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When
University of Tennessee Director of Athletics Mike
Hamilton began the search for a new basketball
coach, he cited the desire to hire an established
coach who, over a period of time, had proven success
in leading his teams to championships.
Hamilton found his man, naming Bruce Pearl as
Tennessee's 17th basketball coach on March 28, 2005,
in a mid-court ceremony at Thompson-Boling Arena.
"Bruce Pearl possesses all the criteria for success
in men's basketball at the University of Tennessee,"
Hamilton said. "He is a proven,
nationally-recognized winner. His teams are
disciplined, mentally tough and exciting to watch.
He is a relentless recruiter, a passionate promoter
of his program, an excellent floor coach and a
staunch family man."
Pearl's success has been described as magical. At
Division II Southern Indiana he led the Screaming
Eagles to nine NCAA Division II Tournaments,
including a national championship in 1995 and a
runner-up finish in 1994. He then moved to mid-major
UW-Milwaukee, where he directed the Panthers to the
Sweet 16 of the 2005 NCAA Tournament with wins over
major conference powers Alabama and Boston College.
A ringing endorsement from a Tennessee basketball
legend who is considered one of the top front office
talents in the NBA didn't hurt either.
"He's a basketball junkie," former UT All-America
and current president of basketball operations for
the Washington Wizards Ernie Grunfeld said about
Pearl. "He loves the game. He loves to talk about
it. He lives it, breathes it and eats it, and those
are the type of people you want running your
program. And besides all that, he's a good guy."
In 13 seasons as a head coach, Pearl has compiled a
317-84 career record. His teams have received
postseason bids 12 times and have advanced to the
Sweet 16 of NCAA Tournaments seven times. Five times
he has been named league coach of the year and 12
times his teams have registered at least 20 wins,
including a school record 26 at UW-Milwaukee in
2005.
During the 2005 campaign he became one of the
fastest coaches in NCAA history to reach the 300-win
milestone. Pearl needed just 382 games to reach the
300-win mark, which was second only to Roy Williams
(Kansas and North Carolina) who needed 370 games.
Pearl's success has been a result of hard work, both
by the coaches and players. As a staff, the coaches
quickly developed a reputation in Tennessee for
working from sunrise until late into the night,
leaving no stone unturned while working to improve
the program. On the court, the coaches expect 100
percent effort from the players.
"One thing I can tell you about our basketball team
is that they will play hard, they will play
unselfishly and people are going to know we never
got outworked by our opponent," Pearl said.
Pearl brings an exciting style of play, both for
fans and players alike. In each of his four seasons
at UWM the Panthers led the Horizon League in
scoring offense, averaging 76.2 points per game.
"We're going to pressure the ball for 40 minutes.
We'll do it 94 feet most of the time. The talent
level will dictate how fast we make people go or how
slow we make them go. There are two ways to control
tempo -- pressure defense or holding the ball. I
just prefer pressure defense."
That pressure defense resulted in the Panthers
leading the Horizon League in steals (8.34 spg) and
forcing their opponents into almost 18 turnovers per
game in 2005.
Major Success As A Head Coach
In today's world of instant gratification, Pearl
wasted no time in turning UW-Milwaukee into one of
the most successful mid-major programs in the
nation.
In his four years at UWM, the Panthers won a pair of
Horizon League regular season titles (2004 and 2005)
and two Horizon League Tournament championships
(2003 and 2005). They advanced to Division I
postseason play for the first time in school
history, making two NCAA Tournament appearances
(2003 and 2005) and receiving an NIT bid (2004).
In 2005, Pearl led the Panthers to the most
successful season in school history. In addition to
winning regular season and conference tournament
titles, UWM set a school record with 26 wins and
made its first-ever appearance in the Sweet 16 with
NCAA Tournament wins over Alabama and Boston
College.
During the Panthers' run to the Sweet 16, Pearl
received national acclaim including being named a
finalist for the Jim Phelan National Coach of the
Year honor with fellow coaches Bruce Weber of
Illinois, Roy Williams of North Carolina, Skip
Prosser of Wake Forest, Al Skinner of Boston College
and Tubby Smith of Kentucky.
Honors consistently were bestowed upon Pearl and his
players. Three times in his four seasons at UWM he
was named the Horizon League Coach of the Year. In
2004, Dylan Page was named the Horizon League Player
of the Year while Ed McCants repeated the feat in
2005. Four players (Clay Tucker in 2002 and 2003,
Page in 2003 and 2004, McCants 2005 and Joah Tucker
in 2005) earned first team all-conference honors
under Pearl's direction.
Pearl's 51-13 (.797) record in Horizon League games
gives him the best winning percentage of any coach
in league history. He became the second-fastest
coach to win 300 career games with a 73-56 win over
Loyola Jan. 8, 2005. Only North Carolina's Roy
Williams reached the milestone faster.
Other milestones under Pearl's guidance included the
school's first win over a ranked team and first wins
over teams from the SEC, Big Ten, Big East,
Conference USA, WAC and Mountain West.
