Josh Schertz: Difference between revisions

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| bowl_record =

| bowl_record =

| tournament_record = 18–9 ([[NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Division II]])<br>4–2 ([[National Invitational Tournament|NIT]])<br>1–1 ([[College Basketball Invitational|CBI]])

| tournament_record = 18–9 ([[NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Division II]])<br>4–2 ([[National Invitational Tournament|NIT]])<br>1–1 ([[College Basketball Invitational|CBI]])

| championships = 5 [[South Atlantic Conference men’s basketball tournament|SAC tournament]] (2011, 2014, 2016, 2018, 2020)<br>9× [[South Atlantic Conference|SAC]] regular season (2011, 2013–2018, 2020, 2021)<br>[[Missouri Valley Conference|MVC]] regular season (2024)

| championships = 5 [[South Atlantic Conference men’s basketball tournament|SAC tournament]] (2011, 2014, 2016, 2018, 2020)<br> [[South Atlantic Conference|SAC]] regular season (2011, 2013–2018, 2020, 2021)<br>[[Missouri Valley Conference|MVC]] regular season (2024)

| awards = [[Hugh Durham Award]] (2024)<br>7× South Atlantic Coach of the Year (2011, 2014–2018, 2020)<br>[[Missouri Valley Conference Men’s Basketball Coach of the Year|MVC Coach of the Year]] (2024)<br>[[Clarence Gaines Award]] (2016)

| awards = [[Hugh Durham Award]] (2024)<br>7× South Atlantic Coach of the Year (2011, 2014–2018, 2020)<br>[[Missouri Valley Conference Men’s Basketball Coach of the Year|MVC Coach of the Year]] (2024)

| coaching_records =

| coaching_records =

}}

}}

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| conference = 16–2

| conference = 16–2

| confstanding = 1st

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = [[2011 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA DII First Round]]

| postseason = [[2011 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA First Round]]

}}

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

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| conference = 14–4

| conference = 14–4

| confstanding = 2nd

| confstanding = 2nd

| postseason = [[2012 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA DII Second Round]]

| postseason = [[2012 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Second Round]]

}}

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

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| conference = 15–3

| conference = 15–3

| confstanding = 1st

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = [[2013 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA DII Second Round]]

| postseason = [[2013 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Second Round]]

}}

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

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| conference = 20–2

| conference = 20–2

| confstanding = 1st

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = [[2014 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA DII Second Round]]

| postseason = [[2014 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Second Round]]

}}

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

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| conference = 21–1

| conference = 21–1

| confstanding = 1st

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = [[2015 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA DII Second Round]]

| postseason = [[2015 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Second Round]]

}}

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

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| conference = 22–0

| conference = 22–0

| confstanding = 1st

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = [[2016 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA DII Runner-Up]]

| postseason = [[2016 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Runner-Up]]

}}

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

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| conference = 19–3

| conference = 19–3

| confstanding = 1st

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = [[2017 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA DII Final Four]]

| postseason = [[2017 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Final Four]]

}}

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

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| conference = 20–0

| conference = 20–0

| confstanding = 1st

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = [[2018 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA DII Sweet Sixteen]]

| postseason = [[2018 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Sweet Sixteen]]

}}

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

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| conference = 22–0

| conference = 22–0

| confstanding = 1st

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = [[2020 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA DII Canceled]]

| postseason = [[2020 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Canceled]]

}}

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

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| conference = 14–3

| conference = 14–3

| confstanding = 1st

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = [[2021 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA DII Final Four]]

| postseason = [[2021 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament|NCAA Final Four]]

}}

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Subtotal

{{CBB Yearly Record Subtotal

American basketball coach (born 1975)

Josh Schertz

Schertz in 2024

Title Head coach
Team Saint Louis
Conference Atlantic 10
Record 19–15 (.559)
Born (1975-07-05) July 5, 1975 (age 50)
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.[1]
Alma mater Florida Atlantic (2000)
1999–2001 Lynn (assistant)
2001–2003 Queens (NC) (associate HC)
2003–2008 High Point (associate HC)
2008–2021 Lincoln Memorial
2021–2024 Indiana State
2024–present Saint Louis
Overall 422–124 (.773)
Tournaments 18–9 (NCAA Division II)
4–2 (NIT)
1–1 (CBI)
5 SAC tournament (2011, 2014, 2016, 2018, 2020)
9 SAC regular season (2011, 2013–2018, 2020, 2021)
MVC regular season (2024)
Hugh Durham Award (2024)
Clarence Gaines Award (2016)
7× SAC Coach of the Year (2011, 2014–2018, 2020)
MVC Coach of the Year (2024)

Josh Schertz (born July 5, 1975) is an American basketball coach who is the currently the head coach at Saint Louis University.

Coaching career

Schertz’s coaching career began as a student assistant with Florida Atlantic for the 1999–2000 season.[2] He then moved on to Lynn, where he was an assistant for two seasons before a two-year assistant coaching stop at Queens University in North Carolina.[3] In 2003, Schertz would follow Queens’ head coach, Bart Lundy, to High Point, where he stayed until 2008 when he accepted the head coaching position at Lincoln Memorial.[3]

In his 13 years coaching, the Railsplitters posted 11-straight 20-win seasons, including four 30-win seasons, en route to 10 NCAA Division II men’s basketball tournament appearances.[4] Schertz was also named South Atlantic Conference Coach of the Year a record seven times, while also having the highest overall winning percentage among all active NCAA head coaches at any level in a 10-year period.[3]

On March 17, 2021, Schertz was named the 26th head coach in Indiana State history, replacing Greg Lansing.[4][5]

On April 6, 2024, it was announced that Schertz had been hired as the head coach for the St. Louis Billikens, replacing Travis Ford.[4][6]

Head coaching record

References

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