Teri Clemens Explained

Teri Clemens
Nationality:American
Coachteams:Washington University in St. Louis

Teri Clemens is a retired American volleyball coach. Clemens served as the head coach at Washington University in St. Louis for 14 years, where she led the Bears to seven NCAA Division III national championships, including six consecutive from 1991-96.

Early life

Before taking over for Washington University, she served as the head coach at Incarnate Word Academy in Saint Louis, Missouri, where she accumulated a 155-15 record with three Missouri State championships in 1982, 1983 and 1984.

Washington University

Washington University dominated Division III under Clemens, as they won the NCAA Division III national championship seven times, including an unprecedented six in a row from 1991-96. Clemens coached the Bears for fourteen seasons, from 1985-1998. She now ranks second in the NCAA Division III record book for career-winning percentage of .873.[1]

Aside from coaching, Clemens served on the AVCA All-America Committee as the chair of the South Region and was an AVCA poll voter. She also served as the Division III representative on the AVCA Board of Directors from 1990-93. During her time on the board, the AVCA instituted the Division III national poll to provide publicity for schools playing at the Division III level. She was inducted into the AVCA Hall of Fame in 2004.[2]

Clemens graduated from Parkway West Senior High School in 1974. Following her tenure at Washington University, Clemens gave the commencement address at PWSH graduation.

Books

Honors and awards

Notes and References

  1. http://bearsports.wustl.edu/volleyball/volleyballhistory.html Washington University volleyball history
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20041109034611/http://www.avca.org/NewsDetail.asp?id=177 AVCA announces 2004 Hall of Fame class
  3. http://www2.ncaa.org/portal/media_and_events/press_room/2005/november/20051101_diiivb25thanniv.html NCAA named Division III 25th anniversary team
  4. http://record.wustl.edu/archive/1999/04-22-99/articles/clemens.html Clemens receives 1999 Eliot Society Search award