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Ramsey served as a graduate assistant coach for SIU. He later was an assistant coach at Kansas State, and Oklahoma. [3] [4] He was the head basketball coach at Oklahoma, from 1973 to 1975. He took over the program after recently hired head coach Les Lane died of a heart attack. In 1975, Oklahoma fired Ramsey after a 31–21 record. [5]
He was the father of former National Basketball Association (NBA) players Mark and Brent Price. [1] Born and raised in Norman, Oklahoma, Price came to the Oklahoma Sooners out of Norman High School to play for coach Doyle Parrack. He played both baseball and basketball there, earning All-Big Eight Conference honors in both.
Porter Andrew Moser (born August 24, 1968) is a college basketball coach who is the current head coach of the University of Oklahoma men's basketball team.Moser spent 10 years (2011–2021) at Loyola University Chicago, helping lead the Ramblers to the Final Four in 2018.
The Oklahoma Sooners men's basketball and women's basketball programs are college basketball teams that represents the University of Oklahoma. Both teams play at the Division I level of the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA). [1] The men's team has had 12 head coaches—excluding a coach who died before ever coaching a game ...
Enos Semore (born April 28, 1931) [1] is a former college baseball coach. He attended Keota High School and Northeastern State University , where he played baseball and basketball. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Semore was the head baseball coach at Bacone College from 1963 to 1967 and won a JUCO World Series title in 1967.
List of head baseball coaches showing season(s) coached, overall records, conference records, postseason records, championships and selected awards *Statistics correct as of the end of the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season # Name Term [A 6] GC OW OL OT O% CW CL CT C% PA PW PL WA WW WL DCs CCs CTs NCs Awards [A 7] 1 No coach 1898–1900, 1904 ...
Sampson was named national coach of the year in 1995 (his first year at OU) by the Associated Press, United States Basketball Writers Association and Basketball Weekly after guiding the Sooners to 23–9 overall and 15–0 home marks. It was the second-best overall record posted by a first-year coach in Big 8 history.
The 1975 Oklahoma Sooners football team represented the University of Oklahoma in the 1975 NCAA Division I football season. The team was helmed by Barry Switzer in his third season as head coach. After sailing through their first eight games, Oklahoma suffered a surprising home loss to Kansas, which snapped a 28-game winning streak. [1]