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Neil
Dougherty begins his fifth season at the
helm of the Horned Frogs' men's basketball
team in 2006-07. Dougherty, who was hired
on March 25, 2002, as TCU's 18th head
coach, guided the Frogs to the 2005
National Invitation Tournament, the
school's first postseason berth since
1999.
At the conclusion of the 2004-05 season,
the Frogs made a late-March run all the
way to the NIT quarterfinals despite
playing all three games on the road. TCU
battled to wins at Miami (Ohio) and
Western Michigan before falling in a
hard-fought game at Maryland 85-73. When
it was all over, the Frogs came out with a
21-14 record--the 11th 20-win season in
school history and the most wins for the
program since 1998-99.
Also in 2004-05, the Frogs reached the
second round of the Conference USA
Tournament for the second straight year
after accumulating an 8-8 conference
record - the best during TCU's four-year
stay in C-USA. Dougherty and the Frogs
edged out Marquette in the opening round
before falling to NCAA Final Four
participant Louisville. During the regular
season, TCU recorded key victories over
NCAA Tournament participants Texas Tech
and UAB, picked up two wins over an
NIT-bound Marquette squad and also upended
NIT Final Four team Memphis on the road.
TCU's march in the National Invitation
Tournament marked only the third time in
school history that the Frogs reached the
tournament quarterfinals.
The 2003-04 squad went 7-9 in Conference
USA, one of just four leagues in the
nation to receive six bids to the 2004
NCAA Tournament. In addition, TCU recorded
the program's first victory over a top-10
team since 1990, and grabbed its first
conference tournament win since 2000 when
the team bounced Marquette from the C-USA
Tournament. That final Frog victory was
also the 1,000th win in school history and
was the second in a four-game winning
streak over the tradition-rich Golden
Eagles.
Dougherty's plan for success, his
determination and his style of play
re-energized the Horned Frogs' fan base.
Under his watch, TCU set an all-time arena
attendance record when 7,267 fans crammed
into Daniel-Meyer Coliseum to watch the
Horned Frogs play the top-ranked Kansas
Jayhawks on Dec. 1, 2003. In the
first-ever visit to DMC by a No. 1 team,
the Horned Frogs trailed at halftime by
just one point, 39-38, against a team that
ultimately advanced to the NCAA
Tournament's Elite Eight.
There is no debating that TCU's strength
of schedule has drastically improved since
Dougherty's arrival in Fort Worth. Of
Dougherty's 123 games at the helm of the
program, 15 have been against top-25
teams. To compare, the Horned Frogs played
just 19 ranked teams during the entire
decade of the 1990s, a span of 303 games.
Another tangible sign of Dougherty's
impact on TCU basketball is the $6 million
Ed & Rae Schollmaier Basketball Complex,
the newest Horned Frog athletics facility.
The 22,000-square-foot complex, which sits
southeast of Daniel-Meyer Coliseum,
features office space for the men's
basketball staff, two NCAA regulation
practice courts, a meeting room, a weight
room, a lobby and a courtyard. It was
completed in March of 2004, and stands as
a model of the university's strong
commitment to basketball and Coach
Dougherty.
TCU has also made its presence known on
national television during the Dougherty
era. The Frogs' statement game came in
February of 2004 in front of an ESPN2
audience as part of "Super Tuesday"
action, as TCU recorded a monumental 71-46
victory over 10th-ranked Louisville. It
was just the fifth win over a top-10 team
ever enjoyed by the TCU program. In the
contest, TCU held the Cardinals to just 46
points, the lowest output by a Rick
Pitino-coached team since his Boston
University squad was defeated 48-46 by
Canisius in 1982. Since Dougherty took the
reins, the Frogs have made more than two
dozen appearances on the ESPN network
family.
As the TCU head coach, Dougherty has
accomplished much on the recruiting trail
as well, blazing a path through Texas high
schools and junior colleges and building
relationships with coaches and
student-athletes. His current roster
boasts eight players from the Lone Star
state, an area flourishing with top-notch
basketball talent.
Under Dougherty's tutelage, former guards
Corey Santee and Nile Murry earned
all-conference honors. In addition,
several former players - Santee, Murry,
Bingo Merriex, Jamal Brown and Marcus
Sloan - have continued their careers by
playing professional basketball.
