Jamie Dixon is the 22nd head coach in the history of TCU men’s basketball and is in his fifth season with the Horned Frogs.
Dixon, a 2007 TCU Hall of Fame Inductee, returned to his alma mater on March 22, 2016, after serving 13 seasons as head coach at the University of Pittsburgh. Dixon, who has earned four college basketball National Coach of the Year honors, including the 2009 Naismith Coach of the Year, previously served as an assistant at Pitt, Northern Arizona, Hawaii and UC Santa Barbara.
The 2019-20 season saw the Horned Frogs defeat three ranked teams for the first time in program history, including a win over No. 2 Baylor, the highest ranked home win ever at TCU. It was one of 14 home wins by TCU, for a total of 59 home wins by Dixon, the most-ever at TCU over a four-year period. Dixon helped coach Desmond Bane to multiple postseason honors, including becoming the program’s first All-Big 12 First Team member.
In the 2018-19 season, Dixon led TCU to the NIT semifinals, the second time in school history the program had made three postseason appearances and the first time since 1999. Another evidence of the winning culture Dixon has brought to Fort Worth, the 68 wins over the three year period of 2016-19 are the second-most over any three year period in school history. With a 23-14 record, it was the first time in 19 years that TCU had recorded three-straight years of 20 or more wins. In those 23 wins was a victory at No. 17 Iowa State, the Frogs’ second road win over a ranked team in program history, and three wins to earn the Diamond Head Classic championship. Dixon is one of four active coaches who have had 20 or more wins in 15 of their first 16 seasons as head coach joining Jim Boeheim, Mark Few and Bruce Pearl.
During the 2017-18 season, Dixon led TCU back to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 20 years by coaching the Horned Frogs to a 21-12 record. Dixon led the Frogs to several marquee wins including their first Big Monday win over No. 7 West Virginia, a win over No. 22 Nevada in the Naismith Hall of Fame Classic and the Emerald Coast Classic championship. TCU’s nine Big 12 wins were its most in any conference in 17 years.
Dixon needed little time to complete the second-largest turnaround in school history. In his first season, Dixon led TCU to a 24-15 record in 2016-17, an improvement of 12 wins from the previous season. Win No. 24 gave TCU its first postseason championship, when it beat Georgia Tech, 88-56, at Madison Square Garden for in the NIT title. The victory also tied for the second-most wins in school history and was the most in 19 seasons.
Dixon showed the nation that TCU can win in the Big 12 Conference. After compiling eight Big 12 wins in their first four seasons in the league combined, the Frogs won six games in 2016-17. TCU accomplished rare feats like sweeping the season series over Texas for the first time in 30 years, defeating Iowa State for the first time in 20 years and winning at Kansas State for the first time in 18 years. TCU’s run to the NIT title was sparked by defeating a top-ranked team for the first time in school history when it beat No. 1 Kansas in the quarterfinals of the Phillips 66 Big 12 Championship.
In his three seasons at TCU, Dixon has coached six players to All-Big 12 honors, two to the USBWA All-District team and one to the NABC All-District team. In his first two seasons at TCU, Dixon helped develop Kenrich Williams, who went on to start 29 games in his first season with the New Orleans Pelicans.
Dixon's 13-year head coaching tenure at Pitt saw the Panthers compile a 328-123 record and earn 11 NCAA Tournament berths, including three Sweet Sixteen appearances and one NCAA Regional Final. He is one of only eight coaches nationally to guide their program to 11 NCAA Tournament appearances in the last 13 seasons and led Pitt to its first two NCAA Tournament No. 1 seeds in 2009 and 2011. Only two coaches (Mark Few and Roy Williams) in NCAA history took their school to the NCAA Tournament more times in their first 13 seasons as a head coach than Dixon.
Dixon guided Pitt to three Big East Championships, including two outright regular-season titles and one tournament championship. He set an NCAA Division I all-time record for best start to a coaching career after eight seasons with 216 victories and his .727 career winning percentage currently ranks in the top-25 nationally. In addition, his .658 career Big East win percentage ranks as the best all-time mark in league play, surpassing the likes of Georgetown's John Thompson, Connecticut's Jim Calhoun, Syracuse's Jim Boeheim, Louisville's Rick Pitino and St. John's Lou Carnesseca. He is one of only nine coaches in NCAA Division I history to win over 100 games during his first four seasons of a coaching career and helped Pitt capture the program's first No. 1 national ranking in 2008-09.
Dixon's players at Pitt excelled as well with Steven Adams (Oklahoma City Thunder), DeJuan Blair (Washington Wizards) and Lamar Patterson (Atlanta Hawks) currently playing in the NBA. In all, he has had six selected in the NBA Draft. Four of his players have earned consensus All-America honors, 16 were All-Region honorees, 10 earned major conference awards, including four league Most Improved Player honorees, and 19 have been named all-conference.
Over 17 seasons, Dixon helped the Panthers rise to national prominence. The three-year span from 2001-04 produced the winningest period in school history as Pitt won three consecutive Big East regular-season titles, advanced to three straight NCAA Sweet Sixteen appearances, captured the program's first Big East Tournament title in 2003, while compiling one of the nation's three best winning percentages (.846 with an 88-16 record) from 2001-04, including a 51-2 home record.
Dixon has over 20 years of major NCAA Division I coaching experience, including stints at Pitt (17 years), Northern Arizona (four years), Hawaii (three years) and UC Santa Barbara (one year). Additionally, as an assistant coach, he served under a school's winningest coach in four different stints. His teams have won a combined 10 conference titles, advanced to the postseason during 19 different seasons and his student-athletes have earned five league player of the year awards.
He led USA Basketball U-19 Team to the 2009 FIBA World Championship Gold Medal and a 9-0 record after assuming head coaching duties a month prior to competition.
As a student-athlete at TCU, Dixon played for Jim Killingsworth and led the Horned Frogs to Southwest Conference titles as a junior and senior. He earned All-SWC honors in 1987 and was an All-SWC Academic honoree. In addition, he led the SWC in assists as a senior and was voted TCU's Senior Male Scholar-Athlete Award recipient. He was inducted into the TCU Athletic Hall of Fame in 2007 and received a bachelor's degree in finance in 1987. Dixon earned a master's degree in economics from UC Santa Barbara in 1992.
Dixon was selected in the 1987 NBA draft by the Washington Bullets. He went on to play professionally with the Lacrosse Catbirds of the Continental Basketball Association and also in New Zealand.
Dixon is married to the former Jacqueline Corteway. The couple has one son, Jack, and a daughter, Shannon. The son of New York City natives Jim and Marge, Dixon spent much of his childhood in the Bronx. He has two sisters: the late Maggie Dixon, who served as head women's basketball coach at the United States Military Academy, and Julie Dixon, who is a Los Angeles attorney.
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