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Tim Floyd

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Tim Floyd

Tim Floyd (born February 25, 1954) is the current head coach of the University of Southern California men's college basketball team. Floyd is also a former head coach of several teams in both the NCAA and the NBA. Floyd is also known as the coach of the Chicago Bulls after Phil Jackson, Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, and Dennis Rodman left the team.

Personal life

Born in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, Floyd is a 1977 graduate of Louisiana Tech University. He earned a bachelor's of science degree in health and physical education from Louisiana Tech. He originally was a walk-on player at The University of Southern Mississippi, but he transferred to Louisiana Tech and was a scholarship player there.

Floyd and wife Beverly have one daughter, Shannon.

Coaching career

University of Texas at El Paso

Floyd's first coaching job was as an assistant at UTEP under Hall of Famer Don Haskins from 1977 to 1986. While Floyd was at UTEP, the Miners went to three straight NCAA Tournaments (from 1984 to 1986). They also went to the NIT three times (in 1980, 1981, and 1983), and UTEP won four Western Athletic Conference championships in those years.

University of Idaho

Tim Floyd's first assignment as a head coach came at the University of Idaho, succeeding the disappointing Bill Trumbo, who finished last in the Big Sky conference in each of his three seasons. Floyd coached the Vandals for two years. In his first season, the Vandals posted their first winning record since Don Monson left for Oregon after the 20-9 1983 season.

University of New Orleans

At the University of New Orleans, Floyd tallied a 127–58 mark in six seasons as head coach. During his tenure, UNO advanced to postseason play five times, including two NCAA Tournament appearances in 1991 and 1993 and the NIT three times. At UNO, Floyd averaged 21 wins a season. Floyd is one of only four Division I coaches who have won four conference championships in the first five years at their school. In his final season at New Orleans in 1994, the team finished 20-10. Floyd reached the 20-win plateau for the sixth time in eight seasons, and UNO made its seventh postseason appearance in eight years.

Iowa State University

Floyd was hired at Iowa State University in May 1994 as the 15th basketball coach in ISU history. In his four years at ISU, Floyd posted an 81-49 record. He is the only coach in Iowa State history to post three consecutive 20-win seasons, which in part, earned him a nickname among the NCAA nation (mostly top NCAA coaches) as "Timothy The Great". He also led the team to three straight appearances in the NCAA Tournament and three straight first-round victories.

In his first season with the Cyclones, Floyd guided the team to a then-school-record 23 victories and the second round of the NCAA Tournament. During that season, the Cyclones were ranked in the AP Top 25 poll for 11 consecutive weeks, peaking at number eleven. Four of the eleven ISU losses were to 1995 NCAA Final Four teams. The Cyclones returned to the Big Eight Conference Tournament championship for the first time since 1986. In that year, Fred Hoiberg became the first Cyclone to earn All-American honors since Jeff Grayer in 1988.

Picked in preseason polls to finish last in the Big Eight, the 1995-96 Cyclones finished second in the league with a 9-5 mark and won Big Eight Conference Tournament with a win over the Kansas Jayhawks, then ranked the number five team in the nation. The Cyclones received the highest NCAA Tournament seed in school history. As the number five seed, the Cyclones defeated California Bears but lost to Utah Utes, then coached by Rick Majerus (who, in 2004, accepted and immediately resigned from the USC head coaching job that went to Floyd). Iowa State's 24 victories that season was a school record. For his coaching efforts, Floyd was named Big Eight Coach of the Year and runner-up to Gene Keady of Purdue University for AP National Coach of the Year.

In the 1996-1997 season, Floyd and the Cyclones posted a 22-9 mark and advanced to their first NCAA Sweet Sixteen appearance in 11 years. In the NCAA Tournament, the sixth-seeded Cyclones defeated the Illinois State Redbirds in the first round and the Cincinnati Bearcats before losing to UCLA Bruins in overtime.

While at Iowa State, Floyd coached future pros Dedric Willoughby, Fred Hoiberg, Kelvin Cato, Marcus Fizer and Paul Shirley.

Chicago Bulls

On July 23, 1998, Floyd was hired head coach of the Chicago Bulls of the NBA. That off-season, the core of the Bulls championship teams retired or left, leaving the equivalent of an expansion team. During the lockout season of 1998-1999, the team posted a record of 13–37. The next season, the Bulls had a 17-65 record. The team continued to regress, posting a 15–67 record in the 2000-2001 season. His fourth year as coach was marred by fights with players and management. Floyd resigned on December 24, 2001 after a 4–21 start.

