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Pat Kelsey. Check this out. Two in a row CAA regular season championships, fiery, great coach loved by players and fans alike. Promise he will be snatched up soon. His Australian recruit drained 10 threes last night to wrap up league championship. Is now paid $1,000,000 but will be much more when he moves on! Check out all the links for his history.​

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pat Kelsey
Awards
Championships
Accomplishments and honors
Head coaching record
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Playing career
Biographical details
Current position

Kelsey in 2023
TitleHead coach
TeamCharleston
ConferenceCAA
Record71–26 (.732)
BornMay 15, 1975 (age 48)
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
1993–1994Wyoming
1995–1998Xavier
Position(s)Point guard
1998–2001Elder HS (assistant)
2004–2009Wake Forest (assistant)
2009–2011Xavier (associate HC)
2012–2021Winthrop
2021–presentCharleston
2001–2004Wake Forest (dir. ops)
Overall257–121 (.680)
Tournaments0–3 (NCAA Division I)
4 Big South regular season (2016, 2017, 2020, 2021)
3 Big South tournament (2017, 2020, 2021)
2 CAA regular season (2023, 2024)
CAA tournament (2023)
Big South Coach of the Year (2021)
Patrick Kelsey (born May 15, 1975) is an American college basketball coach. He is the current head men's basketball coach at the College of Charleston.

Playing career[edit]​

Kelsey played high school basketball at Roger Bacon High School in Cincinnati, Ohio. He transferred to Elder High School for his senior year and in 1993 helped lead the team to a Division I state title.[1][2] Kelsey began his collegiate career as a freshman guard at the University of Wyoming. He transferred to Xavier in 1994 where he played three seasons.

Coaching career[edit]​

Kelsey began his career as an assistant coach at Wake Forest University and later Xavier University. During his time as an assistant coach, his teams earned an ACC regular season championship, five NCAA Tournament berths, an NIT berth, and a No. 1 national ranking in two different seasons. In 2010, College Bound Hoops ranked Kelsey eighth in the nation among college basketball assistants.[3] He was sought after by some of America's top programs and has been a candidate for multiple head coaching positions. Chris Mack, former A-10 and Big East Championship head coach, considered him to be one of the best assistant coaches in America.
As head coach at Winthrop University, Kelsey resurrected a winning tradition and became one of the winningest coaches in the history of the Big South Conference (ranked 2nd all-time with 110 conference wins). During his nine seasons, no other Big South program had more conference wins or wins overall. The program made four straight Big South Conference tournament title games (2014–17) and the Eagles claimed the 2017, 2020, and 2021 Big South Conference Championships. The 2017 team claimed a share of the Big South regular season championship and then defeated Campbell University to earn Winthrop’s 10th trip to the NCAA Tournament. In 2020, the team secured the Big South regular season championship and defeated Hampton University in the conference championship game to earn what would have been Winthrop's 11th trip to the NCAA tournament. However, the 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, the Eagles started the season 16–0 and had a cumulative 21-game winning streak dating back to the prior season, which were both program records. They defeated Campbell in the conference tournament to earn their 11th NCAA Tournament bid. Following the season, Kelsey was named a finalist for the Jim Phelan Award (national coach of the year) and the Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award.[4]
Under Kelsey, the program broke multiple school records and produced some of the best players in its history, including Keon Johnson, Winthrop's all-time leading scorer,[5] and Xavier Cooks, Winthrop's all time leading rebounder and shot-blocker.[6]
In 2017, Kelsey was hired as the head coach at Massachusetts, but returned to Winthrop two days after accepting the position, citing personal reasons. Kelsey informed UMass Athletic Director Ryan Bamford of his decision 25 minutes before the scheduled press conference to formally introduce Kelsey to the press and university community. Two days prior, Kelsey had signed an MoU with the university, which included a $1 million buyout clause should Kelsey leave before two years.[7][8][9]
On March 25, 2021, Kelsey announced that he was leaving Winthrop to become head coach at the College of Charleston.[10]
Kelsey has coached a number of players who went on to have successful professional basketball careers, including NBA All-Stars Chris Paul and Jeff Teague.[11] He coached Ish Smith, an All-ACC selection and player for the Houston Rockets, James Johnson, a two-time All-ACC selection and 17th overall draft pick by the Chicago Bulls in the 2009 NBA Draft, and Al-Farouq Aminu, a McDonald's All-America who was drafted eighth overall by the L.A. Clippers in the 2010 NBA Draft.[12]

Newtown speech at Ohio State[edit]​

In December 2012, after a game against Ohio State, Kelsey gave an impassioned speech about the Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting that had occurred just days prior. During the game's press conference, Kelsey spoke out about the tragedy and said "Parents, teachers, rabbis, priests, coaches, everybody needs to step up. This has to be a time for change.”[13]
After a clip of the conference aired on ESPN, parents of a victim of the shooting reached out to Kelsey. He later participated in an event (Race4Chase triathlon) put on by the CMAK Sandy Hook Memorial Foundation. The family was honored at an Eagles basketball game on March 1, 2014. At the game, each Winthrop player wore the name of a child killed at Sandy Hook on the back of their jersey.[14]

