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Dick Bennett - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dick Bennett

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dick Bennett (born April 20, 1943 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States) is the former head men's basketball coach at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, University of Wisconsin, and most recently Washington State University. Bennett, who went to high school in Clintonville, Wisconsin and graduated from Ripon College (Wisconsin) is known for revitalizing the Wisconsin Badgers basketball program, culminating in a Final Four trip.

Dick Bennett was hired at Washington State University on March 29, 2003. He retired immediately following the 2005-2006 season. His son, Tony Bennett, who was picked to be his successor, took over the team immediately following his retirement[1].

Bennett was the head coach at the University of Wisconsin where he led the Badgers to the Final Four in 2000. During his tenure there he was 94-68 (.580) from 1995-2000. He took the Badgers to three NCAA tournament appearances and one NIT bid. Wisconsin had played in a total of three NCAA Tournaments in the 97 years before his arrival. Bennett coached Wisconsin to its first 20-win season ever in 1998-99. Citing burnout -- he said he "simply was drained" -- Bennett resigned three games into the 2000-2001 season[2].

Before taking the job at Wisconsin, Bennett was the head coach at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. He took the job prior to the 1985-86 season. He inherited a team that was 4-24 the year before he arrived and produced a winning record (15-14) in just his second season. He won the 1990 Mid-Continent Conference Coach of the Year award after leading the Phoenix to a 24-8 mark and the second round of the NIT.

The following season, led by son Tony Bennett, the Phoenix rolled to a 24-7 record and made its first appearance in the NCAA Tournament, losing 60-58 to Michigan State in the first round. During the 1991-92 campaign, UW-GB went 25-5 and won its first regular season conference title.

The 1993-94 squad was 27-7, won the conference title and knocked off 16th-ranked California, which was led by Jason Kidd and Lamond Murray. In his final year with the Phoenix, Bennett returned to the NCAA Tournament before losing to Big Ten champion Purdue 49-48 to close out a 22-8 season.

Before coaching Green Bay Coach Bennett was the Head Coach at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point where he won 173 games. He was named NAIA Coach of the Year after leading the 1983-84 squad to a 28-4 record and national runner-up finish. That was a team featuring former NBA All-Star Terry Porter and current Saint Louis University Head Coach Brad Soderberg.

Bennett has been revered for years for his defensive prowess. While at Wisconsin his teams led the Big 10 in scoring defense four straight years and finished in the top-five nationally three times. Statistics, however, do not tell the entire story about Bennett. He is highly respected by his peers. During the 1998-99 season, Sports Illustrated polled 115 college basketball coaches and asked the question, "If you could only go to one coaching clinic, whose would it be?" The top four vote-getters were Mike Krzyzewski, Rick Majerus, Dick Bennett and Bob Knight (then with Indiana).

Bennett's daughter Kathi Bennett is the former head women's basketball coach at Indiana. His son Tony Bennett, previously the head assistant coach, was hired as WSU head coach after his father's retirement. His brother Jack Bennett recently retired as head coach at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point after winning back-to-back NCAA Division III National Titles in 2004 and 2005. Another brother, Tom Bennett, died of AIDS-related complications at age 38 in January 1996.

Preceded by
Stan Van Gundy
Wisconsin Men's Basketball Head Coach
1995–2000
Succeeded by
Brad Soderberg
Preceded by
Paul Graham
Washington State Men's Basketball Head Coach
2003–2006
Succeeded by
Tony Bennett


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