Gale Catlett - Head Coaching Record

Head Coaching Record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Cincinnati Bearcats (Independent/Metro Conference)
1972-1973 Cincinnati 17-9
1973-1974 Cincinnati 19-8 NIT 1st Round
1974-1975 Cincinnati 23-6 NCAA 3rd Place
1975-1976 Cincinnati 25-6 2-1 2nd NCAA 1st Round
1976-1977 Cincinnati 25-5 4-2 2nd NCAA 1st Round
1977-1978 Cincinnati 17-10 6-6 4th
Cincinnati: 126-44 12-9
West Virginia Mountaineers (ECAC)
1978-1979 West Virginia 16-12 7-3 2nd
1979-1980 West Virginia 15-14 4-6 7th
1980-1981 West Virginia 23-10 9-4 3rd NIT Semifinals
1981-1982 West Virginia 27-4 13-1 1st NCAA 2nd Round
West Virginia: 81-40 33-14
West Virginia (Atlantic 10)
1982-1983 West Virginia 23-8 10-4 T-1st NCAA 1st Round
1983-1984 West Virginia 20-12 9-9 T-4th NCAA 2nd Round
1984-1985 West Virginia 20-9 16-2 1st NIT 1st Round
1985-1986 West Virginia 22-11 15-3 2nd NCAA 1st Round
1986-1987 West Virginia 23-8 15-3 2nd NCAA 1st Round
1987-1988 West Virginia 18-14 12-6 3rd
1988-1989 West Virginia 26-5 17-1 1st NCAA 2nd Round
1989-1990 West Virginia 16-12 11-7 T-3rd
1990-1991 West Virginia 17-14 10-8 T-3rd NIT 2nd Round
1991-1992 West Virginia 20-12 10-6 3rd NCAA 1st Round
1992-1993 West Virginia 17-12 7-7 6th NIT 2nd Round
1993-1994 West Virginia 17-12 8-8 3rd NIT 2nd Round
1994-1995 West Virginia 13-13 7-9 T-6th
West Virginia: 252-130 147-73
West Virginia Mountaineers (BigEast)
1995-1996 West Virginia 12-15 7-11 4th
1996-1997 West Virginia 21-10 11-7 3rd NIT Quarterfinals
1997-1998 West Virginia 24-9 11-7 3rd NCAA Sweet 16
1998-1999 West Virginia 10-19 4-14 12th
1999-2000 West Virginia 14-14 6-10 8th
2000-2001 West Virginia 17-12 8-8 4th (West) NIT 1st Round
2001-2002 West Virginia 8-20 1-15 7th (West)
West Virginia: 106-99 48-72
Total: 565-320


Read more about this topic:  Gale Catlett

Famous quotes containing the words head and/or record:

    No country is so peaceful as the one that leads into death. Life arches above one’s head like a bridgespan, and below it flows the water, carries the boat, takes it further.
    Alfred Döblin (1878–1957)

    Unlike Boswell, whose Journals record a long and unrewarded search for a self, Johnson possessed a formidable one. His life in London—he arrived twenty-five years earlier than Boswell—turned out to be a long defense of the values of Augustan humanism against the pressures of other possibilities. In contrast to Boswell, Johnson possesses an identity not because he has gone in search of one, but because of his allegiance to a set of assumptions that he regards as objectively true.
    Jeffrey Hart (b. 1930)