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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early years  





2 Early coaching career  





3 Appalachian State  





4 Georgia Tech  





5 College of Charleston  





6 Head coaching record  





7 Personal life  





8 See also  





9 References  














Bobby Cremins






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Bobby Cremins
Biographical details
Born (1947-07-04) July 4, 1947 (age 77)
The Bronx, New York, U.S.
Playing career
1967–1970South Carolina
Position(s)Point guard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1971–1973Point Park (assistant)
1973–1975South Carolina (assistant)
1975–1981Appalachian State
1981–2000Georgia Tech
2006–2012College of Charleston
Head coaching record
Overall579–375
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
NCAA Division I Regional – Final Four (1990)
3ACC tournament (1985, 1990, 1993)
2ACC regular season (1985, 1996)
SoCon tournament (1979)
4SoCon regular season (1978, 1979, 1981, 2011)
Awards
Naismith College Coach of the Year (1990)
ACC Coach of the Year (1983, 1985, 1996)
4× SoCon Coach of the Year (1976, 1978, 1981, 2011)

Robert Joseph Cremins Jr. (born July 4, 1947) is an American retired college basketball coach. He served as a head coachatAppalachian State, Georgia Tech, and the College of Charleston.

Early years[edit]

Cremins attended All Hallows High School in the Bronx, New York, where he was born to Irish immigrants from County Kerry. In 1966, he entered the University of South Carolina (USC) on a basketball scholarship, where he played under coach Frank McGuire. While Cremins was there, the South Carolina team won 61 games, with 17 losses, while Cremins was the starting point guard for three years for the Gamecocks. Cremins, known as "Cakes",[citation needed] was also the captain of South Carolina's 1969–70 team which went 25–3 and won USC's first (and only) ACC regular season title. He graduated from USC in 1970 with a B.S. degree in marketing, before playing professional basketball for one year in Ecuador.

Early coaching career[edit]

Cremins started his coaching career in 1971 as an assistant coach at Point Park CollegeinPittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He next returned to South Carolina to become McGuire's assistant coach and to earn a M.S. degree in guidance and counseling in 1972.

Appalachian State[edit]

At age 27, Cremins became one of the youngest NCAA Division I head coaches in history when he took charge of the basketball team at Appalachian State University. He inherited a program that had only won 22 games since joining Division I five years earlier, and had just come off the worst season in school history at 3–23. In his first year at Appalachian his team had a record of 13–14, but then they accumulated an 87–56 record over the next five seasons, with three Southern Conference regular season championships. The Mountaineers posted a 23–6 record, and received an NCAA Tournament slot in 1979 after sweeping the Southern Conference regular season and tournament titles.

Georgia Tech[edit]

Cremins's performance at Appalachian State gathered him some national attention in the NCAA coaching ranks, including catching the eye of Georgia Tech athletic director Homer Rice. After Rice persuaded him to come to Atlanta, Cremins was hired as the Rambling Wreck's new head basketball coach at the close of the 1981 season, on April 14, 1981.

When Cremins arrived at Georgia Tech, he walked into a situation that was as bad, if not worse, than what he'd inherited at Appalachian State. Georgia Tech had only notched one winning season in the previous 10 years, and had just suffered the worst season in school history—a 4–23 overall record and a winless record in Atlantic Coast Conference play.

Considering the poor state of the program he'd inherited, Cremins engineered a very quick return to respectability. In only his third year in Atlanta, he led the Yellow Jackets to the 1984 NIT—their first postseason berth of any sort in 13 years. A year later, the Yellow Jackets shocked the ACC by winning a share of the regular season title, then winning the conference tournament. They then advanced all the way to the Elite Eight, tallying an overall record of 27–8. In 1990, Cremins's team advanced all the way to the Final Four in the NCAA Tournament, with an overall 28–7 record. The 28 wins are still a school record for wins in a season.

Cremins was three times the ACC "Coach of the Year": In 1983 with the first ever Yellow Jackets' ACC tournament victory, and an overall 13–15 won/loss record; again in 1985, and again in 1996 when his team posted a 24–12 record, won the ACC regular-season championship with a 13–3 record (only the second time in 15 years that a team from North Carolina had not won at least a share of the title), and progressed to the NCAA basketball tournament's "Sweet 16" before losing to Cincinnati. Cremins' coaching of the 1990 Yellow Jackets' team earned him the Naismith College Coach of the Year honor.

Cremins had a host of players that went on to have successful NBA careers. First there was Mark Price (the Cleveland Cavaliers) and John Salley (the Detroit Pistons) in the early 1980s, followed by Duane Ferrell, Tom Hammonds, Dennis Scott, Brian Oliver, Kenny Anderson, Jon Barry, Travis Best, Stephon Marbury, Jason Collier and Matt Harpring.

Cremins was an assistant coach on the first-ever gold medal-winning American World University Games team in 1986, assisting the head coach Lute Olson of the University of Arizona. Cremins also assisted Olson at the 1986 FIBA World Championship, also winning the gold medal there.[1] During the summer of 1989 he coached the American team that qualified for the 1990 FIBA World Championship.

Cremins assisted former NBA coach Lenny Wilkens in the American basketball team's appearance in the Summer Olympic Games of 1996inAtlanta. This team was the second of the "Dream Teams" in the Olympic Games, and it featured such NBA stars as Charles Barkley, Karl Malone, Reggie Miller, Shaquille O'Neal, Scottie Pippen, David Robinson and John Stockton, several of whom were returning for their second Olympic Games basketball tournament. This "Dream Team" was undefeated in the Olympic basketball tournament, of course, and it defeated the second-place Yugoslavian team 95–69 in the championship game in winning the gold medal.

