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A
proven winner at every stop of his career, Rick
Barnes has led The University of Texas basketball
program to a level of national prominence never
before seen at the Forty Acres. In his first seven
years at the helm of the Longhorns, the 51-year-old
Barnes has guided Texas to a school-record seven
consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances and a
school-best six straight 20-win seasons entering the
2005-06 campaign.
The Longhorns have registered a 161-69 (.700) mark
during this time, an average of 23.0 victories per
year. Included in this stretch was a trip to the
2003 Final Four, marking the third time in school
history and first since 1947 (a span of 56 years)
that UT had advanced to the Final Four, and three
consecutive "Sweet 16"appearances (2002, '03, '04).
With talent, depth, recruiting, facility
improvements and a commitment to the program's
success at an all-time high, Barnes has everyone
talking about Texas Basketball, both in Austin and
around the nation.
Barnes has compiled a 363-203 (.641) record in 18
seasons as a head coach at George Mason, Providence,
Clemson and Texas. Along the way, he has guided his
teams to a total of 13 NCAA Tournament (including a
current streak of 10 straight) and three Postseason
NIT appearances.
Barnes is a coach who adapts his style of play to
the talents of his team. In his first three years at
Texas, the Horns combined a halfcourt offensive
attack featururing post players Chris Mihm and Chris
Owens with a hard-nosed, man-to-man defense that
posted three of the top 10 marks in school history
for single-season field goal percentage defense. In
fact, Texas ranked fifth nationally in 2000-01 in
field goal percentage defense, holding opponents to
just 38.9% shooting on the year.
In 2001-02, Barnes instructed freshman sensation T.J.
Ford to push the ball and attack offensively at
every opportunity. Under Barnes' guidance, a smaller
but quicker squad reached the "Sweet 16"for the
first time at Texas since 1996-97. In 2002-03, the
Longhorns turned heads around the nation by climbing
to as high as No. 2 in the national polls (the
highest ranking in school history), earning a No. 1
seed in the NCAA Tournament and advancing to the
Final Four for the first time since 1947. In
2003-04, following Ford's early departure to the
NBA, Barnes used a balanced lineup that featured an
11-man rotation to post 25 wins and reach the "Sweet
16"for the third consecutive year, another first in
Texas history.
In addition to creating success on the court, Barnes
also has been the point-man in changing the physical
face of Texas Basketball. The Frank Erwin Center
recently completed a three-step, $52 million
makeover. Phase one was completed prior to the start
of the 2001-02 season, when the lower arena seating
areas were reconfigured to move fans closer to the
court. In the process, almost 1,200 arena-level
seats were created as general admission seating for
UT students.
Construction on the final two phases ‹ luxury suites
and the 44,000-square foot Denton A. Cooley Pavilion
(a state-of-the-art practice facility located
immediately south of the Erwin Center) ‹ was
completed in mid-October of 2003. The two-story
facility now serves as the Longhorns' permanent
headquarters for the basketball program.
Hired as the 23rd men's basketball coach in Texas
history on April 12, 1998, Barnes took all of one
year to turn the Longhorns basketball program from
one in disarray to one on the rise in the national
picture. Despite playing with just seven scholarship
players for the majority of the 1998-99 season and
struggling out of the gate to a 3-8 mark, Barnes
remained patient and engineered one of the greatest
midseason turnarounds in school history. The
Longhorns won 16 of their final 21 games to finish
the year at 19-13.
In the process, Texas posted a 13-3 mark in the Big
12 Conference en route to capturing its first ever
Big 12 crown and first outright league title since
1993-94. Texas claimed a No. 7 seed in the East
Region of the NCAA Tournament before falling to
Purdue 58-54 in a first-round nailbiter at Boston's
FleetCenter.
For his efforts, Barnes was named the Big 12
Conference Coach of the Year by both the media and
the league's coaches. He also earned mention as
Basketball Times' All-Southwest Coach, USBWA (United
States Basketball Writers Association) District 7
Coach of the Year and NABC (National Association of
Basketball Coaches) District 9 Coach of the Year.