Head coaching record[edit]​

Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
2012–13Winthrop14–176–105th (South)
2013–14Winthrop20–1310–6T–2nd (South)
2014–15Winthrop19–1312–6T–3rd
2015–16Winthrop23–913–5T–1st
2016–17Winthrop26–715–3T–1stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2017–18Winthrop19–1212–6T–2nd
2018–19Winthrop18–1210–6T–3rd
2019–20Winthrop24–1015–3T–1stNCAA Division I Canceled*
2020–21Winthrop23–217–11stNCAA Division I Round of 64
Winthrop:186–95 (.662)110–46 (.705)
2021–22Charleston17–158–106th
2022–23Charleston31–416–2T–1stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2023–24Charleston23–714–31st
Charleston:71–26 (.732)38–15 (.717)
Total:257–121 (.680)
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
*The 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled due to concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic.

Awards[edit]​

  • Big South Men's Basketball Coach of the Year (2020–21)[15]

References​

 
  • Like
Reactions: demunn

Contents​

hide

Pat Kelsey. Check this out. Two in a row CAA regular season championships, fiery, great coach loved by players and fans alike. Promise he will be snatched up soon. His Australian recruit drained 10 threes last night to wrap up league championship. Is now paid $1,000,000 but will be much more when he moves on! Check out all the links for his history.​

1 language
Tools





From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pat Kelsey
Current position
Biographical details
Playing career
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
Head coaching record
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Awards

Kelsey in 2023
TitleHead coach
TeamCharleston
ConferenceCAA
Record71–26 (.732)
BornMay 15, 1975 (age 48)
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
1993–1994Wyoming
1995–1998Xavier
Position(s)Point guard
1998–2001Elder HS (assistant)
2004–2009Wake Forest (assistant)
2009–2011Xavier (associate HC)
2012–2021Winthrop
2021–presentCharleston
2001–2004Wake Forest (dir. ops)
Overall257–121 (.680)
Tournaments0–3 (NCAA Division I)
4 Big South regular season (2016, 2017, 2020, 2021)
3 Big South tournament (2017, 2020, 2021)
2 CAA regular season (2023, 2024)
CAA tournament (2023)
Big South Coach of the Year (2021)
Patrick Kelsey (born May 15, 1975) is an American college basketball coach. He is the current head men's basketball coach at the College of Charleston.

Playing career[edit]​

Kelsey played high school basketball at Roger Bacon High School in Cincinnati, Ohio. He transferred to Elder High School for his senior year and in 1993 helped lead the team to a Division I state title.[1][2] Kelsey began his collegiate career as a freshman guard at the University of Wyoming. He transferred to Xavier in 1994 where he played three seasons.

Coaching career[edit]​

Kelsey began his career as an assistant coach at Wake Forest University and later Xavier University. During his time as an assistant coach, his teams earned an ACC regular season championship, five NCAA Tournament berths, an NIT berth, and a No. 1 national ranking in two different seasons. In 2010, College Bound Hoops ranked Kelsey eighth in the nation among college basketball assistants.[3] He was sought after by some of America's top programs and has been a candidate for multiple head coaching positions. Chris Mack, former A-10 and Big East Championship head coach, considered him to be one of the best assistant coaches in America.
As head coach at Winthrop University, Kelsey resurrected a winning tradition and became one of the winningest coaches in the history of the Big South Conference (ranked 2nd all-time with 110 conference wins). During his nine seasons, no other Big South program had more conference wins or wins overall. The program made four straight Big South Conference tournament title games (2014–17) and the Eagles claimed the 2017, 2020, and 2021 Big South Conference Championships. The 2017 team claimed a share of the Big South regular season championship and then defeated Campbell University to earn Winthrop’s 10th trip to the NCAA Tournament. In 2020, the team secured the Big South regular season championship and defeated Hampton University in the conference championship game to earn what would have been Winthrop's 11th trip to the NCAA tournament. However, the 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, the Eagles started the season 16–0 and had a cumulative 21-game winning streak dating back to the prior season, which were both program records. They defeated Campbell in the conference tournament to earn their 11th NCAA Tournament bid. Following the season, Kelsey was named a finalist for the Jim Phelan Award (national coach of the year) and the Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award.[4]
Under Kelsey, the program broke multiple school records and produced some of the best players in its history, including Keon Johnson, Winthrop's all-time leading scorer,[5] and Xavier Cooks, Winthrop's all time leading rebounder and shot-blocker.[6]
In 2017, Kelsey was hired as the head coach at Massachusetts, but returned to Winthrop two days after accepting the position, citing personal reasons. Kelsey informed UMass Athletic Director Ryan Bamford of his decision 25 minutes before the scheduled press conference to formally introduce Kelsey to the press and university community. Two days prior, Kelsey had signed an MoU with the university, which included a $1 million buyout clause should Kelsey leave before two years.[7][8][9]
On March 25, 2021, Kelsey announced that he was leaving Winthrop to become head coach at the College of Charleston.[10]
Kelsey has coached a number of players who went on to have successful professional basketball careers, including NBA All-Stars Chris Paul and Jeff Teague.[11] He coached Ish Smith, an All-ACC selection and player for the Houston Rockets, James Johnson, a two-time All-ACC selection and 17th overall draft pick by the Chicago Bulls in the 2009 NBA Draft, and Al-Farouq Aminu, a McDonald's All-America who was drafted eighth overall by the L.A. Clippers in the 2010 NBA Draft.[12]

