Andy Enfield
Andy Enfield (born June 8, 1969)
Current position: Head men’s basketball coach
Current team: SMU Mustangs
Current conference: Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC)
Florida Gulf Coast record: 41-28 (.594)
USC record: 220-147 (.599)
SMU record: 0-0 (.000)
Overall record: 261-175 (.599)
Career Accomplishments:
- NCAA National Championships: 0
- NCAA Tournament Appearances: 6 (2013, 2016, 2017, 2021, 2022, 2023)
- NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen: 2 (2013, 2021)
- NCAA Tournament Final Four: 0
- NIT Championships: 0
- NIT Appearances: 1 (2018)
- ACC Regular Season Champion: 0
- ACC Tournament Champion: 0
- Atlantic Sun Tournament Champion: 1 (2013)
Awards:
- Pac-12 Coach of the Year: 1 (2021)
Coaching Career (head coach, unless noted):
2024-present | SMU |
2013-2024 | USC |
2011-2013 | Florida Gulf Coast |
2006-2011 | Florida State (asst) |
1998-2000 | Boston Celtics (asst) |
1994-1996 | Milwaukee Bucks (asst) |
Andy Enfield Facts
- Andrew William Enfield
- Born June 8, 1969
- Hometown: Shippensburg, Pennsylvania
- Alma Mater: Johns Hopkins University (BS, 1991) / University of Maryland (MBA, 1993)
- Played at Johns Hopkins under longtime head coach Bill Nelson, leaving with 18 school records
- Inducted into the Johns Hopkins Athletic Hall of Fame in 2001
- Worked as a shooting consultant, which eventually led to shooting coach positions with the NBA’s Bucks and Celtics
- For the two seasons he was with the Celtics (1998-2000), Enfield worked under Hall of Fame coach Rick Pitino
- Was an assistant coach for five seasons at Florida State under head coach Leonard Hamilton
- Hired in 2011 as the head coach at Florida Gulf Coast
- Led the Eagles to the NCAA Tournament in 2013, where they upset 2-seed Georgetown and 7-seed San Diego State to become the first 15-seed to ever participate in the Sweet Sixteen
- Took the head coaching position at USC in April 2013
- Led the Trojans to five NCAA Tournaments (2016-17, 2021-23), reaching the Elite Eight in 2021
- Went 220-147 overall in eleven seasons with the Trojans, winning 21+ games eight times, and recruited/developed a number of future NBA players, including Evan Mobley, Kevin Porter Jr, Onyeka Okongwu, Jordan McLaughlin, Chimezie Metu, De’Anthony Melton, Isiah Collier and Bronny James
- Left USC to become the new head coach at SMU in April 2024, ahead of the Mustangs’ move to the ACC
Andy Enfield Coaching Tree
- Joey Cantens (Daytona State)
- Michael Fly (Florida Gulf Coast)
- Jason Hart (G League Ignite)
- Marty Richter (USC Upstate)