Barnes became the first rookie coach at Texas to win
an outright league title since Harold Bradley led
the Longhorns to the Southwest Conference crown in
1959-60.
Barnes led the Longhorns to one of the best regular
seasons in modern school history in 1999-2000. Along
the way, Texas posted a 24-9 record (13-3 Big 12,
second), advanced to the second round of the NCAA
tourney and earned a No. 15 final AP ranking, the
best in school history. Tabbed No. 21 in the AP
preseason poll, the Horns were ranked in the AP Top
25 all season for the first time in school history.
Despite playing a school-record 12 games against AP
Top 25 foes, Texas won 20 games for the first time
since 1995-96. The 22 regular-season wins tied for
the third-most victories by a Texas team. The
Longhorns also posted five wins against AP Top 25
opponents, including two against Top 10 foes,
breaking the school record for most wins in a season
versus ranked opponents.
Texas earned a No. 5 seed in the West Region of the
NCAA Tournament, tied for the best NCAA seed in
school history since the tourney expanded to 64
teams. UT downed Indiana State (77-61) in the first
round, before falling to fourth-seeded LSU (72-67)
in round two.
One of 15 finalists for the 2000 Naismith National
College Coach of the Year, Barnes helped develop
junior Chris Mihm into one of the top centers in the
country. Mihm earned consensus first-team
All-America honors, becoming just the second player
in Texas history (Jack Gray, 1935) to earn the
accolade. Mihm also was named to the AP first-team
All-America squad, becoming the first player in
school history to earn the honor.
Despite losing four starters, including Mihm a year
early to the NBA, from his 1999-2000 squad, Barnes
did one of his better coaching jobs during his third
year in Austin. He molded four true freshmen who all
played significant minutes and a total of eight
newcomers into a team that posted a 25-9 record
(12-4 Big 12, tied for second), advanced to the NCAA
Tournament and finished the year ranked No. 18 in
the final AP poll.
The ranking marked the first time in school history
that the Horns appeared in the final AP poll in
back-to-back seasons. In addition, the 49 wins in
those two seasons tied the school record for most
victories in a two-year span (25-9 in 2000-01; 24-9
in 1999-2000).
Texas used an eight-game winning streak to reach the
Big 12 Tournament title game for the first time in
the league's five-year history before falling to
Oklahoma. After earning a No. 6 seed in the South
Region of the NCAA Tournament, the Horns closed out
the season with a 79-65 loss to an upstart Temple
squad which eventually reached the "Elite Eight.²
The Longhorns tied a school record for most home
wins in a season (16-1 mark) and defeated two AP Top
10 teams (No. 5 Illinois, No. 6 Iowa State) at home
in the same season for the first time in school
history. Texas' 23 regular-season wins also tied for
the second-most regular-season victories in UT
history. Barnes again earned USBWA District 7 and
NABC District 9 Coach of the Year accolades.
Year four in Austin proved to be one of the most
dramatic in school history. When All-America
candidate Chris Owens was lost for the season with a
torn ACL in late December, most predicted the Horns
would be lucky to reach the Postseason NIT. One of
the youngest teams in the nation, as its top five
players by season's end consisted of four sophomores
and then-freshman Ford), Texas managed to rally
around each other and prove the nay-sayers wrong.
The Longhorns posted a 22-12 record (10-6 Big 12,
tied for third) and advanced to the NCAA "Sweet
16"for the first time since 1996-97.
Texas used a 70-61 win at No. 5 Oklahoma State to
open Big 12 Conference play and set the tone for an
exciting spring. The victory marked the first
against an AP Top Five opponent in a true road game
in school history. The Longhorns overcame a brutal
February slate, as six of their eight opponents were
ranked in the AP Top 25 at some point during the
season, to earn a No. 3 seed in the Big 12
Tournament.