Newtown speech at Ohio State[edit]​

In December 2012, after a game against Ohio State, Kelsey gave an impassioned speech about the Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting that had occurred just days prior. During the game's press conference, Kelsey spoke out about the tragedy and said "Parents, teachers, rabbis, priests, coaches, everybody needs to step up. This has to be a time for change.”[13]
After a clip of the conference aired on ESPN, parents of a victim of the shooting reached out to Kelsey. He later participated in an event (Race4Chase triathlon) put on by the CMAK Sandy Hook Memorial Foundation. The family was honored at an Eagles basketball game on March 1, 2014. At the game, each Winthrop player wore the name of a child killed at Sandy Hook on the back of their jersey.[14]

Head coaching record[edit]​

Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
2012–13Winthrop14–176–105th (South)
2013–14Winthrop20–1310–6T–2nd (South)
2014–15Winthrop19–1312–6T–3rd
2015–16Winthrop23–913–5T–1st
2016–17Winthrop26–715–3T–1stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2017–18Winthrop19–1212–6T–2nd
2018–19Winthrop18–1210–6T–3rd
2019–20Winthrop24–1015–3T–1stNCAA Division I Canceled*
2020–21Winthrop23–217–11stNCAA Division I Round of 64
Winthrop:186–95 (.662)110–46 (.705)
2021–22Charleston17–158–106th
2022–23Charleston31–416–2T–1stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2023–24Charleston23–714–31st
Charleston:71–26 (.732)38–15 (.717)
Total:257–121 (.680)
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
*The 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled due to concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic.

Awards[edit]​

  • Big South Men's Basketball Coach of the Year (2020–21)[15]

References​

If we go the coach cig route, might be someone to consider.
 

Contents​

hide

Pat Kelsey. Check this out. Two in a row CAA regular season championships, fiery, great coach loved by players and fans alike. Promise he will be snatched up soon. His Australian recruit drained 10 threes last night to wrap up league championship. Is now paid $1,000,000 but will be much more when he moves on! Check out all the links for his history.​

1 language
Tools





From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pat Kelsey
Current position
Biographical details
Playing career
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
Head coaching record
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Awards

Kelsey in 2023
TitleHead coach
TeamCharleston
ConferenceCAA
Record71–26 (.732)
BornMay 15, 1975 (age 48)
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
1993–1994Wyoming
1995–1998Xavier
Position(s)Point guard
1998–2001Elder HS (assistant)
2004–2009Wake Forest (assistant)
2009–2011Xavier (associate HC)
2012–2021Winthrop
2021–presentCharleston
2001–2004Wake Forest (dir. ops)
Overall257–121 (.680)
Tournaments0–3 (NCAA Division I)
4 Big South regular season (2016, 2017, 2020, 2021)
3 Big South tournament (2017, 2020, 2021)
2 CAA regular season (2023, 2024)
CAA tournament (2023)
Big South Coach of the Year (2021)
Patrick Kelsey (born May 15, 1975) is an American college basketball coach. He is the current head men's basketball coach at the College of Charleston.

Playing career[edit]​

Kelsey played high school basketball at Roger Bacon High School in Cincinnati, Ohio. He transferred to Elder High School for his senior year and in 1993 helped lead the team to a Division I state title.[1][2] Kelsey began his collegiate career as a freshman guard at the University of Wyoming. He transferred to Xavier in 1994 where he played three seasons.

