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BIOGRAPHY
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What they're saying about Terry
Waldrop |
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Now in his thirteenth season, Terry Waldrop is the
winningest coach in Texas Wesleyan University Men's
Basketball history. He reached that milestone in the
2007-08 season with his 161st career win and the mark
now stands at 245.
In his seventh season, the program reached the pinnacle
of NAIA Basketball when they won the 69th Annual Buffalo
Funds NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Championship, and
Waldrop was named both Rawlings NAIA and the National
Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) NAIA Coach of
the Year.
Since the national championship run, the program has hit
a new gear. The Rams have made four more NAIA National
Tournament appearances in the last five years. They have
been ranked nationally in 43 consecutive NAIA Coaches'
Polls, marking the third longest active streak. In the
last four years, their 103 wins ranks second in the
state of Texas only to the University of Texas; however,
the Rams own a higher winning percentage (.769) than the
Longhorns (.741). The team has also been nearly
unbeatable at home, delivering a mind-boggling 45-1
record in the last three seasons.
Last season, the Rams put together an historic season
and Waldrop was once again a finalist for the National
Coach of the Year award. At 30-4 the Rams matched the
highest win total in the 74-year history of TWU
Basketball. The team won its fourth consecutive Red
River Athletic Conference regular season championship.
At 21-1, their only conference loss came at
LSU-Shreveport when the Pilots were ranked #1 in the
country. The team's defense was the best in the country
allowing opponents to shoot an anemic 36.2% from the
field. The Rams also led the nation in 3-point field
goal percentage defense at 26% and was the national
leader in rebound margin at +12 per game and also total
rebounds at 47.7 per game. Five Rams were named
All-Conference, while Brian Wanamaker hit the 1,000
point plateau in only his second season and was named
RRAC Player of the Year and 1st-team All-American.
Jonathan Blake was also an Honorable Mention
All-American selection.
In the 2005-06 season, several years of hard work and
competition against some of the best teams in the
country paid off. Waldrop led the Rams to a 10-game
winning streak and a 76-69 win at two-time defending
Southland Conference Champion and NCAA Division I
Tournament participant Southeastern Louisiana. Then the
Rams pulled off one of the most remarkable runs in NAIA
history when they won the National Championship as the
27th seed in the field of 32 teams. The 2005-06 Rams
solidified their place as the best team in school
history when they defeated Carroll College 73-70 to
advance to the Fab Four for the first time in program
history. They then defeated Oklahoma Baptist, 83-72, to
advance to the title game. In the title game,
All-American Ben Hunt scored a career high 34 points,
including a three with 0.2 seconds remaining to seal a
67-65 win.
The Rams' 25 wins were the third most in school history,
while their 16 conference wins were a school record.
They also set 15 school records after setting a
remarkable 17 in the previous season. For his work in
the 2005-06 season, Waldrop received two national Coach
of the Year awards and was named Alumnus of the Year at
the United States Sports Academy.
Three years removed from their first national title,
Waldrop led the Rams to one of the most outstanding
seasons in school history in 2008-09 and was named RRAC
Coach of the Year. The team went 29-5, including a
perfect 17-0 at home, and was one win shy of the school
single season record. They were also one shy of a school
record with an 18-game winning streak. The team won its
second straight RRAC Regular Season Title and advanced
to the NAIA Sweet 16. Chris Berry became the school's
second 1st-team All-American after he broke Clifton
McNeely's single season scoring record. Berry finished
with 740 points, averaging 21.8 per game, and was also
named Texas Small College Player of the Year.
In his first season, Waldrop made an immediate impact on
the program, leading the then NCAA Division II Rams to a
15-win season and the best winning percentage at
Wesleyan in more than a decade.
In the 2001-02 season, Waldrop led the Rams to a 17-9
finish with an 8-1 home record, then Wesleyan's best
all-time home winning percentage. The Rams finished the
year in the USCAA National Tournament in Detroit,
advancing to the Elite Eight.
In the 2002-03, the Rams finished the season with a
22-12 record. The squad included 6-10, Honorable-Mention
All-American, David Johnson, who led the nation in
blocked shots for two seasons.
The 2004-05 Rams set 17 school records, including most
three-pointers made (348) and most three-pointers
attempted (865). In addition, they led the nation in
threes made per game with 10.9. They were led by
2nd-team All-American Tommy Johnson, who made what was
then a school record 109 three-pointers.
In 2006-07, Waldrop led the Rams to 19 wins. The team
featured two Honorable Mention All-Americans in Evan
Patterson and CJ Higginbotham, who led all levels of
collegiate basketball with his 53% long range shooting.
In 2007-08, Waldrop led the Rams back to the national
tournament. The Rams went 20-12 overall and won the RRAC
regular season title with a 12-4 record. Their title
clinching win came at Jarvis Christian in the regular
season finale. That win also marked coach Waldrop's
161st coaching win, making him the winningest coach in
program history. The Rams earned an at-large bid to the
NAIA National Tournament where they were defeated,
73-71, by McKendree University in the opening round.
In 2009-10 the Rams won their third consecutive RRAC
Championship with a record of 16-4, and made their
fourth NAIA National Tournament Appearance in the last
five years. The team featured five All-Conference
selections and one All-American in senior guard Jamel
White. White averaged 22.4 points per game for the
season and 30 points per game in the national
tournament. White nearly led the Rams past eventual
champion Oklahoma Baptist with a 40-point performance in
the Sweet 16.
Prior to joining Wesleyan, Waldrop was an assistant to
John Lyles at Southeastern Louisiana University, an NCAA
Division I program on the north shore of New Orleans.
During his five seasons with the Lions, SLU won a Trans
America Athletic Conference Championship, had two
nationally rated recruiting classes, and defeated
nationally ranked College of Charleston, snapping one of
the nation's longest winning streaks.
Waldrop began his collegiate coaching career in Texas at
Navarro Junior College. He was an assistant for
widely-respected Coach Lewis Orr, (a Texas Wesleyan
alum) where he helped bring in three All-American
players, two of whom went on to play in the NBA. Ruben
Garces led Providence to the Elite Eight and later
played for the Phoenix Suns, while Corey Brewer was
honored as the Big 12 Player of the Year at Oklahoma and
became a first-round draft choice of the Miami Heat.
Waldrop took his first head coaching position at
Sterlington High School where he posted back-to-back
20-win seasons with the Panthers. He began his coaching
career at West Monroe High School in Louisiana, serving
as an assistant for Sidney Smith. While at West Monroe,
Waldrop helped guide the Rebels to several USA Today
Top-25 rankings and two regional finals appearances.
Waldrop is a 1986 graduate of the University of
Louisiana-Monroe and holds a bachelor of science in
kinesiology. He has a master's degree in sport
management from the United States Sports Academy in
Mobile, Alabama.
A native of Louisiana, Waldrop grew up in the northern
Louisiana city of Monroe. Waldrop attended East Union in
Marion, Louisiana and graduated from Ouachita Parish
High School in 1981. He is married to Nicole, who
teaches at Daulton Elementary School in the Mansfield
ISD, and they are the parents of three children, Cody
(23), Allyson (14), and Michael (12), daughter in law
Caitland and granddaughter Kenna Michelle. The family
resides in nearby Mansfield. |
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