The conference battles proved to be a maturing
process for Texas, with the league sending six teams
to the "Big Dance"and four into the "Sweet 16."After
falling in the Big 12 tourney semifinals, the
Longhorns headed to Dallas as a No. 6 seed at the
Midwest Sub-Regional.
Before a pro-Texas crowd, the Longhorns posted wins
against Boston College (70-57) and No. 17
Mississippi State (68-64) to advance to the "Sweet
16"for just the third time since the NCAA tourney
expanded to 64 teams in 1985. In a matchup against
No. 2 seed Oregon in the regional semifinals, Texas
rallied from a 13-point halftime deficit to tie the
game at 70 with 24 seconds remaining. However, a
place in the "Elite Eight"was denied when Oregon
guard Fredie Jones drove the lane and hit a running
floater with three seconds left to give the Ducks a
72-70 victory.
Ford became the first freshman in NCAA history to
lead the nation in assists (8.27 avg.), picking up
USBWA National Freshman of the Year honors. Texas
concluded the season tied at No. 18 in the final
ESPN/USA Today poll.
The 2002-03 campaign was arguably the most
successful season in school history. Returning all
five starters from the team that reached the "Sweet
16,"expectations had never been higher. Texas was
ranked No. 4 in the AP preseason poll.
The Horns proved up to the challenge, tying the
school record for most victories in a season with a
26-7 mark. Along the way, Texas earned its highest
ranking in both the Associated Press and the
ESPN/USA Today polls in school history (No. 2 in
both polls on Dec. 2, 2002). UT was ranked in the AP
Top 10 for all 19 weeks of the season, a first in
school history, and 13 of those 19 weeks were spent
in the Top Five.
Barnes earned his 300th career collegiate victory in
the 58-50 win against Louisiana Tech on Dec. 30,
2002. He also became the sixth coach in UT history
to reach 100 wins while at Texas with a 70-50
victory against Iowa State on Jan. 11, 2003.
UT placed second in the final Big 12 standings by
registering a 13-3 mark in arguably the nation's
toughest conference. The Longhorns posted a 14-0
record at home, marking the first time since the
1994-95 season and just the third time since the
move to the Erwin Center in 1977-78 that the Horns
completed an unbeaten home campaign. Texas also
recorded a 6-4 mark against AP Top 25 teams, setting
a school record for most victories against ranked
opponents in a season, and a 3-1 record against AP
Top 10 foes.
Barnes used a formula of depth and exceptional team
chemistry to guide the Horns to their first-ever No.
1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Texas made the most
of its opportunities in the tourney, recording wins
against UNC Asheville and Purdue during the NCAA
First and Second Rounds in Birmingham, Ala. The
Horns then posted hard-fought victories against No.
23 Connecticut and Michigan State at the NCAA South
Regional in San Antonio to advance to their first
Final Four since 1947, a span of 56 years. A 95-84
loss to eventual national champion Syracuse in the
Louisiana Superdome before 54,432 fans, the largest
crowd to ever see a Texas Basketball game, ended
UT's successful run in the NCAA semifinals.
One of 25 finalists for the Naismith National Coach
of the Year, Barnes garnered Big 12 Coach of the
Year honors from the league's coaches and NABC
District 9 Coach of the Year accolades. He helped
develop Ford into one of the top players in school
history. Ford became the first UT male to earn the
Naismith and Wooden Awards as college basketball's
Player of the Year. He also was named National
Player of the Year by CBS SportsLine, ESPN.com,
Sports Illustrated and The Sporting News and
garnered consensus first-team All-America
recognition.
Despite the early departure of Ford to the NBA as
the eighth overall pick by the Milwaukee Bucks, year
six (2003-04) saw Texas record a 25-8 mark and
advance to its third straight "Sweet 16."Led by a
quartet of seniors who ended their careers as the
winningest class in school history with 98 wins, UT
again was ranked in the AP Top 25 for all 19 weeks
of the season.