Coaching career[edit]​

Kelsey began his career as an assistant coach at Wake Forest University and later Xavier University. During his time as an assistant coach, his teams earned an ACC regular season championship, five NCAA Tournament berths, an NIT berth, and a No. 1 national ranking in two different seasons. In 2010, College Bound Hoops ranked Kelsey eighth in the nation among college basketball assistants.[3] He was sought after by some of America's top programs and has been a candidate for multiple head coaching positions. Chris Mack, former A-10 and Big East Championship head coach, considered him to be one of the best assistant coaches in America.
As head coach at Winthrop University, Kelsey resurrected a winning tradition and became one of the winningest coaches in the history of the Big South Conference (ranked 2nd all-time with 110 conference wins). During his nine seasons, no other Big South program had more conference wins or wins overall. The program made four straight Big South Conference tournament title games (2014–17) and the Eagles claimed the 2017, 2020, and 2021 Big South Conference Championships. The 2017 team claimed a share of the Big South regular season championship and then defeated Campbell University to earn Winthrop’s 10th trip to the NCAA Tournament. In 2020, the team secured the Big South regular season championship and defeated Hampton University in the conference championship game to earn what would have been Winthrop's 11th trip to the NCAA tournament. However, the 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, the Eagles started the season 16–0 and had a cumulative 21-game winning streak dating back to the prior season, which were both program records. They defeated Campbell in the conference tournament to earn their 11th NCAA Tournament bid. Following the season, Kelsey was named a finalist for the Jim Phelan Award (national coach of the year) and the Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award.[4]
Under Kelsey, the program broke multiple school records and produced some of the best players in its history, including Keon Johnson, Winthrop's all-time leading scorer,[5] and Xavier Cooks, Winthrop's all time leading rebounder and shot-blocker.[6]
In 2017, Kelsey was hired as the head coach at Massachusetts, but returned to Winthrop two days after accepting the position, citing personal reasons. Kelsey informed UMass Athletic Director Ryan Bamford of his decision 25 minutes before the scheduled press conference to formally introduce Kelsey to the press and university community. Two days prior, Kelsey had signed an MoU with the university, which included a $1 million buyout clause should Kelsey leave before two years.[7][8][9]
On March 25, 2021, Kelsey announced that he was leaving Winthrop to become head coach at the College of Charleston.[10]
Kelsey has coached a number of players who went on to have successful professional basketball careers, including NBA All-Stars Chris Paul and Jeff Teague.[11] He coached Ish Smith, an All-ACC selection and player for the Houston Rockets, James Johnson, a two-time All-ACC selection and 17th overall draft pick by the Chicago Bulls in the 2009 NBA Draft, and Al-Farouq Aminu, a McDonald's All-America who was drafted eighth overall by the L.A. Clippers in the 2010 NBA Draft.[12]

Newtown speech at Ohio State[edit]​

In December 2012, after a game against Ohio State, Kelsey gave an impassioned speech about the Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting that had occurred just days prior. During the game's press conference, Kelsey spoke out about the tragedy and said "Parents, teachers, rabbis, priests, coaches, everybody needs to step up. This has to be a time for change.”[13]
After a clip of the conference aired on ESPN, parents of a victim of the shooting reached out to Kelsey. He later participated in an event (Race4Chase triathlon) put on by the CMAK Sandy Hook Memorial Foundation. The family was honored at an Eagles basketball game on March 1, 2014. At the game, each Winthrop player wore the name of a child killed at Sandy Hook on the back of their jersey.[14]

Head coaching record[edit]​

Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
2012–13Winthrop14–176–105th (South)
2013–14Winthrop20–1310–6T–2nd (South)
2014–15Winthrop19–1312–6T–3rd
2015–16Winthrop23–913–5T–1st
2016–17Winthrop26–715–3T–1stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2017–18Winthrop19–1212–6T–2nd
2018–19Winthrop18–1210–6T–3rd
2019–20Winthrop24–1015–3T–1stNCAA Division I Canceled*
2020–21Winthrop23–217–11stNCAA Division I Round of 64
Winthrop:186–95 (.662)110–46 (.705)
2021–22Charleston17–158–106th
2022–23Charleston31–416–2T–1stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2023–24Charleston23–714–31st
Charleston:71–26 (.732)38–15 (.717)
Total:257–121 (.680)
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
*The 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled due to concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic.

Awards[edit]​

  • Big South Men's Basketball Coach of the Year (2020–21)[15]

References​

Maybe after Paris leaves, he can take over that program.
 

Contents​

hide

Pat Kelsey. Check this out. Two in a row CAA regular season championships, fiery, great coach loved by players and fans alike. Promise he will be snatched up soon. His Australian recruit drained 10 threes last night to wrap up league championship. Is now paid $1,000,000 but will be much more when he moves on! Check out all the links for his history.​

1 language
Tools





From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pat Kelsey
Awards
Championships
Accomplishments and honors
Head coaching record
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Playing career
Biographical details
Current position

Kelsey in 2023
TitleHead coach
TeamCharleston
ConferenceCAA
Record71–26 (.732)
BornMay 15, 1975 (age 48)
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
1993–1994Wyoming
1995–1998Xavier
Position(s)Point guard
1998–2001Elder HS (assistant)
2004–2009Wake Forest (assistant)
2009–2011Xavier (associate HC)
2012–2021Winthrop
2021–presentCharleston
2001–2004Wake Forest (dir. ops)
Overall257–121 (.680)
Tournaments0–3 (NCAA Division I)
4 Big South regular season (2016, 2017, 2020, 2021)
3 Big South tournament (2017, 2020, 2021)
2 CAA regular season (2023, 2024)
CAA tournament (2023)
Big South Coach of the Year (2021)
Patrick Kelsey (born May 15, 1975) is an American college basketball coach. He is the current head men's basketball coach at the College of Charleston.

