Kim Anderson
Kim Anderson (born May 12, 1955)
Teams coached: Central Missouri Mules, Missouri Tigers, Pittsburg State Gorillas
Central Missouri record: 273-96 (.740)
Missouri record: 27-68 (.284)
Pittsburg State record^: 64-76 (.457)
Overall record^: 364-240 (.603)
Career Accomplishments:
- NCAA National Championships: 0
- NCAA Tournament Appearances: 0
- NIT Championships: 0
- NIT Appearances: 0
- MIAA (Div II) Regular Season Champion: 4 (2005, 2007, 2010, 2014)
- MIAA (Div II) Tournament Champion: 2 (2009, 2014)
- NCAA Division II National Championships: 1 (2014)
- NCAA Division II Tournament Appearances: 7 (2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2014)
- NCAA Division II Tournament Final Four: 3 (2007, 2009, 2014)
Awards:
- NABC Div II Coach of the Year: 1 (2014)
- MIAA (Div II) Coach of the Year: 2 (2005, 2010)
- Big Eight Player of the Year: 1 (1977)
Coaching Career (head coach, unless noted):
2017-2022 | Pittsburg State |
2014-2017 | Missouri |
2002-2014 | Central Missouri |
1991-1999 | Missouri (asst) |
1985-1991 | Baylor (asst) |
1982-1985 | Missouri (asst) |
Kim Anderson Facts
- Keith Kim Anderson
- Born May 12, 1955
- Hometown: Sedalia, Missouri
- Alma Mater: University of Missouri (BA, 1979 & MA, 1981)
- Played four seasons for the Missouri Tigers under Hall of Fame head coach Norm Stewart
- Was an assistant for a total of 11 seasons (in two separate stints) at Missouri under Stewart
- Also spent six seasons at Baylor as an assistant to head coach Gene Iba
- In 12 seasons as the head coach at D-II Central Missouri, Anderson compiled a record of 273-96 (.740)
- Went to three Final Fours and won the NCAA D-II National Championship in 2014
- Became the head coach at his alma mater Missouri in April 2014, following the departure of previous head coach Frank Haith
- Tenure at Missouri was a rough one, as he was just 26-67 overall and finished last in the SEC all three seasons
- Anderson was asked to step down in March 2017
- Hired the same month to be the head coach at D-II Pittsburg State in Kansas
- Through five seasons, Anderson went 64-76 and was unable to return to the D-II NCAA Tournament
- Anderson announced his retirement from coaching on March 1, 2022 after four decades in the profession
- Along with his wife, Melissa, has two sons
Kim Anderson Coaching Tree
- coming soon
^ overall record includes head coaching positions at both the NCAA Division I and Division II levels