The Horned Frogs' academic performance has
also improved. Since the spring of 2003,
10 of Dougherty's student-athletes have
received their degrees, while five more
will obtain their certificates during the
2006-07 school year. In addition, 11
players have been honored by the
conference for their academic prowess over
the past four years.
After finding ways to compete with
nationally-recognized teams, increase fan
interest, upgrade the schedule, build a
basketball facility, gain national
exposure, recruit in-state players and
raise academic standards, Dougherty also
had another challenge in 2005-06: to lead
the Horned Frogs into the Mountain West
Conference, an established league known
for its size and all-around talent.
While TCU struggled to find its feet in
the new league, the Horned Frogs upended
perennial power Utah on national
television, and narrowly dropped decisions
in the final seconds at New Mexico and
BYU, both of which possessed long home
court winning streaks.
A longtime assistant coach, Dougherty had
been looking for the right head coaching
position for several years prior to 2002.
When the TCU job came open following the
2001-02 season, the young coach knew he
had discovered the right fit. And in March
of 2002, TCU announced that it, too, had
found the perfect match.
Prior to coming to TCU, Dougherty, now 45,
spent the previous seven seasons at the
University of Kansas working as an
assistant coach under coaching legend Roy
Williams. A recruiting guru, Dougherty
helped KU sign eight McDonald's
All-Americans during his tenure. He was
also responsible for scouting coordination
and assisting with supervision of the
academic progress of the Jayhawk players.
During Dougherty's years on the Kansas
staff, KU averaged nearly 30 victories per
season and won four Big 12 Conference
championships. The 2001-02 Jayhawks
captured the NCAA Midwest Regional title
and advanced to the Final Four, where they
were defeated by the eventual champion
Maryland Terrapins. Kansas reached the
NCAA Tournament every season during
Dougherty's time in Lawrence. The 1996-97
squad spent much of the campaign rated No.
1 in the nation and finished the season
with a 35-2 overall mark.
Eight of Dougherty's former Jayhawk
players are currently in the NBA: Nick
Collison (Seattle), Drew Gooden
(Cleveland), Kirk Hinrich (Chicago), Raef
LaFrentz (Portland), Paul Pierce (Boston),
Scot Pollard (Cleveland), Wayne Simien
(Miami) and Jacque Vaughn (San Antonio).
Dougherty arrived in his home state of
Kansas after serving stints under Eddie
Fogler at Vanderbilt and South Carolina.
He worked four years as an assistant with
the Commodores (1989-93) before spending
two seasons in a similar capacity with the
Gamecocks (1993-95).
Vanderbilt advanced to the NCAA Tournament
twice during Dougherty's time in Nashville
(1991 and 1993). The 1993 Southeastern
Conference champions ultimately reached
the Sweet Sixteen. The 1990 Commodore
squad took home the National Invitation
Tournament championship, while the 1992
team also reached the tournament.
Before his four-year stay at Vanderbilt,
Dougherty worked as an assistant coach at
Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa,
during the 1988-89 campaign.
Prior to his year at Drake, Dougherty
coached four seasons at his alma mater,
Cameron University (1984-88). The Aggies
posted a 44-20 record in his final two
years at Lawton, Okla.
Dougherty was born in Leavenworth, Kan.,
on April 14, 1961, and was a standout
athlete at Leavenworth High School. He was
an all-state guard as a high school senior
and also earned honorable mention
All-America status. The Leavenworth High
basketball team enjoyed tremendous success
during Dougherty's years, including a
state championship appearance his junior
season in the spring of 1978. In that
tournament, Leavenworth lost to Salina
South, but Dougherty made 16 field goals,
a Class 4A record that still stands today.
Following graduation, Dougherty attended
the United States Military Academy in West
Point, N.Y. At Army, he was recruited by
and played one year for Mike Krzyzewski,
now the legendary head coach at Duke.
Dougherty played several games as a
freshman and was a part-time starter as a
sophomore under coach Pete Gaudet.
Dougherty transferred to Cameron
University for his final two collegiate
seasons. He started at point guard as a
junior and senior, helping the team to a
combined 34 wins in two seasons. Dougherty
graduated with a bachelor's degree in
education from Cameron in 1984 and earned
his master's degree in education at the
University of Oklahoma in 1987.
Dougherty and his wife, Patti, have three
children: a daughter, Megan, and sons,
Neil Patrick and Ryan. Neil Patrick is a
senior guard on the TCU basketball team.
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