List of Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball head coaches

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mark Few at a press conference after the ESPN Armed Forces Classic
Mark Few, the current head coach of the Gonzaga Bulldogs, and the winningest head coach in Bulldogs men's basketball history.

The following is a list of Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball head coaches. There have been 26 head coaches of the Bulldogs in their 116-season history.[1]

Gonzaga's current head coach is Mark Few. He was hired as the Bulldogs' head coach in July 1999,[2] replacing Dan Monson, who left to become the head coach at Minnesota.[3]

No. Tenure Coach Years Record Pct.
1907–1908 No coach 1 9–2 .818
1 1908–1909 George Varnell 1 10–2 .833
2 1909–1910 William Mulligan 1 11–3 .786
3 1910–1911 Frank McKevitt 1 8–1 .889
4 1911–1912 Fred Burns 1 4–2 .667
5 1912–1913 Ed Mulholland 1 4–2 .667
6 1913–1915 Robert E. Harmon 2 10–4 .714
7 1915–1916 William S. Higgins 1 2–7 .222
8 1916–1917 John F. McGough 1 4–5 .444
9 1917–1918 Jimmy Condon 1 3–2 .600
10 1918–1920 Edward Geheves 2 9–17 .346
11 1920–1926 Gus Dorais 6 14–16 .467
12 1926–1931 Maurice J. "Clipper" Smith 5 46–59 .438
13 1931–1932 Sam Dagly 1 4–7 .364
14 1932–1933 Perry Ten Eyck 1 4–15 .211
15 1933–1942
1946–1949
Claude McGrath 12 129–133 .492
16 1942–1943 Bill Frazier 1 2–9 .182
17 1943–1944 Charles Henry 1 22–4 .846
18 1944–1945 Eugene Wozny 1 12–19 .387
19 1945–1946 Gordon C. White 1 6–14 .300
20 1949–1951 L. T. Underwood 2 26–33 .441
21 1951–1972 Hank Anderson 21 290–275 .513
22 1972–1978 Adrian Buoncristiani 6 78–82 .488
23 1978–1981
1985–1997
Dan Fitzgerald 15 252–171 .596
24 1981–1985 Jay Hillock 4 60–50 .545
25 1997–1999 Dan Monson 2 52–17 .754
26 1999–present Mark Few 24 688–135 .836
Totals 26 coaches 116 seasons 1,773–1,125 .612
Records updated through end of 2022–23 season
Source[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "2021–22 Gonzaga Men's Basketball FInal Season Guide" (PDF). Gonzaga Athletics. p. 99-100. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
  2. ^ Geranios, Nicholas K. (July 26, 1999). "Few can replace Monson". Moscow-Pullman Daily News. Associated Press. p. 1C. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
  3. ^ "Minnesota Hires Gonzaga's Monson". Los Angeles Times. July 25, 1999. Retrieved March 11, 2023.