Texas placed in a tie for second in the final Big 12
standings by recording a 12-4 mark. UT advanced to
the league's postseason tournament championship game
for the second time in four years, before falling to
Oklahoma State. The Longhorns also registered an 8-5
record against AP Top 25 opponents, breaking the
school record for most wins against ranked opponents
in a season.
Barnes again used depth and balance to play an
11-man rotation while leading the Horns to a No. 3
seed in the NCAA Tournament, the second-highest seed
in school history. Texas recorded hard-fought wins
against Princeton (66-49) and North Carolina (78-75)
during the NCAA First and Second Rounds in Denver,
before an upstart Xavier team ended UT's season in
the "Sweet 16."The Horns recorded at least 25 wins
for the second consecutive season, setting a school
mark for most victories in a two-year period (51).
Texas replaced the four departing seniors with a
quartet of true freshmen who saw significant action
in 2004-05. As if that wasn't a difficult transition
by itself, constant lineup and roster changes due to
injuries and off-court situations were the norm,
rather than the exception.
Through it all, Barnes and Co. never wavered or
allowed expectations in Austin to dip.
Mid-season losses of two key starters, LaMarcus
Aldridge and P.J. Tucker, spoiled a 14-3 start to
the season which saw UT climb as high as No. 10 in
the AP poll. Although the Horns suffered through a
three-game losing skid in league play for the first
time in the Barnes era, Texas rallied together to
reach the 20-win plateau for the sixth straight year
and advance to the NCAA Tournament for the seventh
consecutive season.
Despite its depleted roster, the Longhorns managed
to post a regular-season sweep of eventual "Sweet
16"participant Oklahoma State. The Horns recorded a
75-61 home win against the No. 5 Cowboys, then
completed the sweep with a dramatic 74-73 victory
over No. 8 Oklahoma State on "Senior Night"in
Stillwater. The road win snapped OSU's nation-long
home winning streak (29 games).
Barnes came to Texas after taking the Clemson
program to never-before-seen heights in four short
years, including a school-record three consecutive
NCAA Tournament appearances and a No. 2 national
ranking during its 1996-97 "Sweet 16"campaign.
Barnes left Clemson with the school's best all-time
winning percentage (.607) and top winning percentage
in Atlantic Coast Conference play.
While at Clemson, Barnes' teams drew more fans and
saw more season tickets sold than at any other time
in the program's history. Overall, Barnes' teams at
Clemson posted a 74-48 record, including 13 wins
against AP Top 25 teams.
The Tigers jumped out to a fast start in 1994-95,
Barnes' initial season, winning their first 10
games. In his first ACC game, Barnes guided Clemson
to an upset of No. 9 Duke at Cameron Indoor Stadium.
It was the program's first win at Duke in 10 years.
Barnes had Clemson in the AP Top 20 on Jan. 10, 1995
for the first time since the 1989-90 campaign. His
Clemson team, which didn't have a starter over 6-7
and was tabbed in the preseason as "the worst team
in ACC history"by the Greenville (S.C.) News, went
on to finish 15-13 and earn an NIT bid.
Barnes followed up his first year with an 18-11
overall record, earning Clemson's first NCAA bid
since the 1989-90 "Sweet 16"team. Along the way, the
Tigers had four wins against Top 25 teams. Clemson
also defeated every ACC school during the year for
just the fifth time in school history. Barnes' year
was highlighted by a dramatic, last-second 75-73
victory over North Carolina in the ACC Tournament
quarterfinals. The win marked the first by Clemson
against the Tar Heels in the state of North Carolina
in 29 years. The Tigers lost an 81-74 decision in
the NCAA First Round to a Georgia team which reached
the "Elite Eight.²
Bolstered by a Top 10 national recruiting class, the
1996-97 Tigers jumped out to a 16-1 start and a No.
2 ranking. Clemson finished that season with a 23-10
record against a schedule ranked as the
ninth-toughest in the nation. Barnes' team played 15
games against teams ranked in the Top 25 of the RPI
poll, including nine games against Top 10 foes.
Clemson and LSU were the only schools in the nation
to play three of the teams that advanced to the
Final Four.
