Family editIn addition to Penders and son Tommy Jr serving as basketball coaches his father was a longtime baseball coach at Stratford High School from 1931 to 1968 and led the school to four state championships His brother Jim is the baseball coach at East Catholic High School and was named the national high school Coach of the Year in 1996 Like his father Jim Penders won four state championships 2 Penders two nephews also are collegiate baseball coaches Jim was named the head coach at Connecticut in 2003 after serving seven years as an assistant coach and playing four years for the Huskies Rob serves as the head baseball coach at St Edward s University in Austin Texas 2 Head coaching record editStatistics overview Season Team Overall Conference Standing PostseasonTufts Jumbos New England Small College Athletic Conference 1971 1974 1971 72 Tufts 12 81972 73 Tufts 22 41973 74 Tufts 20 6Tufts 54 18Columbia Lions Ivy League 1974 1978 1974 75 Columbia 4 22 2 12 T 7th1975 76 Columbia 8 17 6 8 T 4th1976 77 Columbia 16 10 8 6 3rd1977 78 Columbia 15 11 11 3 T 2ndColumbia 43 60 27 29Fordham Rams NCAA Division I independent 1978 1981 1978 79 Fordham 7 221979 80 Fordham 11 171980 81 Fordham 19 9 NIT first roundFordham Rams Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference 1981 1986 1981 82 Fordham 18 11 8 2 2nd NIT first round1982 83 Fordham 19 11 7 3 T 2nd NIT first round1983 84 Fordham 19 15 7 7 4th NIT first round1984 85 Fordham 19 12 9 5 2nd NIT first round1985 86 Fordham 13 17 7 7 T 4thFordham 125 114 38 24Rhode Island Rams Atlantic 10 Conference 1986 1988 1986 87 Rhode Island 20 10 12 6 3rd NIT first round1987 88 Rhode Island 28 7 14 4 2nd NCAA Division I Sweet 16Rhode Island 48 17 739 26 10Texas Longhorns Southwest Conference 1988 1996 1988 89 Texas 25 9 12 4 2nd NCAA Division I second round1989 90 Texas 24 9 12 4 3rd NCAA Division I Elite Eight1990 91 Texas 23 9 13 3 2nd NCAA Division I second round1991 92 Texas 23 12 11 3 T 1st NCAA Division I first round1992 93 Texas 11 17 4 10 7th1993 94 Texas 26 8 12 2 1st NCAA Division I second round1994 95 Texas 23 7 11 3 T 1st NCAA Division I second round1995 96 Texas 21 10 10 4 3rd NCAA Division I second roundTexas Longhorns Big 12 Conference 1996 1998 1996 97 Texas 18 12 10 6 T 3rd NCAA Division I Sweet 161997 98 Texas 14 17 6 10 9thTexas 208 110 103 48George Washington Colonials Atlantic 10 Conference 1998 2001 1998 99 George Washington 20 9 13 3 1st West NCAA Division I first round1999 00 George Washington 15 15 9 7 T 2nd West 2000 01 George Washington 14 18 6 10 7thGeorge Washington 49 42 28 20Houston Cougars Conference USA 2004 2010 2004 05 Houston 18 14 9 7 T 4th NIT first round2005 06 Houston 21 10 9 5 4th NIT second round2006 07 Houston 18 15 10 6 3rd2007 08 Houston 24 10 11 5 3rd CBI semifinal2008 09 Houston 21 12 10 6 T 4th CBI first round2009 10 Houston 19 16 7 9 7th NCAA Division I first roundHouston 121 77 56 38Total 648 438 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 championSee also editList of college men s basketball coaches with 600 winsReferences edit Stratford Connecticut Proc 090610 Tom Penders Sterling House Archived from the original on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2011 01 02 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Player Bio Tom Penders University of Houston Official Athletic Site Archived from the original on 2011 06 10 a b Houston coach Penders resigns after NCAA run 22 March 2010 a b Strauss Michael Penders of Tufts Takes Columbia Basketball Job The New York Times Friday April 19 1974 Retrieved February 24 2023 New Fordham Athletic Hall of Fame Class to be Inducted on January 26th PLUS COLLEGE BASKETBALL TEXAS Penders Recovering After Heart Surgery The New York Times 10 November 1997 Penders Resigns as UT Coach Associated Press The best little scandal in Texas 23 August 1999 Jury clears former Texas coach in defamation suit Associated Press 2002 08 13 Amazon com GW basketball faces NCAA violations SportsIllustrated com Brown plans jump to NBA GW Hatchet Archived 2007 12 22 at the Wayback Machine Lei Richard 2001 07 16 Schooled in Scandal The Washington Post Retrieved 2022 05 26 Penders resigns amid turmoil 23 April 2001 Citing Burnout Penders Resigns Washington Post Mark Asher and Thomas Heath April 21 2001 Penders resigns amid turmoil GW Hatchet Archived 2007 12 22 at the Wayback Machine 1968 MLB January Draft Pick Transactions January 27 Pro Sports Transactions Retrieved February 24 2023 External links editCareer statistics and player information from Baseball Reference Minors Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tom Penders amp oldid 1179123950, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.