MyFOXChattanoogaCoach Moore Bio

Coach Moore Bio

Updated: July 6, 2011 3:21PM EST

COACHING HONORS

• Only coach in NCAA history to take three different teams to a national tournament at each NCAA levels. 

• Five-time Southern Conference Coach of the Year
• Ranked eighth among all NCAA Coaches for winning percentage (78%)
• Winningest Coach in UTC and Southern Conference history
• Moore served as women's basketball assistant coach at North Carolina State under the late Kay Yow from 1993-1995. During that time, the Wolfpack went 34-24 and reached the Sweet 16.
Maryville College (Division III)

Milestone Victories

  • NCAA Division III Tournament (5) Career
    (1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993) 1 - Nov. 21, 1987 at Emory University

57-51

  • Converse/WBCA District 5 Coach of the Year (3) 50 - Jan. 15, 1990 at Fisk University

70-63

    (1990, 1992, 1993) 100 - Feb. 4, 1992 vs. Tennessee Temple

 

     200 - March 18, 1998 vs. Arkansas Tech

69-61

Francis Marion (Division II) 300 - Feb. 3, 2003 at College of Charleston

85-75

  • NCAA Division II Tournament (2) 400 - Jan. 6, 2007 at Appalachian State

84-74

    (1997, 1998)    
  • Peach Belt Athletic Conference Coach of the Year Chattanooga 
    (1996-97) 1 - Nov. 21, 1998 vs. Samford

72-65

      50 - Jan. 20, 2001 at Davidson 

78-60

University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (Division I) 100 - Feb. 3, 2003 at College of Charleston

85-75

  • NCAA Division I Tournament (8) 200 - Jan. 6, 2007 at Appalachian State

84-74

    (2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010)    
  • Women's National Invitation Tournament (3) Southern Conference
    (2000, 2005, 2009) 1 - Nov. 28, 1998 at Davidson

86-64

  • Southern Conference Coach of the Year (5) 50 - Feb. 4, 2002 at Western Carolina

83-52

    (2000, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008) 100 - Jan. 22, 2005 at Furman

63-56

   • 2004 TSWA Collegiate Coach of the Year 150 - Jan. 21, 2008 at Wofford

74-49

   • 2007 WBCA Victory Award Winner ~ 400 Career Victories     

 


Since arriving in Chattanooga in 1998, Lady Mocs head coach Wes Moore has built a reputation not only as a top coach in the Southern Conference, but as one of the nation's best. With a 466-132 overall record, he is ranked eighth by the NCAA in winning percentage at .779. He became the first Southern Conference coach to reach the 100-win plateau and currently holds a 177-27 record in league play. He is the winningest coach in Chattanooga history with a record of 266-76 in 11 years.

Upon his arrival, Moore quickly returned the Lady Mocs to the top of the Southern Conference reclaiming the league title in just his second year at the helm. He guided the Lady Mocs to a first place league finish and a WNIT berth.

Moore's teams have continued to win picking up 10 successive conference titles, an unprecedented feat in SoCon history, and 10 consecutive post season tournament appearances including seven NCAA bids.

Excluding his first year at each school, Moore's teams have posted an impressive 256-59 overall record for a .813 winning percentage, the best by any coach in the Southern Conference. In 2008, the Lady Mocs posted a Southern Conference record of 18-0, their third undefeated season in five years. On top of that, the Lady Mocs carried the nation's longest-active winning streak in to the NCAA Tournament for the third time in five years. Over that time, the Lady Mocs posted a league mark of 73 wins and 4 losses.

Three times under Moore's tutelage the Lady Mocs held the nation's longest active winning streak. In the 2003-04 campaign, Chattanooga capped off a school-record 27-game win streak that began at Thanksgiving and ended with an NCAA Tournament win over Rutgers. In 2005-06, the Lady Mocs nearly matched that feat with 26 straight wins picking up victories over Auburn, UAB, Middle Tennessee and Stephen F. Austin along the way. Last season, UTC kicked off its run to the NCAA tournament with a win over Alabama before running past Weber State and Miami (Ohio) in the UTSA New Year's Classic and picking up 18 wins in the SoCon.

Over each of the last seven years, the Lady Mocs have made waves on the national front receiving votes in two national polls. In the 2005-06 campaign, the Lady Mocs climbed as high as 26 in the USA Today/ESPN Top 25 Coaches Poll and 30th in the AP Top 25 Poll with 26 votes.

In the 2004 postseason, the Lady Mocs made history with its first-ever NCAA win, upsetting Big East foe Rutgers.

