American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Coach of the Year explained

American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Coach of the Year
Description:The most outstanding basketball coach in the American Athletic Conference
Country:United States
Year:2014

The American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Coach of the Year is a basketball award given to the American Athletic Conference's most outstanding head coach. The conference formed in 2013–14 after many schools departed from the original Big East Conference to form their own conference. Mick Cronin of Cincinnati was the first-ever winner.[1]

Key

Awarded one of the following National Coach of the Year awards that year:
Associated Press Coach of the Year (AP)
Adolph Rupp Cup (ARC)
Basketball Times Coach of the Year (BT)
CBS/Chevrolet Coach of the Year (CBS)
Naismith Coach of the Year (N)
NABC Coach of the Year (NABC)
Sporting News Coach of the Year (SN)
U.S. Basketball Writers Association (USBWA)
Denotes the number of times the coach had been awarded the Coach of the Year award at that point
Elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a coach but is no longer active
Active coach who has been elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame (as a coach)
Conference win–loss record for that season
Conference standing at year's end (Tdenotes a tie)
Overall win–loss record for that season
SeasonTeam won the NCAA Division I National Championship

Winners

SeasonPlayerSchoolclass=unsortableNational Coach of the Year AwardsConf. W–LConf. St.Overall W–LRef.
2013–14Cincinnati15–31stT27–7
2014–15Temple13–53rdT26–11[2]
2015–16 (2)Temple14–41st21–12[3]
2016–17SMU17–11st30–5[4]
2017–18Houston14–42ndT27–8[5]
2018–19 (2)Houston16–21st33–4[6]
2019–20Tulsa13–51stT21–10[7]
2020–21Wichita State11–21st16–6[8]
2021–22 (3)Houston15–31st32–6[9]
2022–23 (4)Houston17–11st33–4[10]
2023–24South Florida16–21st25–8[11]

Winners by school

In this table, the "year joined" reflects the calendar year when each school joined the conference. The "Years" column reflects the calendar year in which each award was presented.

School (year joined)WinnersYears
Houston (2013)42018, 2019, 2022, 2023
Temple (2013)22015, 2016
Cincinnati (2013)12014
SMU (2013)12017
Tulsa (2014)12020
Wichita State (2017)12021
South Florida (2013)12024
East Carolina (2014)0
Louisville (2013) 0
Memphis (2013)0
Rutgers (2013)0
Tulane (2014)0
UCF (2013)0
UConn (2013)0

Notes and References

  1. Web site: UConn's Shabazz Napier Named American Athletic Conference Player of the Year. TheAmerican.org. American Athletic Conference. March 12, 2014. March 12, 2014.
  2. Web site: SMU's Nic Moore Named Men's Basketball Player of the Year. TheAmerican.org. American Athletic Conference. March 12, 2014. March 12, 2015.
  3. Web site: SMU's Nic Moore Named AAC's Top Player; Temple's Dunphy Top Coach. Hartford Courant. March 10, 2016. March 10, 2016.
  4. Web site: American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Notes . . April 12, 2017 . April 20, 2022 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20170905035946/http://sidearm.sites.s3.amazonaws.com/theamerican.sidearmsports.com/documents/2016/11/17/2016_17_American_Men_s_Basketball_Weekly_Release.pdf . September 5, 2017.
  5. Web site: Clark Named American Player of the Year, Williams Rookie of the Year & Sampson Coach of the Year - American Athletic Conference . Theamerican.org . 2019-06-01.
  6. Web site: American Athletic Conference Awards Player, Freshman and Coach of the Year - American Athletic Conference . Theamerican.org . 2019-06-01.
  7. Web site: American Athletic Conference Announces Individual Awards. theamerican.org. en. 2020-03-11. 2020-03-11.
  8. Web site: American Athletic Conference Announces Men’s Basketball Honors. theamerican.org. en. 2021-03-10. 2021-03-10.
  9. Web site: American Athletic Conference Announces Men’s Basketball Honors. theamerican.org. en. 2022-03-09. 2022-03-09.
  10. Web site: The American Announces Men's Basketball Honors. theamerican.org. en. 2023-03-08. 2023-03-08.
  11. Web site: American Athletic Conference Announces Men's Basketball Honors. theamerican.org. en. 2024-03-12. 2024-03-12.