The Tigers posted wins over Miami (Ohio) and Tulsa
to advance to the NCAA "Sweet 16"for just the third
time in school history, before falling to
third-ranked and eventual Final Four participant
Minnesota in a 90-84 double-overtime classic at San
Antonio's Alamodome. Clemson concluded the year
ranked No. 8 in the CNN/USA Today poll, the highest
final season ranking in school history.
During his final season at Clemson (1996-97), the
Tigers began the year ranked No. 5 in the preseason
AP poll ‹ the highest preseason ranking in school
history. Despite facing a schedule ranked third
toughest in the nation by the RPI and playing with
an injured point guard in Terrell McIntyre for the
majority of the season, Barnes' team still posted an
18-14 mark en route to another berth in the "Big
Dance.²
It marked the third straight trip to the NCAA
Tournament for Clemson, the first time in school
history the feat had been accomplished. The Tigers
posted three wins against Top 25 opposition during
the regular season. Barnes also picked up his 200th
win as a Division I coach with a 77-72 victory over
North Carolina State on Feb. 26, 1998.
The Providence Years Prior to his stint at Clemson,
Barnes served as the head coach at Providence
College for six years. During his tenure at the Big
East Conference school, he posted an 108-76 (.587)
overall record while leading Providence to its first
Big East Tournament title and a total of five
postseason appearances (three NCAA, two NIT). In his
102 games at PC, the Friars averaged 10,596 fans per
game and posted the top five single-season
attendance marks in school history.
Under Barnes' guidance, Providence recorded 17 wins
over Top 25 teams. His 17 wins over ranked opponents
are tied for second in school history, although he
owns the mark on a season average basis (2.8 wins
per year). Dave Gavitt had 23 ranked wins in 10
years, while Joe Mullaney chalked up 17 victories in
14 seasons.
Barnes helped develop 11 Providence student-athletes
who went on to play professional basketball at some
level, including six NBA players. PC joined Duke as
the only schools in the nation to boast at least two
selections in both the 1994 and 1995 NBA drafts. All
four Friars players drafted in those years were
recruited and coached by Barnes.
While at Providence, Barnes' teams featured an
up-tempo style that held rebounding as the key
aspect of the game. Four of the top 11 scoring teams
in PC history were coached by Barnes, including the
1988-89 squad that averaged a school-record 85.3 ppg.
In his six years, the Friars averaged 79.7 points
per game. In addition, each of his last four PC
teams ranked in the top 25 nationally in rebound
margin, including the 1991-92 squad which ranked
fourth (+7.5).
In his first season at Providence (1988-89), Barnes
inherited an 11-17 team and opened the season with a
13-game winning streak. Less than a month into his
first year, Barnes had the Friars in the Top 20. PC
went on to post an 18-11 record and earn a spot in
the NCAA Tournament, where it lost to Virginia
100-97 in a First Round contest. Barnes was named
District I Coach of the Year by the NABC.
His second year at PC proved his initial season was
no fluke. Barnes led the Friars to a 17-12 overall
mark, including the school's first win at the
Carrier Dome with an 87-86 victory against No. 5
Syracuse. The win snapped a 21-game losing streak to
the Orangemen. The Friars also upset No. 3
Georgetown en route to earning a second straight
NCAA bid. Providence lost an overtime thriller to
Ohio State in a First Round game.
With the help of the fourth-ranked recruiting class
in the nation, the 1990-91 Friars posted a 19-13
record while narrowly missing a third straight NCAA
appearance. During the year, PC played 12 games
against ranked teams, including a remarkable 10-game
stretch against Top 25 opponents from Jan. 8-Feb.
12. The Friars survived the span with a 5-5 mark.
After receiving a NIT bid, Providence downed James
Madison and West Virginia, before falling to
Oklahoma in the quarterfinals. In his first three
seasons at the Rhode Island school, Barnes had taken
Providence to three straight postseason tournaments
(two NCAAs and an NIT) and posted three consecutive
winning seasons for the first time since the
legendary Dave Gavitt accomplished the feat for the
Friars 14 years earlier (1976-78).
