Guy Lewis - Head Coaching Record

Head Coaching Record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Houston Cougars (Missourl Valley)
1956-1957 Houston 10-16 5-9 T-5th
Houston: 10-16 5-9
Houston Cougars (Skyline 8)
1957-1958 Houston 9-16 4-10 T-6th
Houston: 9-16 4-10
Houston Cougars (Missouri Valley)
1958-1959 Houston 12-14 6-8 5th
1959-1960 Houston 13-12 6-9 T-4th
Houston: 25-26 12-17
Houston Cougars (Independent)
1960-1961 Houston 17-11 NCAA Sweet 16
1961-1962 Houston 21-6 NIT Quarterfinals
1962-1963 Houston 15-11
1963-1964 Houston 16-10
1964-1965 Houston 19-10 NCAA Sweet 16
1965-1966 Houston 23-6 NCAA Sweet 16
1966-1967 Houston 27-4 NCAA Final 4/NCAA 3rd Place
1967-1968 Houston 31-2 NCAA Final 4/NCAA 4th Place
1968-1969 Houston 16-10
1969-1970 Houston 25-5 NCAA Sweet 16
1970-1971 Houston 22-7 NCAA Sweet 16
1971-1972 Houston 20-7 NCAA 1st Round
1972-1973 Houston 23-4 NCAA 1st Round
1973-1974 Houston 17-9
1974-1975 Houston 16-10
Houston: 308-175 N/A
Houston Cougars (SWC)
1975-1976 Houston 17-11 7-9 6th
1976-1977 Houston 29-8 13-3 2nd NIT Runner Up
1977-1978 Houston 25-8 11-5 3rd NCAA 1st Round
1978-1979 Houston 16-15 6-10 T-5th
1979-1980 Houston 14-14 8-8 T-4th
1980-1981 Houston 21-9 10-6 T-2nd NCAA 1st Round
1981-1982 Houston 25-8 11-5 2nd NCAA Final 4
1982-1983 Houston 31-3 16-0 1st NCAA Final 4/Runner Up
1983-1984 Houston 32-5 15-1 1st NCAA Final 4/Runner Up
1984-1985 Houston 16-14 8-8 T-5th NIT 1st Round
1985-1986 Houston 14-14 8-8 6th
Houston: 240-109 113-99
Houston: 592-279 113-99
Total: 592-279


Read more about this topic:  Guy Lewis

Famous quotes containing the words head and/or record:

    Our minds can go no further. The human imagination is capable of no further expression of beauty than the carved owl of Athene, the archaic, marble serpent, the arrogant selfish head of the Acropolis Apollo.
    Hilda Doolittle (1886–1961)

    Society is the stage on which manners are shown; novels are the literature. Novels are the journal or record of manners; and the new importance of these books derives from the fact, that the novelist begins to penetrate the surface, and treat this part of life more worthily.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)