J. D. Barnett | |
Birth Date: | 10 January 1944 |
Birth Place: | Meadville, Missouri, U.S. |
Player Years1: | 1964–1966 |
Player Team1: | Winona State |
Coach Years1: | 1970–1971 |
Coach Team1: | Lenoir–Rhyne |
Coach Years2: | 1971–1972 |
Coach Team2: | High Point |
Coach Years3: | 1973–1977 |
Coach Team3: | West Texas State (asst.) |
Coach Years4: | 1977–1979 |
Coach Team4: | Louisiana Tech |
Coach Years5: | 1979–1985 |
Coach Team5: | VCU |
Coach Years6: | 1985–1991 |
Coach Team6: | Tulsa |
Coach Years7: | 1994–1999 |
Coach Team7: | Northwestern State |
Coach Years8: | 2004–2005 |
Coach Team8: | Hawaii Pacific |
Admin Years1: | 1991–1994 |
Admin Team1: | Tulsa Union HS |
Admin Years2: | 1994–1999 |
Admin Team2: | Northwestern State (assoc.) |
Admin Years3: | 2000–2004 |
Admin Team3: | Tulane (assoc.) |
Admin Years4: | 2004–2005 |
Admin Team4: | Hawaii Pacific |
Overall Record: | 356–272[1] |
Tournament Record: | 4–7 (NCAA Division I) 0–2 (NIT) |
Championships: | 4 Sun Belt regular season (1981, 1983–1985) 3 Sun Belt tournament (1980, 1981, 1985) MVC regular season (1987) MVC tournament (1986) |
Awards: | Southland Coach of the Year (1979) 2x Sun Belt Coach of the Year (1983, 1984) MVC Coach of the Year (1987) |
Joseph Donald Barnett (born January 10, 1944) is an American retired college basketball coach. He was a former head basketball coach at several Division I institutions, the most high-profile being Virginia Commonwealth University, where his most notable win consisted of a buzzer-beater NCAA Tournament win over Jim Calhoun's Northeastern Huskies. He is also well known for being a mentor of Tubby Smith. Most notably, Barnett taught Smith the philosophy of ball-line defense,[2] which is a strategy that requires all defenders to stay between the line of the ball and the baseline. His last head coaching position was in 2004–2005, when Barnett was both the head coach and athletic director at Division II Hawaii Pacific.[3]
Barnett graduated from Winona State University in 1966 with two varsity letters each in baseball and basketball. He was inducted into the school's athletic hall of fame in 2002.[4]
Barnett has a career record of 317–229 (.580) in Division I basketball, including 7 NCAA tournament appearances. During his stay at Virginia Commonwealth, Barnett led the Rams to 5 NCAA tournament appearances, with 4 of those resulting in 1st round victories.[5] In his first two years at Tulsa, he led the Golden Hurricane to back-to-back NCAA tournament appearances. Both of those, however, resulted in 1st round exits.[6] That was the last time Barnett made the NCAAs.
Also, Maurice Cheeks, former head coach of the Philadelphia 76ers, was recruited by and played under Barnett while he was an assistant coach at West Texas State. While at West Texas State, Barnett is credited with organizing "The Cager Club", a support group that helped the basketball program.
In addition, Tom Izzo was hired by Barnett to be his recruiting coordinator at Tulsa. Izzo left a low-paying student assistant position with Jud Heathcote to take the position with Tulsa. That experiment lasted all of seven weeks before Heathcote called Izzo offering him an assistant coaching position back in East Lansing.
From 1991 to 1994, Barnett was athletic director at Union High School in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Barnett also served as associate athletic director at Northwestern State while head men's basketball coach from 1994 to 1999. From 2000 to 2004, Barnett was senior associate athletic director for revenue development at Tulane University in New Orleans.[7] [8]