Playing career[edit]​

Kelsey played high school basketball at Roger Bacon High School in Cincinnati, Ohio. He transferred to Elder High School for his senior year and in 1993 helped lead the team to a Division I state title.[1][2] Kelsey began his collegiate career as a freshman guard at the University of Wyoming. He transferred to Xavier in 1994 where he played three seasons.

Coaching career[edit]​

Kelsey began his career as an assistant coach at Wake Forest University and later Xavier University. During his time as an assistant coach, his teams earned an ACC regular season championship, five NCAA Tournament berths, an NIT berth, and a No. 1 national ranking in two different seasons. In 2010, College Bound Hoops ranked Kelsey eighth in the nation among college basketball assistants.[3] He was sought after by some of America's top programs and has been a candidate for multiple head coaching positions. Chris Mack, former A-10 and Big East Championship head coach, considered him to be one of the best assistant coaches in America.
As head coach at Winthrop University, Kelsey resurrected a winning tradition and became one of the winningest coaches in the history of the Big South Conference (ranked 2nd all-time with 110 conference wins). During his nine seasons, no other Big South program had more conference wins or wins overall. The program made four straight Big South Conference tournament title games (2014–17) and the Eagles claimed the 2017, 2020, and 2021 Big South Conference Championships. The 2017 team claimed a share of the Big South regular season championship and then defeated Campbell University to earn Winthrop’s 10th trip to the NCAA Tournament. In 2020, the team secured the Big South regular season championship and defeated Hampton University in the conference championship game to earn what would have been Winthrop's 11th trip to the NCAA tournament. However, the 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, the Eagles started the season 16–0 and had a cumulative 21-game winning streak dating back to the prior season, which were both program records. They defeated Campbell in the conference tournament to earn their 11th NCAA Tournament bid. Following the season, Kelsey was named a finalist for the Jim Phelan Award (national coach of the year) and the Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award.[4]
Under Kelsey, the program broke multiple school records and produced some of the best players in its history, including Keon Johnson, Winthrop's all-time leading scorer,[5] and Xavier Cooks, Winthrop's all time leading rebounder and shot-blocker.[6]
In 2017, Kelsey was hired as the head coach at Massachusetts, but returned to Winthrop two days after accepting the position, citing personal reasons. Kelsey informed UMass Athletic Director Ryan Bamford of his decision 25 minutes before the scheduled press conference to formally introduce Kelsey to the press and university community. Two days prior, Kelsey had signed an MoU with the university, which included a $1 million buyout clause should Kelsey leave before two years.[7][8][9]
On March 25, 2021, Kelsey announced that he was leaving Winthrop to become head coach at the College of Charleston.[10]
Kelsey has coached a number of players who went on to have successful professional basketball careers, including NBA All-Stars Chris Paul and Jeff Teague.[11] He coached Ish Smith, an All-ACC selection and player for the Houston Rockets, James Johnson, a two-time All-ACC selection and 17th overall draft pick by the Chicago Bulls in the 2009 NBA Draft, and Al-Farouq Aminu, a McDonald's All-America who was drafted eighth overall by the L.A. Clippers in the 2010 NBA Draft.[12]

Newtown speech at Ohio State[edit]​

In December 2012, after a game against Ohio State, Kelsey gave an impassioned speech about the Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting that had occurred just days prior. During the game's press conference, Kelsey spoke out about the tragedy and said "Parents, teachers, rabbis, priests, coaches, everybody needs to step up. This has to be a time for change.”[13]
After a clip of the conference aired on ESPN, parents of a victim of the shooting reached out to Kelsey. He later participated in an event (Race4Chase triathlon) put on by the CMAK Sandy Hook Memorial Foundation. The family was honored at an Eagles basketball game on March 1, 2014. At the game, each Winthrop player wore the name of a child killed at Sandy Hook on the back of their jersey.[14]

Head coaching record[edit]​

Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
2012–13Winthrop14–176–105th (South)
2013–14Winthrop20–1310–6T–2nd (South)
2014–15Winthrop19–1312–6T–3rd
2015–16Winthrop23–913–5T–1st
2016–17Winthrop26–715–3T–1stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2017–18Winthrop19–1212–6T–2nd
2018–19Winthrop18–1210–6T–3rd
2019–20Winthrop24–1015–3T–1stNCAA Division I Canceled*
2020–21Winthrop23–217–11stNCAA Division I Round of 64
Winthrop:186–95 (.662)110–46 (.705)
2021–22Charleston17–158–106th
2022–23Charleston31–416–2T–1stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2023–24Charleston23–714–31st
Charleston:71–26 (.732)38–15 (.717)
Total:257–121 (.680)
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
*The 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled due to concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic.

Awards[edit]​

  • Big South Men's Basketball Coach of the Year (2020–21)[15]

References​

Go big game hunting first before going to this list.
Make guys like Jay Wright, Bruce Pearl, Billy Donovan say no first. Which those questions should be asked now.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: The Mooreman
Fun, I guess, to speculate. But Woodson is here for 24-25.
Even with losing out, first game loss in BTT, and first game loss in NIT, Woodson is here

Actually, the BOT are all in on Woodson. Not just Quinn but the whole group. The plan is to give him the full 6 years and if he makes improvements, they plan to extend him. So, as RMK used to say: “Just lay back and enjoy it!”
 
