Barclay Radebaugh
Barclay Radebaugh (born September 14, 1965)
Teams coached: Queens (NC) Royals, Charleston Southern Buccaneers
Queens (NC) record^: 21–8 (.724)
Charleston Southern record: 228-325 (.412)
Overall record^: 249-333 (.428)
Career Accomplishments:
- NCAA National Championships: 0
- NCAA Tournament Appearances: 0
- NIT Championships: 0
- NIT Appearances: 2 (2013, 2015)
- CIT Appearances: 1 (2019)
- Big South Regular Season Champion: 2 (2013, 2015)
Awards:
- Big South Coach of the Year: 1 (2012, 2015)
Coaching Career (head coach, unless noted):
2005-2023 | Charleston Southern |
2004-2005 | Miami (FL) (asst) |
2003-2004 | Queens (NC) |
2001-2003 | Winthrop (asst) |
1994-2001 | South Carolina (asst) |
1990-1994 | Furman (asst) |
1989-1990 | Wofford (asst) |
1986-1988 | East Tennessee State (student asst) |
Barclay Radebaugh Facts
- Barclay Radebaugh
- Born September 14, 1965
- Hometown: Lincolnton, North Carolina
- Alma Mater: East Tennessee State University (BS, 1987) / University of South Carolina (MA, 1996)
- Was a student assistant at ESTU on Les Robinson‘s staff while doing his undergrad
- First full-time assistant positions were at Wofford (under Richard Johnson) and Furman (under Butch Estes)
- Spent seven years on Eddie Fogler‘s staff at South Carolina, then two more at Winthrop under Gregg Marshall
- First head coaching gig was for one season at Division II Queens University in Charlotte, NC, where he went 21-8
- After one season as an assistant to Frank Haith at Miami (FL), Radebaugh was hired as the head coach at Charleston Southern
- Had 228 wins in 18+ seasons, winning two Big South titles (2013, 2015) and going to the NIT each of those years plus a CIT in 2019
- In November 2023, after a 2-5 start to the season, Radebaugh stepped down from his position as head coach
Barclay Radebaugh Coaching Tree
- Murray Garvin (South Carolina State)
- Will Jones (North Carolina A&T)
- Mike Morrell (UNC Asheville)
- Saah Nimley (Charleston Southern)
- Bob Richey (Furman)
^ overall and Queens (NC) records includes seasons at both the NCAA Division I and Division II levels; Queens moved to D-I in 2022