Herb Sendek

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Herb Sendek

Title Head coach
College Arizona State
Sport Basketball
Team record 21-12 (.636)
Born February 22, 1963 (1963-02-22) (age 45)
Place of birth Flag of the United States Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Career highlights
Overall 283-190 (.598)
Championships
MAC Regular Season Championship (1995)
Awards
ACC Coach of the Year (2004)
MAC Coach of the Year (1995)
Playing career
1981–1984 Carnegie Mellon
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1985–1989
1989–1993
1994–1996
1996–2006
2006–present
Providence (asst.)
Kentucky (asst.)
Miami (OH)
NC State
Arizona State

Herbert J. Sendek (born February 22, 1963 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States) is the head basketball coach at Arizona State University.

Contents

[edit] Background

Sendek was formally introduced as the ASU head coach on April 3, 2006.[1] A graduate of Carnegie Mellon University, he served as an assistant coach at Providence College and the University of Kentucky under Rick Pitino. He was then the head coach at Miami University (Ohio) and at North Carolina State University. He was the head coach at N.C. State for 10 years. He is the grandson of a coal miner. Herb Sr., his father, is a teacher and basketball coach at both the high school and junior college levels. During his youth, Sendek was influenced by several coaches who had a great impact on him, including legendary junior college coach Bill Shay. Sendek became a standout guard as a senior at Penn Hills High School, earning All-East Suburban notice as the team captain. He was also a leader in the classroom, graduating with a perfect 4.0 grade-point average. He was recently named to the Penn Hills Hall of Fame and to the East Boros Chapter of the Pennsylvania Hall of Fame. From there, Sendek opted to attend Carnegie Mellon University, earning a Carnegie Merit Scholarship and the opportunity to play for coach Dave Maloney.

[edit] Timeline

[edit] Coaching career

[edit] NC State

Sendek was hired at NC State in 1996 after three years of success at Miami (Ohio), his first head coaching experience. He immediately improved upon the Les Robinson era since internal restriction applied to Robinson were relaxed, winning 17 games for the program's first winning record in six years. In his first year at NC State, the Wolfpack also finished the year winning eight of eleven games, advanced to the finals of the ACC Tournament, and earned a trip to the postseason in the NIT. Despite this improvement, Sendek was never able to achieve success on the level of prior NCSU coaches Everett Case, Press Marivich, Norm Sloan and Jim Valvano.

Sendek coached NC State to the NCAA tournament five consecutive years from 2002 until 2006 (tying the school record). He had his most success during these last five years, winning his 100th game at NC State in 2002 and having a winning conference record in each year but one. In 2004, Sendek won ACC Coach of the Year and Julius Hodge, one of Sendek's most prized recruits during his NC State tenure, won the ACC Men's Basketball Player of the Year. In 2005, NC State upset defending champion Connecticut in the second round of the NCAA tournament to advance to the Sweet Sixteen, NC State's deepest run into the tournament during Sendek's years. Sendek finished his NC State coaching career with a 71-88 record in the ACC and a 32-87 record against RPI top 50 teams.

[edit] Arizona State

On April 3, 2006, Sendek accepted the head coaching job at Arizona State. While his first year record in the Pac-10 was a paltry 2-16, recruiting went well: ASU signed Jerren Shipp, a highly regarded high school guard, point guard Derrick Glasser from the LA Area, and Eric Boateng, a former McDonald's All-American who transferred from Duke. His second recruiting class included highly touted McDonald's All-American James Harden and point guard Jamelle McMillan (a four star recruit and the son of former NC State Basketball star Nate McMillan).

The 2007-2008 season was a great improvement over the previous season. Sendek and freshman guard James Harden led the Sun Devils to fifth place in the Pac-10 Conference, including a sweep of rival Arizona. Arizona State was rewarded with a number 1 seed in the 2008 NIT.

[edit] Style of Play

Sendek's teams have come to be characterized by tenacious match up zone defense, and methodical offense. His style of offense incorporates many Princeton principles into a modified motion offense, and is often characterized by a center posting up at the top of the key, many handoffs and lateral screens, as well as numerous backdoor cuts. Herb's teams often rely on the three point shot to set up the backdoor play, which has at times resulted in long scoring droughts on poor shooting nights. Herb is a methodical coach and demands the same from his players. Currently at ASU Sendek has been using a modified 3-2 zone defense.

[edit] Head coaching record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Miami (OH) (Mid-American Conference) (1993 — 1996)
1993–1994 Miami (OH) 19-11 12-6 2nd NIT 1st Round
1994–1995 Miami (OH) 23-7 16-2 1st NCAA 2nd Round
1995–1996 Miami (OH) 21-8 12-6 3rd NIT 1st Round
Miami (OH): 63-26 40-14
NC State (Atlantic Coast Conference) (1996 — 2006)
1996–1997 NC State 17-15 4-12 8th NIT 2nd Round
1997-1998 NC State 17-15 5-11 8th NIT 2nd Round
1998–1999 NC State 19-14 6-10 5th NIT 2nd Round
1999–2000 NC State 20-14 6-10 6th NIT 4th Place
2000–2001 NC State 13-16 5-11 7th none
2001–2002 NC State 23-11 9-7 T-3rd NCAA 2nd Round
2002–2003 NC State 18-13 9-7 4th NCAA 1st Round
2003–2004 NC State 21-10 11-5 2nd NCAA 2nd Round
2004–2005 NC State 21-14 7-9 T-6th NCAA Sweet 16
2005–2006 NC State 22-10 10-6 4th NCAA 2nd Round
NC State: 191-132 72-88
Arizona State (Pacific Ten Conference) (2006 — present)
2006–2007 Arizona State 8-22 2-16 10th none
2007–2008 Arizona State 21-12 9-9 5th NIT 1 seed
Arizona State: 29-34 11-25


Total: 283-190

      National Champion         Conference Champion         Conference Tournament Champion


[edit] See also

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[edit] References

  1. ^ Arizona State University (April 3, 2006). "Arizona State Names Herb Sendek Men's Head Basketball Coach". Press release. Retrieved on 2006-04-03.

[edit] External links