Actually, the BOT are all in on Woodson. Not just Quinn but the whole group. The plan is to give him the full 6 years and if he makes improvements, they plan to extend him. So, as RMK used to say: “Just lay back and enjoy it!”
I remember the Knight quote.
But I sure hope u r wrong about 3 more years.
 
Actually, the BOT are all in on Woodson. Not just Quinn but the whole group. The plan is to give him the full 6 years and if he makes improvements, they plan to extend him. So, as RMK used to say: “Just lay back and enjoy it!”
It shows they don't care about winning. So I hope the Hall sits half empty and donations go way down.
 

Contents​

hide

Pat Kelsey. Check this out. Two in a row CAA regular season championships, fiery, great coach loved by players and fans alike. Promise he will be snatched up soon. His Australian recruit drained 10 threes last night to wrap up league championship. Is now paid $1,000,000 but will be much more when he moves on! Check out all the links for his history.​

1 language
Tools





From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pat Kelsey
Awards
Championships
Accomplishments and honors
Head coaching record
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Playing career
Biographical details
Current position

Kelsey in 2023
TitleHead coach
TeamCharleston
ConferenceCAA
Record71–26 (.732)
BornMay 15, 1975 (age 48)
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
1993–1994Wyoming
1995–1998Xavier
Position(s)Point guard
1998–2001Elder HS (assistant)
2004–2009Wake Forest (assistant)
2009–2011Xavier (associate HC)
2012–2021Winthrop
2021–presentCharleston
2001–2004Wake Forest (dir. ops)
Overall257–121 (.680)
Tournaments0–3 (NCAA Division I)
4 Big South regular season (2016, 2017, 2020, 2021)
3 Big South tournament (2017, 2020, 2021)
2 CAA regular season (2023, 2024)
CAA tournament (2023)
Big South Coach of the Year (2021)
Patrick Kelsey (born May 15, 1975) is an American college basketball coach. He is the current head men's basketball coach at the College of Charleston.

Playing career[edit]​

Kelsey played high school basketball at Roger Bacon High School in Cincinnati, Ohio. He transferred to Elder High School for his senior year and in 1993 helped lead the team to a Division I state title.[1][2] Kelsey began his collegiate career as a freshman guard at the University of Wyoming. He transferred to Xavier in 1994 where he played three seasons.

Coaching career[edit]​

Kelsey began his career as an assistant coach at Wake Forest University and later Xavier University. During his time as an assistant coach, his teams earned an ACC regular season championship, five NCAA Tournament berths, an NIT berth, and a No. 1 national ranking in two different seasons. In 2010, College Bound Hoops ranked Kelsey eighth in the nation among college basketball assistants.[3] He was sought after by some of America's top programs and has been a candidate for multiple head coaching positions. Chris Mack, former A-10 and Big East Championship head coach, considered him to be one of the best assistant coaches in America.
As head coach at Winthrop University, Kelsey resurrected a winning tradition and became one of the winningest coaches in the history of the Big South Conference (ranked 2nd all-time with 110 conference wins). During his nine seasons, no other Big South program had more conference wins or wins overall. The program made four straight Big South Conference tournament title games (2014–17) and the Eagles claimed the 2017, 2020, and 2021 Big South Conference Championships. The 2017 team claimed a share of the Big South regular season championship and then defeated Campbell University to earn Winthrop’s 10th trip to the NCAA Tournament. In 2020, the team secured the Big South regular season championship and defeated Hampton University in the conference championship game to earn what would have been Winthrop's 11th trip to the NCAA tournament. However, the 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, the Eagles started the season 16–0 and had a cumulative 21-game winning streak dating back to the prior season, which were both program records. They defeated Campbell in the conference tournament to earn their 11th NCAA Tournament bid. Following the season, Kelsey was named a finalist for the Jim Phelan Award (national coach of the year) and the Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award.[4]
Under Kelsey, the program broke multiple school records and produced some of the best players in its history, including Keon Johnson, Winthrop's all-time leading scorer,[5] and Xavier Cooks, Winthrop's all time leading rebounder and shot-blocker.[6]
In 2017, Kelsey was hired as the head coach at Massachusetts, but returned to Winthrop two days after accepting the position, citing personal reasons. Kelsey informed UMass Athletic Director Ryan Bamford of his decision 25 minutes before the scheduled press conference to formally introduce Kelsey to the press and university community. Two days prior, Kelsey had signed an MoU with the university, which included a $1 million buyout clause should Kelsey leave before two years.[7][8][9]
On March 25, 2021, Kelsey announced that he was leaving Winthrop to become head coach at the College of Charleston.[10]
Kelsey has coached a number of players who went on to have successful professional basketball careers, including NBA All-Stars Chris Paul and Jeff Teague.[11] He coached Ish Smith, an All-ACC selection and player for the Houston Rockets, James Johnson, a two-time All-ACC selection and 17th overall draft pick by the Chicago Bulls in the 2009 NBA Draft, and Al-Farouq Aminu, a McDonald's All-America who was drafted eighth overall by the L.A. Clippers in the 2010 NBA Draft.[12]

