Maine Black Bears men's basketball
The Maine Black Bears men's basketball team is the basketball team that represents University of Maine in Orono, Maine, United States. The school's team currently competes in the America East Conference, which they joined upon its founding in 1979. Their current head coach is Richard Barron, who previously served as the head coach of the women's basketball program from 2011-2017 before taking a leave of absence.[3] The Black Bears have never appeared in the NCAA tournament.
Maine Black Bears | |||
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| |||
University | University of Maine | ||
First season | 1904–05[1] | ||
All-time record | 1184-903[1] | ||
Head coach | Richard Barron (3rd season) | ||
Conference | America East | ||
Location | Orono, Maine | ||
Arena | Cross Insurance Center, Memorial Gym (Capacity: 5,800 , 3,100) | ||
Nickname | Black Bears | ||
Colors | Maine Blue, White, and Navy[2] | ||
Uniforms | |||
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Coaches
Overall | Conference | [4] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Coach | Years | Record | Pct. | Record | Pct. | Notes |
George Huntington | 1903–05 | 15–11 | .577 | |||
George Owen | 1905–06 | 10–4 | .714 | |||
John Phelan | 1906–08 | 12–9 | .571 | |||
John Neary | 1908–10 | 13–7 | .650 | |||
William C. Kenyon | 1937–42; 1944–45 | 30–45 | .413 | 9–31 | .225 | |
Samuel Sezak | 1942–44 | 8–14 | .364 | 4–4 | .500 | |
Eck Allen | 1945–49 | 34–33 | .507 | 8–20 | .286 | |
Rome Rankin | 1949–54 | 38–53 | .418 | 11–27 | .289 | |
Russell DeVette | 1954–55 | 4–13 | .235 | 1–7 | .125 | |
Harold Woodbury | 1955–58 | 20–38 | .345 | 9–17 | .346 | |
Brian McCall | 1958–68 | 38–53 | .418 | 11–27 | .289 | |
Gil Philbrick | 1968–71 | 25–21 | .543 | 9–21 | .300 | |
Skip Chappelle | 1971–88 | 217–226 | .490 | 89–124 | .418 | |
Rudy Keeling | 1988–96 | 106–122 | .465 | 60–56 | .517 | |
John Giannini | 1997–04 | 125–111 | .530 | 75–65 | .536 | |
Ted Woodward | 2004–14 | 117–178 | .397 | 65–97 | .401 | |
Bob Walsh | 2014–18 | 24–100 | .194 | 12–52 | .188 | |
Richard Barron | 2018–20 | 14–49 | .222 | 8–24 | .250 |
Rivalries
- University of New Hampshire Wildcats – UMO's rivalry with UNH is the longest continuous rivalry between two non-Ivy League schools, lasting 116 seasons as of 2020.
Team records
Single Season records
[5] | Player | Record | Season |
---|---|---|---|
MIN | Errick Greene | 1135 | 2001–02 |
PT | Rufus Harris | 718 | 1979-80 |
PPG | Rufus Harris | 25.6 | 1979-80 |
FG | Rufus Harris | 271 | 1979–80 |
FG% | Rickey White | .662 | 2002–03 |
3PT | Gerald McLemore | 102 | 2009–10 |
3PT% | Fred Meeks | .428 | 1997–98 |
FT | Rufus Harris | 176 | 1979–80 |
FT% | Aaron Calixte | .899 | 2017-18 |
REB | Robert Warner | 352 | 1974-75 |
AST | Andy Bedard | 193 | 1999-00 |
STL | Marty Higgins | 95 | 1991-92 |
BLK | Justin Rowe | 121 | 2001-02 |
Career records
[6] | Player | Record | Season |
---|---|---|---|
MIN | Gerrald McLemore | 3856 | 2008-12 |
PT | Rufus Harris | 2206 | 1976-80 |
PPG | Jim Stephenon | 22.7 | 1966-69 |
FG | Rufus Harris | 834 | 1976–80 |
FG% | Kevin Nelson | .545 | 1975–79 |
3PT | Gerald McLemore | 323 | 2008–12 |
3PT% | Gerald McLemore | .382 | 2008–12 |
FT | Rufus Harris | 538 | 1976–80 |
FT% | Rufus Harris | .791 | 1976-80 |
REB | Allen Ledbetter | 1017 | 1995-99 |
AST | Marty Higgins | 619 | 1988-92 |
STL | Marty Higgins | 243 | 1988-92 |
BLK | Justin Rowe | 226 | 2001-03 |
Notable players
- Rufus Harris, 1979-80 America East Conference Player of the Year
- Noam Laish (born 1993), Israeli basketball player
References
- "2013-14 Maine Men's Basketball Media Guide". Issuu. University of Maine Athletics Department. Retrieved August 16, 2015.
- Colors – Branding Toolbox – University of Maine. Retrieved April 5, 2017.
- "Barron named UMaine men's basketball head coach following Walsh's decision not to extend contract" (Press release). Maine Black Bears. March 5, 2018. Retrieved July 26, 2018.
- "Maine Black Bears Index". College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. Retrieved 2020-12-20.
- "Maine Leaders & Records - Season". College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. Retrieved 2020-12-20.
- "Maine Leaders & Records - Career". College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. Retrieved 2020-12-20.
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