Barnes led a 1991-92 Providence team dominated by
freshmen and sophomores to 14 wins, including a
victory over No. 12 Syracuse. The Friars also posted
a 23-point victory at Georgetown, the first time the
Friars had ever won at the Capital Centre.
PC returned to the postseason during the 1992-93
campaign, reaching the 20-win plateau for the first
time since Rick Pitino's memorable march to the
Final Four in 1986-87. Along the way, Barnes led
Providence to an 81-66 victory over No. 14 Arizona,
marking the school's first win over a ranked
non-conference team since the 1977-78 season. He
also became the first PC coach to post a season
sweep against Georgetown.
The Friars won 10 of their last 13 games to end the
year, including a victory over Connecticut in the
Big East Tournament, which earned PC its 1,000th win
in school history. Providence defeated James
Madison, West Virginia and Boston College in the
NIT, before falling to Minnesota (76-70) at Madison
Square Garden. PC finished fourth after dropping a
55-52 decision to UAB in the third-place game.
In his final season at Providence, Barnes guided the
Friars to a 20-10 mark (10-8 Big East) and a NCAA
bid. It marked the first back-to-back 20-win seasons
at PC since the mid-1970s. The 10 Big East wins were
the most by a Providence team since Pitino's Final
Four squad posted a 10-6 mark in 1986-87.
Providence won its last five regular-season games,
then swept past Villanova, No. 2 Connecticut and
Georgetown to capture the Big East Tournament crown.
Despite losing to Alabama in the first round of the
NCAA Tournament, Barnes' team ranked 14th in the
nation in the final Sagarin computer poll.
Barnes accepted his first head coaching position at
George Mason April 23, 1987. It was at the Fairfax,
Va., school where Barnes' teams began his trademark
of defying the odds. Under his guidance, George
Mason posted a 20-10 record in his first and only
season, including a 9-5 mark in the Colonial
Athletic Association. After leading his team to the
conference tournament championship game, Barnes was
recognized as the league's co-Coach of the Year.
Barnes coached his first team in a Hickory, N.C.,
recreation league while he was still in high school.
He said then he wanted to teach high school, nothing
else. That all changed when he went to the 1978
Atlantic Coast Conference tourney in Greensboro,
N.C., and coaching basketball at the collegiate
level became his passion.
Barnes began his collegiate coaching career as an
assistant coach at North State Academy during the
1977-78 season. He then moved on to an assistant
spot under Eddie Biedenbach at Davidson College the
following year. After two seasons at the Davidson,
N.C., school, Barnes moved on to George Mason where
he served as an assistant to Joe Harrington from
1980-85.
In 1985-86, Barnes joined Wimp Sanderson's staff at
Alabama as an assistant coach. The Crimson Tide
posted a 24-9 record en route to a trip to the NCAA
"Sweet 16."The following year, he served as an
assistant at Ohio State under current Maryland
mentor Gary Williams. The Buckeyes had a 20-win
season and reached the Second Round of the NCAA
Tournament.
A native of Hickory, N.C., Barnes was born on July
17, 1954. He was a standout basketball player at
Hickory High, where he graduated in 1973. Barnes
moved on to Lenoir-Rhyne College (Hickory, N.C.),
where he lettered three years and won the Captain's
Award for Leadership as a junior and senior.
He earned a bachelor's degree in health and physical
education from Lenoir-Rhyne in 1977 and was named
the college's Distinguished Alumnus in 1997. Barnes
was inducted into the Lenoir-Rhyne College Hall of
Fame on Oct. 5, 2002 and received an honorary Doctor
of Humane Letters degree from Lenoir-Rhyne on May 7,
2005. He and his wife, Candy (also a Hickory
native), reside in Austin with their son, Nick (born
Oct. 3, 1984), and daughter, Carley (born Jan. 9,
1988). |