In his four seasons with the Bulls, Floyd posted a record of 49–190. The team did not make the NBA Playoffs in any of those years. Known as a favorite of Jerry Krause by the Chicago media, an entertaining press conference had Floyd proclaim [I'm not] "Jerry's boy."[1]

New Orleans Hornets

As head coach of the New Orleans Hornets in 2003-2004, Floyd posted a 41-41 record, despite the mid-season loss of Hornets star Jamal Mashburn. The Hornets lost in the first round of the playoffs, taking the Miami Heat the full seven games. Ownership was dissatisfied and dismissed Floyd after just one season.

Floyd ended his NBA career with a 93-235 overall record, including the playoffs, admitting in interviews that, as an NBA coach, "I wasn't very good at it".[2]

University of Southern California

On January 14, 2005, Floyd was hired as head coach of the USC Trojans, replacing interim coach Jim Saia who filled in after the school fired coach Henry Bibby.[3] USC had originally hired Rick Majerus on December 15, 2004, however he unexpectedly resigned five days later.[4][5] Floyd was the Trojans' immediate next choice.[4][3]

Floyd's initial season may be regarded as a success. The 2005–2006 Trojans finished the regular season with a 17–12 (8–10) record and sixth place in the Pacific 10 Conference ("Pac-10"), including three conference losses by a combined nine points. Floyd was the subject of heightened media attention in October 2006, when 14-year-old high school freshman Dwayne Polee Jr., son of former NBA player Dwayne Polee, verbally accepted a scholarship offer from Floyd. Polee had yet to play in a high school basketball game.

For the 2006–2007 season, Floyd led the Trojans to a 25–12 (13–8) record (most wins in school history) and third place in the Pacific 10 Conference ("Pac-10"). He also led this team to finals of the Pacific Life Pac-10 Tournament, where they lost to Oregon. Floyd took the Trojans to the 2007 NCAA Tournament's Sweet 16, only the second USC team to do so since 1979. However, USC lost to number one seeded UNC on March 23, 2007.

In the 2008 NCAA Tournament, Floyd's #6 seeded Trojans fell 80-67 to the #11 seed Kansas State Wildcats in the first round. Floyd's Trojans won the 2009 Pac-10 Tournament by defeating Arizona State.

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Idaho (Big Sky Conference) (1986–1988)
1986-1987 Idaho 16-14 6-10 6th
1987-1988 Idaho 19-11 11-6 2nd
Idaho: 35-25 17-16
New Orleans (American South Conference) (1988–1991)
1988-1989 New Orleans 19-11 7-3 1st NIT 1st Round
1989-1990 New Orleans 21-11 8-2 T-1st NIT Quarterfinals
1990-1991 New Orleans 23-8 9-3 T-1st NCAA 1st Round
New Orleans (Sun Belt Conference) (1991–1994)
1991-1992 New Orleans 17-15 8-8 7th
1992-1993 New Orleans 26-4 18-0 1st NCAA 1st Round
1993-1994 New Orleans 20-10 12-6 3rd NIT 2nd Round
New Orleans: 126-59 62-22
Iowa St. (Big Eight Conference) (1994–1996)
1994-1995 Iowa St. 23-11 6-8 5th NCAA 2nd Round
1995-1996 Iowa St. 24-9 9-5 2nd NCAA 2nd Round
Iowa St. (Big 12 Conference) (1996–1998)
1996-1997 Iowa St. 22-9 10-6 3rd NCAA Sweet 16
1997-1998 Iowa St. 12-18 5-11 11th
Iowa St.: 81-47 30-30
USC (Pac-10 Conference) (2005–present)
2005-2006 USC 17-12 8-10 6th
2006-2007 USC 25-12 11-7 T-3rd NCAA Sweet 16
2007–2008 USC 21-12 11-7 T-3rd NCAA 1st Round
2008–2009 USC 22-13 9-9 T-5th NCAA 2nd Round
USC: 85-50 39-33
Total: 327-181

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Notes

  1. ^ "Pity for Bulls' departed Pink Floyd? You must be kidding", The State Journal-Register, Springfield, IL, Dec. 26, 2001.
  2. ^ T.J. Simers, There's no bull in Floyd's retooling of the Trojans, Los Angeles Times, January 24, 2007.
  3. ^ a b Lonnie White, Floyd Bounces Right to Trojans, Los Angeles Times, January 15, 2005, Accessed January 16, 2009
  4. ^ a b Mike Terry and Jason Reid, He Just Wasn’t Fit to Be Tied Down, Los Angeles Times, December 21, 2004, Accessed January 16, 2009 Cite error: The named reference "LAT122104" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  5. ^ Paul Gutierrez, Floyd Looks Like a Keeper for Trojans, Los Angeles Times, January 14, 2005, Accessed January 16, 2009
Preceded by Chicago Bulls head coach
July 23, 1998–December 24, 2001
Succeeded by
Preceded by New Orleans Hornets Head Coach
2003–2004
Succeeded by

Template:Pac10BasketballCoach