One of the most recognizable sports figures in the
city, fans took notice of UWM's success under Pearl.
In each of his four seasons in Milwaukee, the
Panthers drew record-setting crowds for their home
games.
First Job Nets National Championship
A coach whose career had taken him to stops as an
assistant in major conferences such as the Big East,
Pac-10 and Big Ten conferences, Pearl's first head
coaching opportunity came at Southern Indiana, a
Division II school located in Evansville, Ind.
Inheriting a team that had won only 10 games the
previous season, Pearl's first squad at USI posted a
22-7 record and advanced to the NCAA Division II
Tournament.
That first season was a precursor of things to come
for the school. Over the next nine seasons the
Screaming Eagles posted a 231-46 (.834) record and
won four Great Lakes Valley Conference
championships. They received NCAA Division II
Tournament bids in each of Pearl's nine seasons and
advanced to the Sweet 16 six times.
USI experienced unparalleled postseason success
under Pearl's guidance. The Screaming Eagles won a
national championship in 1995 and finished second in
the NCAA II Tournament in 1994. In nine postseason
appearances, USI won 16 NCAA Tournament games.
After winning the national championship in 1995,
Pearl was named the National Association of
Basketball Coaches (NABC) Division II Coach of the
Year. Two times (1993 and 1994) he was named the
Great Lakes Valley Conference Coach of the Year, and
in 2000, he garnered NABC Great Lakes Region Coach
of the Year honors.
Late in the 2000 season, Pearl earned his 200th
career win, making him the fastest coach in NCAA
history to reach the 200-victory mark at one school.
Needing just 240 games, Pearl easily broke the
record of 250 that had been held by North Carolina
State's Everett Case.
In 2001, Pearl's final season at USI, the Screaming
Eagles earned their sixth No. 1 national ranking
over a seven-season period while posting a 26-4
record and winning the Great Lakes Valley Conference
championship.
While at USI, Pearl's successes were not limited to
the basketball court. Serving a dual role as head
basketball coach and coordinator of athletic
development, Pearl helped spur record growth in the
school's booster organizations. Pearl's marketing
efforts and success on the basketball court led to
the sellout of every chairback seat for USI home
games and helped raise more than $500,000 annually
for the university.
Humble Beginnings
Pearl's coaching career began at his alma mater,
Boston College, as a student assistant coach to the
legendary Dr. Tom Davis. After 14 seasons seated to
the right of Davis, the 32-year-old Pearl embarked
on his own head coaching career.
"It's a great country, isn't it, when you can start
from really humble beginnings, work hard, believe
passionately and accomplish just about anything,"
Pearl said.
Pearl's first break came while an undergraduate at
Boston College when Davis offered him a position of
administrative assistant in 1978. In 1981, the
Eagles won the Big East Conference championship and
reached the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament. The
following season, BC advanced to the Elite Eight.
When Davis moved on to Stanford in 1982, Pearl
joined his staff as an assistant coach and then, at
the age of 23, was promoted to associate head coach
for the Cardinal. While in Palo Alto, Calif., they
ended a streak of 20 consecutive losing seasons with
a 19-12 overall record in 1983-84, laying the
groundwork for a resurgence in Stanford basketball.
During this time they recruited four players who
were drafted by the NBA, including Todd Lichti who
finished his career as Stanford's all-time leading
scorer with 2,336 career points.
After four seasons on the West Coast, Pearl followed
Davis to the University of Iowa in 1986. Over the
course of the next six seasons, the Hawkeyes
received five NCAA Tournament berths while compiling
a 129-63 overall record. In 1987, the Hawkeyes
recorded a 30-5 record and advanced to the Elite
Eight before falling to UNLV. The following year,
Pearl was recognized as one of the top Division I
assistants in the country by Basketball Weekly while
helping direct the Hawkeyes to the Sweet 16.
His six seasons in Iowa City helped produce 11 NBA
draft picks for the Hawkeyes, including Brad Lohaus,
Kevin Gamble, B.J. Armstrong, Roy Marble and Acie
Earl.
These 14 seasons with Davis provided Pearl a
foundation of basketball knowledge that enabled him
to move on to a head coach position.
"I feel like I had a great mentor in Dr. Tom Davis,"
Pearl said. "If you're any good at anything, chances
are you had somebody pretty good who taught you how
to do it. I had the pleasure of being by his side
for 14 years. He was a brilliant defensive
strategist. He taught me how to press and how to
run, but, more than anything else, he taught me how
to work with young people, how to be patient, how to
be disciplined and how to get the most out of them,
even more than they ever dreamed they could have."
A native of Boston, Mass., Pearl received his
bachelor's degree in business administration from
Boston College in 1982, graduating cum laude. His
wife, Kim, is the niece of college coaching great
Norm Sloan. They have two daughters, Jacqui and
Leah, and two sons, Steven and Michael. |