Newtown speech at Ohio State[edit]​

In December 2012, after a game against Ohio State, Kelsey gave an impassioned speech about the Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting that had occurred just days prior. During the game's press conference, Kelsey spoke out about the tragedy and said "Parents, teachers, rabbis, priests, coaches, everybody needs to step up. This has to be a time for change.”[13]
After a clip of the conference aired on ESPN, parents of a victim of the shooting reached out to Kelsey. He later participated in an event (Race4Chase triathlon) put on by the CMAK Sandy Hook Memorial Foundation. The family was honored at an Eagles basketball game on March 1, 2014. At the game, each Winthrop player wore the name of a child killed at Sandy Hook on the back of their jersey.[14]

Head coaching record[edit]​

Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
2012–13Winthrop14–176–105th (South)
2013–14Winthrop20–1310–6T–2nd (South)
2014–15Winthrop19–1312–6T–3rd
2015–16Winthrop23–913–5T–1st
2016–17Winthrop26–715–3T–1stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2017–18Winthrop19–1212–6T–2nd
2018–19Winthrop18–1210–6T–3rd
2019–20Winthrop24–1015–3T–1stNCAA Division I Canceled*
2020–21Winthrop23–217–11stNCAA Division I Round of 64
Winthrop:186–95 (.662)110–46 (.705)
2021–22Charleston17–158–106th
2022–23Charleston31–416–2T–1stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2023–24Charleston23–714–31st
Charleston:71–26 (.732)38–15 (.717)
Total:257–121 (.680)
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
*The 2020 NCAA tournament was canceled due to concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic.

Awards[edit]​

  • Big South Men's Basketball Coach of the Year (2020–21)[15]

References​

Knew he was a good coach when he was here at Winthrop, but the gamble with someone like this, is they may be an awesome coach, but can they handle the demands of a P5 program where bball is #1? I'd definitely want to talk with guys like this, but that's my concern: no track record of experience to show they can handle that. But, I'd toss him in the pool of folks I'd want to vet. I think that's the best way for us to find our next "program coach": cast a wide net, and turn over every rock! I think the guy at ISU is intriguing... actually both IN St and IA St!
 
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Actually, the BOT are all in on Woodson. Not just Quinn but the whole group. The plan is to give him the full 6 years and if he makes improvements, they plan to extend him. So, as RMK used to say: “Just lay back and enjoy it!”
I agree he looks safe this year with the BoT and others not looking for change (insane). Not sure he has that much job security though! Or at least I can’t stomach that thought.
 
Knew he was a good coach when he was here at Winthrop, but the gamble with someone like this, is they may be an awesome coach, but can they handle the demands of a P5 program where bball is #1? I'd definitely want to talk with guys like this, but that's my concern: no track record of experience to show they can handle that. But, I'd toss him in the pool of folks I'd want to vet. I think that's the best way for us to find our next "program coach".
This is why you do what OSU did and cut bait asap. Can't wait till season is over to start a search. Then new coach is way behind getting players.
 
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It shows they don't care about winning. So I hope the Hall sits half empty and donations go way down.
Dittos.

I can’t imagine how much more $ the program would make if we were winning conference titles and making Final Fours. It would be like $10M+ easy people would be so excited.

Nope. We are gonna drop bags of Cook $ to try and get a 12 seed next year and then celebrate the improvement.
 
Actually, the BOT are all in on Woodson. Not just Quinn but the whole group. The plan is to give him the full 6 years and if he makes improvements, they plan to extend him. So, as RMK used to say: “Just lay back and enjoy it!”
There is something to be said for how they handled bearers of bad news in centuries past. :)
 
But RMK wasn't a power 5 coach!
Exactly. That's why I say cast a very wide net. Leave no stone unturned. My interview would basically be 2 questions: 1) tell me your vision for IU basketball, where you think you could get it to, and the timeline to do that? And, 2) looking at your experience, this is the concern(s) I have. Tell me how you'll overcome that, or it won't be a problem for you at IU? The answers to those 2 questions would give you a really good idea if that candidate is "the guy" and that could probably be done on a zoom call.
 
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It shows they don't care about winning. So I hope the Hall sits half empty and donations go way down.
So why do you assume he’s right? Does he personally know the entire board and their feelings? If he does, good for him.
 
But RMK wasn't a power 5 coach!
Exactly. That's why I say cast a very wide net. Leave no stone unturned. My interview would basically be 2 questions: 1) tell me your vision for IU basketball, where you think you could get it to, and the timeline to do that? And, 2) looking at your experience, this is the concern(s) I have. Tell me how you'll overcome that, or it won't be a problem for you at IU? The answers to those 2 questions would give you a really good idea if that candidate is "the guy" and that could probably be done on a zoom call.


