maryland
maryland
  Mark Turgeon
Mark Turgeon

Player Profile
Position:
Head Coach

Experience:
1st Season

Alma Mater:
Kansas '87

05/22/2012

Aronhalt Transferring to Maryland

Guard will play his final season for Terps

04/23/2012

Cassell Jr. Signs with Terps

Baltimore guard joins big recruiting class for 2012

04/16/2012

Smotrycz Transfers to Maryland

Sharpshooting forward will have two years remaining

04/12/2012

Mitchell Signs to Play for Terps

Georgia power forward heading to College Park

03/16/2012

Inside MD Basketball Airs Sunday

Show appears on Comcast SportsNet at 9:30 a.m.

03/09/2012

2012 ACC Tournament, Maryland vs. North Carolina :: March 9, 2012 (AP Photos)

2012 ACC Tournament, Maryland vs. North Carolina :: March 9, 2012 (AP Photos)

03/08/2012

2012 ACC Tournament, Maryland Routs Wake Forest :: March 8, 2012 (AP Photos)

2012 ACC Tournament, Maryland Routs Wake Forest :: March 8, 2012 (AP Photos)

03/04/2012

030412 Mens Basketball

Maryland v Virginia

02/21/2012

022112 Mens Basketball

Maryland v Miami

02/18/2012

Maryland vs. No. 22 Virginia - 2/18/12

AP photos from today's game

Mark Turgeon, who won back-to-back Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year honors at Texas A&M, is in his first season as men's basketball coach at the University of Maryland.

He comes to College Park after directing Texas A&M to four consecutive appearances in the NCAA Tournament, posting a 97-40 record in four seasons with the Aggies. He was the Big 12 Coach of the Year in both 2010 and 2011 and is the only coach in Big 12 history with at least 24 victories in each of his four seasons.

Turgeon, 46, replaced longtime Terrapin head coach Gary Williams, who announced his retirement in May after 22 seasons at Maryland.

"Maryland's got a great basketball tradition," Turgeon said at the time of his hiring. "(These programs are) real similar. It's a gut feeling. Both programs are great. I'm a blessed person to have the choice that I had to make today. They're both great programs."

"We're thrilled to bring Mark to the University, where I'm sure he will continue to build on the great legacy and success of Maryland Basketball," said Anderson. "In Mark, we have brought one of the outstanding young coaches in the country, and one who has a proven record of achievement on and off the court. We couldn't be more excited."

Turgeon is 250-159 after 13 seasons overall as a head coach. In seven years at Wichita State, he built the Shockers into a power in the Missouri Valley Conference, earning the league title and an NCAA Sweet Sixteen appearance in 2006. In that NCAA Tournament, Wichita State beat Seton Hall and Tennessee before losing to eventual Final Four participant George Mason.

He went 128-89 at Wichita State (2000-07), posting the third-most wins in school history. The Shockers went to three straight NITs from 2003 to 2005 in addition to the 2006 NCAAs, the first time WSU had four straight postseason appearances in 40 years.

He began his head-coaching career at Jacksonville State, going 17-11 in his final season there (1999-2000) after going 8-18 in his first year.

Turgeon was an assistant at Kansas for five seasons, first under Larry Brown (1987-88) and then under Roy Williams (1988-92). The Jayhawks made the NCAA Tournament in four of those seasons, winning the national championship in 1988 and finishing second in 1991. KU also won Big Eight titles in 1991 and 1992 with Turgeon on staff.

He was the top assistant under Jerry Green at Oregon from 1992-97 and was an assistant coach under Brown with the Philadelphia 76ers in 1997-98 before taking the head coaching position at Jacksonville State.

A point guard at Kansas from 1984-87, Turgeon was the first player in Jayhawks history to play in four straight NCAA Tournaments. KU went 108-33 under Brown in that stretch. Turgeon served as team captain in his junior and senior seasons, leading the Jayhawks to the 1986 NCAA Final Four.

As a student-athlete, he was selected to the Big Eight All-Academic Team in 1986 and was a Big Eight All-Freshman pick in 1984. He earned a bachelor of science degree in personnel administration from Kansas in 1987.

A native of Topeka, Kan., Turgeon led Hayden High School to back-to-back Class 4A state titles in 1982 and 1983, earning all-tournament honors each year. A first team all-state pick as a senior, Hayden went 47-3 in his high-school career.

In the summer of 2008, Turgeon was inducted into the Topeka Sports Hall of Fame.

Turgeon ("TURGE-in") is married to the former Ann Fowler of Chicago, Ill, and they have two sons - William Harris and Leo - and a daughter, Ella.

Turgeon Year-By-Year

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS (Assistant Coach)
Year Head Coach Record Postseason
1987-88 Larry Brown 27-11 NCAA Champions
1988-89 Roy Williams 19-12
1989-90 Roy Williams 30-5 NCAA Second Round
1990-91 Roy Williams 27-8 NCAA Runner-Up
1991-92 Roy Williams 27-5 NCAA Second Round

UNIVERSITY OF OREGON (Assistant Coach)
Year Head Coach Record Postseason
1992-93 Jerry Green 10-20
1993-94 Jerry Green 10-17
1994-95 Jerry Green 19-9 NCAA First Round
1995-96 Jerry Green 16-13
1996-97 Jerry Green 17-11 NIT First Round

PHILADELPHIA 76ERS (Assistant Coach)
Year Head Coach Record Postseason
1997-98 Larry Brown 31-51

JACKSONVILLE STATE (Head Coach / 25-29, 2 Seasons)
Year Record Postseason
1998-99 8-18
1999-2000 17-11

WICHITA STATE (Head Coach / 128-90, 7 Seasons)
Year Record Postseason
2000-01 9-19
2001-02 15-15
2002-03 18-12 NIT Opening Round
2003-04 21-11 NIT First Round
2004-05 22-10 NIT Second Round
2005-06 (MVC Coach of the Year) 26-9 NCAA Sweet Sixteen
2006-07 17-14

TEXAS A&M (Head Coach / 97-40, 4 Seasons)
Year Record Postseason
2007-08 25-11 NCAA Second Round
2008-09 24-10 NCAA Second Round
2009-10 (Big 12 Coach of the Year) 24-10 NCAA Second Round
2010-11 (Big 12 Coach of the Year) 24-9 NCAA Second Round

13 Seasons as Head Coach / 250-159 / 8 Postseasons
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