The Lady Mocs' success captured the hearts of basketball fans in the area. Chattanooga has continually ranked among the nation's leaders in average home attendance. All of the Lady Mocs top 20 attended games came with Moore at the helm including two from the 2005-06 campaign. The largest crowd to watch the Lady Mocs was Nov. 19, 2004 when Tennessee came to town and 10,051 fans nearly filled the McKenzie Arena to capacity. That currently ranks as the 11th largest crowd to ever watch a UTC home game, men's or women's. The two NCAA Tournament games UTC hosted in 2004 averaged almost 7,000 fans each.

Last year, the Lady Mocs were the SoCon winners of the NCAA "Pack the House" Challenge. 7,008 fans filled the arena to watch the Lady Mocs take on the two-time defending National Champion Lady Vols. Fans were treated to a near-upset as the Lady Mocs came within three points of defeating UTK for the first time.

Chattanooga's fans have been thrilled to witness 10 consecutive 20-win seasons by the Lady Mocs. They are the only women's team in Southern Conference history to post 10 consecutive years with 20-plus wins.

Moore has been named the Southern Conference Coach of the Year five times in his 11 years at UTC. With a winning percentage of .779, he is ranked fifth by the NCAA for winning percentage among active coaches and sixth all-time coaches with 10 or more years of coaching experience at the Division I level.

Over the last 11 years, the Lady Mocs have had seven SoCon Players of the Year, six SoCon Tournament MVP's, 25 SoCon coaches All-Conference selections and 28 All-Tournament honorees.

Two-time SoCon Player of the Year Alex Anderson  was drafted by the WNBA. She was selected 39th overall by the San Antonio Silver Stars and currently plays professional overseas. Teammate Laura Hall, an All-Conference athlete, was invited by the Connecticut Sun to participate in camp tryouts.

Moore's 50- and 100-win milestones at Chattanooga have happened faster than any other Lady Mocs coach. He reached No. 100 in just 140 games when UTC topped College of Charleston 85-75 on Feb. 3, 2003. He won No. 50 in his 75th game, a 78-60 victory over Davidson on Jan. 20, 2000.

Moore's accomplishments started by orchestrating the best turnaround in NCAA Division I women's basketball. Chattanooga's women's basketball team improved its record by 16 games in 1999-2000 over the 1998-99 season.

Moore was a unanimous choice as the 1999-2000 Southern Conference Coach of the Year after leading UTC to a 26-5 overall mark and 17-1 record in league play while guiding UTC to the school's first conference title since 1992. The 17 wins were the most by any team in school and SoCon history.

The Lady Mocs hold 11 Southern Conference records including the top seven in number of wins, the top four for 3-pointers made in a game and the top seven for 3-pointers made in a season. The 2007-08 season is ranked third on the all-time charts.

Moore, the fourth women's basketball coach in the program's 36-year history, was named the Lady Mocs' leader on April 30, 1998, and with little preparation time before the season, guided UTC to a 10-17 record and a tie for seventh place in the conference standings.

His 1998-99 team finished sixth in the country averaging seven 3-pointers per game. The team made a then school-record 188 3-point shots. UTC finished with eight conference wins that season, the fourth most in school history.

Before taking his first Division I head-coaching job at UTC, Moore had great success owning a 200-56 record and making seven national tournament appearances in nine years as a head coach at the Division II and III levels.

Moore came to Chattanooga from Francis Marion where he guided his teams to a 69-20 overall mark in three years. In his final season, the Patriots went 30-3, advanced to the Division II Final Four and were ranked fifth in the final 1997-98 USA Today/WBCA Top 25 poll. That FMU squad also captured the Peach Belt Athletic Conference and South Atlantic Region tournament championships.

In his first year at Francis Marion, Moore took a Patriot squad that was 11-15 the season before and led it to an 18-9 record and a second-place showing during the conference regular season. He was named Peach Belt Athletic Conference Coach of the Year for his efforts. The following year (1996-97), he guided Francis Marion to a 21-8 record and another second-place finish in the Peach Belt. He also took the Patriots to their first-ever NCAA Division II national tournament appearance.

MOORE'S COACHING HONORS

The only coach in NCAA history to take three different teams to a national tournament at all three NCAA levels.

Student-athletes recruited by Moore captured two Peach Belt Athletic Conference freshman of the year honors, garnered five all-conference spots and received one player of the year award.

Prior to Francis Marion, Moore served as women's basketball assistant coach at North Carolina State for two years. During that time, the Wolfpack went 34-24 and reached the Sweet 16.