NO.

It needs to be a power 5 proven coach, no exceptions.
Just because "RmK wAsNt P5 cOaCh", and worked out doesnt mean thats the norm.
Sometimes situations are lucky.

As much as I want Woodson gone (ESP after the comment I heard he made about how season would have went better had he had X or somethintlg similar/ridiculous)

After hearing that... he hammered the door shut for me. And it was already closed and boarded up.
Woodson is maybe as lost as joe biden.

None the less as much as I want him gone, more than even Crean at this point due to the ever increasing lack of patience once Its obvious theyre now going to work out as coach....id rather just sit on woody until a proven p5 coach accepts. Nothing less.
It obviously keeps the door open for removing current iu coach much much easier, cheaper, right timing etc.
NO need to give some new random mid conf coach a few years try out and miss the boat on some p5 coach that would have said yes but went somewhere else bc we were giving some archie miller coach a try out

Beard would be an outstanding dream.
Give him 10 mill a year and get this train rolling for once after 20 years.

Again tho, at min IU HAS to get a p5 proven coach.
 
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NO.

It needs to be a power 5 proven coach, no exceptions.
Just because "RmK wAsNt P5 cOaCh", and worked out doesnt mean thats the norm.
Sometimes situations are lucky.

As much as I want Woodson gone (ESP after the comment I heard he made about how season would have went better had he had X or somethintlg similar/ridiculous)

After hearing that... he hammered the door shut for me. And it was already closed and boarded up.
Woodson is maybe as lost as joe biden.

None the less as much as I want him gone, more than even Crean at this point due to the ever increasing lack of patience once Its obvious theyre now going to work out as coach....id rather just sit on woody until a proven p5 coach accepts. Nothing less.
It obviously keeps the door open for removing current iu coach much much easier, cheaper, right timing etc.
NO need to give some new random mid conf coach a few years try out and miss the boat on some p5 coach that would have said yes but went somewhere else bc we were giving some archie miller coach a try out

Beard would be an outstanding dream.
Give him 10 mill a year and get this train rolling for once after 20 years.

Again tho, at min IU HAS to get a p5 proven coach.
I like this. Less risk. The one P5 coach we have brought in was a good coach (let’s not revisit all the off the court stuff, we know it).

A good P5 coach will bring a whole proven system ready to go: long-term staff that know the system and culture, recruiting connections and understanding of desired player profiles, and some immediate recruits and transfers. IU can juice that system with more NIL, budget for the program, fan support, and national exposure.

We don’t need to risk some coach making a leap to a bigger program. Or learning big time NIL. Or making the leap to college basketball from the NBA (my goodness we are dumb).

Beard would be great. I think he is out, heard his background is worse than most know. But Pearl or whoever is proven is fine. No more big risks. This isn’t that hard.
 
NO.

It needs to be a power 5 proven coach, no exceptions.
Just because "RmK wAsNt P5 cOaCh", and worked out doesnt mean thats the norm.
Sometimes situations are lucky.

As much as I want Woodson gone (ESP after the comment I heard he made about how season would have went better had he had X or somethintlg similar/ridiculous)

After hearing that... he hammered the door shut for me. And it was already closed and boarded up.
Woodson is maybe as lost as joe biden.

None the less as much as I want him gone, more than even Crean at this point due to the ever increasing lack of patience once Its obvious theyre now going to work out as coach....id rather just sit on woody until a proven p5 coach accepts. Nothing less.
It obviously keeps the door open for removing current iu coach much much easier, cheaper, right timing etc.
NO need to give some new random mid conf coach a few years try out and miss the boat on some p5 coach that would have said yes but went somewhere else bc we were giving some archie miller coach a try out

Beard would be an outstanding dream.
Give him 10 mill a year and get this train rolling for once after 20 years.

Again tho, at min IU HAS to get a p5 proven coach.
I'd certainly weight my preferences towards them, but not exclude coaches from non-power5 programs, that would just be part of what I'd ask them how they'd compensate and work around it. A smart coach in that situation would definitely add experience in that area via their coaching staff.
 
Actually, the BOT are all in on Woodson. Not just Quinn but the whole group. The plan is to give him the full 6 years and if he makes improvements, they plan to extend him. So, as RMK used to say: “Just lay back and enjoy it!”
They plan on extending a 70 year old coach? Another year like this and decreasing attendance would send Dolson packing.
 
Exactly. That's why I say cast a very wide net. Leave no stone unturned. My interview would basically be 2 questions: 1) tell me your vision for IU basketball, where you think you could get it to, and the timeline to do that? And, 2) looking at your experience, this is the concern(s) I have. Tell me how you'll overcome that, or it won't be a problem for you at IU? The answers to those 2 questions would give you a really good idea if that candidate is "the guy" and that could probably be done on a zoom call.
Do you think Crean, Archie, & Woodson weren’t asked those questions?
 
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