On March 24, 1993, Cremins agreed to coach basketball at his alma mater, the University of South Carolina, before changing his mind and deciding three days later to continue at Georgia Tech. In 2003, Georgia Tech officially named the basketball court at the Alexander Memorial Coliseum on the Georgia Tech campus, the "Cremins Court". Paul Hewitt would take his place at Georgia Tech in 2000.

Cremins announced his retirement after the 1999–2000 season with a 25-year coaching record of 452–303 (a winning percentage of .599), and with a Georgia Tech coaching record of 354–237 in 19 seasons (also a .599 winning percentage). He is far and away the winningest coach in Georgia Tech history.

With his platinum blond hair, Cremins was an iconic figure at Georgia Tech. It was very common for fans to show up at Alexander Memorial Coliseum wearing blond wigs.

Cremins was a member of the 2006 induction class in the Georgia Tech Sports Hall of Fame.

College of Charleston[edit]

Turning down numerous offers to coach during his retirement, and even an occasional athletic directors job, Cremins toured the country doing motivational speaking, did television commentary on ACC and NCAA basketball, and worked with charities, mainly for Coaches vs. Cancer and the Jimmy V Foundation. Cremins also raised money for a five-to-six week summer program, half of which include disadvantaged children, the Hilton Head Basketball Camp 101.

In 2006, Cremins returned to coaching at the College of Charleston, hoping to restore the basketball program there to the mid-major power status that it experienced under coach John Kresse from 1980 to 2002. To some degree, Cremins succeeded, leading the team to four twenty-win seasons in his six seasons there, in addition to signing the highest-rated high school recruit in school history, Adjehi Baru. Another highlight of Cremins' tenure was a home upset over a North Carolina team ranked number nine in the country on January 4, 2010.[2]

Having taken a medical leave of absence on January 27, 2012, which lasted for the duration of the 2011–2012 season, Cremins retired from coaching on March 19, 2012, citing physical exhaustion.

Head coaching record[edit]

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Appalachian State Mountaineers (Southern Conference) (1975–1981)
1975–76 Appalachian State 13–14 6–6 5th
1976–77 Appalachian State 17–12 8–4 3rd
1977–78 Appalachian State 15–13 9–3 1st
1978–79 Appalachian State 23–6 11–3 1st NCAA Division I First Round
1979–80 Appalachian State 12–16 6–10 T–6th
1980–81 Appalachian State 20–9 11–5 T–1st
Appalachian State: 100–70 (.588) 51–31 (.622)
Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets (Atlantic Coast Conference) (1981–2000)
1981–82 Georgia Tech 10–16 3–11 8th
1982–83 Georgia Tech 13–15 4–10 6th
1983–84 Georgia Tech 18–11 6–8 T–5th NIT First Round
1984–85 Georgia Tech 27–8 9–5 T–1st NCAA Division I Elite Eight
1985–86 Georgia Tech 27–7 11–3 2nd NCAA Division I Sweet 16
1986–87 Georgia Tech 16–13 7–7 5th NCAA Division I First Round
1987–88 Georgia Tech 22–10 8–6 4th NCAA Division I Second Round
1988–89 Georgia Tech 20–12 8–6 5th NCAA Division I First Round
1989–90 Georgia Tech 28–7 8–6 T–3rd NCAA Division I Final Four
1990–91 Georgia Tech 17–13 6–8 T–5th NCAA Division I Second Round
1991–92 Georgia Tech 23–12 8–8 T–4th NCAA Division I Sweet 16
1992–93 Georgia Tech 19–11 8–8 6th NCAA Division I First Round
1993–94 Georgia Tech 16–13 7–9 6th NIT First Round
1994–95 Georgia Tech 18–12 8–8 5th
1995–96 Georgia Tech 24–12 13–3 1st NCAA Division I Sweet 16
1996–97 Georgia Tech 9–18 3–13 9th
1997–98 Georgia Tech 19–14 6–10 6th NIT Quarterfinal
1998–99 Georgia Tech 15–16 6–10 T–5th NIT First Round
1999–00 Georgia Tech 13–17 5–11 8th
Georgia Tech: 354–237 (.599) 134–150 (.472)
College of Charleston Cougars (Southern Conference) (2006–2012)
2006–07 College of Charleston 22–11 13–5 2nd (South)
2007–08 College of Charleston 16–17 9–11 3rd (South)
2008–09 College of Charleston 27–9 15–5 3rd (South) CBI Second Round
2009–10 College of Charleston 22–12 14–4 2nd (South) CBI Second Round
2010–11 College of Charleston 26–11 14–4 1st (South) NIT Quarterfinal
2011–12 College of Charleston 12–8 * 4–5 * 4th (South)
College of Charleston: 125–68 (.648) 69–34 (.670)
Total: 579–375 (.607)

      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

*= Team record at the time of Cremins' medical leave of absence on January 27, 2012. CofC finished season 19–12 overall with interim head coach Mark Byington being credited with a 7–4 coaching record.

Personal life[edit]

With his wife Carolyn, Cremins has one child, Bobby III, who is married to Jennifer, and two grandsons, Risen (Robert Joseph Cremins IV) and Xander (Alexander Charles Cremins). He also has two step-daughters, Liz and Suzie, from Carolyn's earlier marriage. He lives in Hilton Head, South Carolina.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ 1986 USA Basketball Archived November 13, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ "College of Charleston stuns No. 9 North Carolina - College Basketball - Rivals.com". Archived from the original on September 8, 2014. Retrieved February 20, 2014.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bobby_Cremins&oldid=1187942773"

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