Before his two seasons at N.C. State, Moore was head coach at Maryville College in Maryville, Tenn., for six years. There, he won 78 percent of his games (131-36) and took the Lady Scots to five NCAA Division III national tournaments, including the Division III Sweet 16. In his first season at Maryville, Moore took a program that was 3-47 the two previous years and tied the then-school record for wins in a single season at 15.

Moore was named the Converse/WBCA District 5 Coach of the Year in 1990, 1992 and 1993. In 1993, he was one of eight finalists for National Coach of the Year.

He also spent three seasons (1984-87) as a men's assistant coach at Johnson Bible College in Knoxville, Tenn. Moore has been a motivational and instructional speaker at various coaching clinics, banquets and basketball camps and was the director of the Kay Yow Basketball Camp (N.C. State) in 1994.

Moore earned a B.S. degree in Religion from Johnson Bible College and both B.S. and M. S. degrees in Physical Education from the University of Tennessee. As a point guard at Johnson Bible College, Moore helped his team to one conference championship and a sixth-place finish at the National Christian College Athletic Association (NCCAA) National Tournament. During his playing career, he earned all-conference and all-tournament honors.

Moore is married to the former Linda Hardison.

MOORE'S COACHING CREDENTIALS

Season School

W-L

Pct. Postseason Honors Player Honors
1987-88 Maryville College

15-12

 .556      
1988-89 Maryville College

23-6

 .793  NCAA    
1989-90 Maryville College

23-5

 .821  NCAA Coach of the Year  
1990-91 Maryville College

23-6

 .793  NCAA    
1991-92 Maryville College

24-4

 .857  NCAA Coach of the Year  
1992-93 Maryville College

23-3

 .885  NCAA Coach of the Year  
             
1993-95 NC State Assistant Coach 

34-24

 .586  NCAA Sweet 16    
             
1995-96 Francis Marion

18-9

 .667      
1996-97 Francis Marion

21-8

 .724  NCAA Coach of the Year  
1997-98 Francis Marion

30-3

 .909  NCAA    
             
1998-99 Chattanooga

10-17

 .370      
1999-2000 Chattanooga

26-5

 .839  WNIT - Second Round  Coach of the Year  Player of the Year - Bullock
2000-01 Chattanooga

24-7

 .774  NCAA   Player of the Year - Bullock
2001-02 Chattanooga

23-8

 .742  NCAA    
2002-03 Chattanooga

26-5

 .839  NCAA    
2003-04 Chattanooga

29-3

 .906  NCAA - Second Round  Coach of the Year Player of the Year - K. Brown
2004-05 Chattanooga

25-5

 .833  WNIT - Second Round  Coach of the Year  
2005-06 Chattanooga

27-4

 .871  NCAA Coach of the Year Player of the Year - K. Brown
2006-07 Chattanooga

25-8

 .758  NCAA   Player of the Year - Anderson
2007-08 Chattanooga

29-4

 .879  NCAA Coach of the Year Player of the Year - Anderson
2008-09 Chattanooga

22-10

 .688  WNIT   Player of the Year - Hollinquest
2009-10 Chattanooga

24-9

 .728  NCAA   Player of the Year - Hollinquest
             
Chattanooga Record (12 years)

 290-85

 .773    
Career Record (21 years)

490-141

 .777      

IN THE SOUTHERN CONFERENCE

Season

W-L

Pct. Finish

Tourney W-L

Tournament Most Outstanding Player All-Tournament
1998-99

8-10

 .444

7th

0-1

     
1999-2000

17-1

 .944

1st

1-1

    Bullock
2000-01

15-3

 .833

1st

3-0

 Champions   Bullock/Wilson/Dykes
2001-02

14-4

 .778

1st

3-0

 Champions Miranda Warfield Bullock/Wilson
2002-03

16-2

 .889

1st

3-0

 Champions Miranda Warfield Wilson/McDivitt
2003-04

20-0

 1.000

 1st

3-0

 Champions Katasha Brown Roberson/Warfield/Galloway
2004-05

19-1

 .950

 1st

0-1

     
2005-06

18-0

 1.000

 1st

3-0

 Champions Tiffani Roberson Anderson/Brown/Mattison/Hand
2006-07

15-3

.833

 1st

3-0

 Champions Alex Anderson Hand/Hall/Hollinquest
2007-08

18-0

 1.000

 1st

3-0

 Champions Alex Anderson Hall/Hollinquest
2008-09

17-3

.850

 1st

1-1

    Hatchett/Wade-Fray
2009-10

16-4

.800

 1st

3-0

 Champions  Shanara Hollinquest

Christopher/Davis/Wade-Fray

               
TOTAL

193-31

 .862

 

26-4 (.867)

     
Powered by WorldNow