Early coaching career Prior to entering the college ranks, Williams was a successful high school basketball coach at
Woodrow Wilson High School in
Camden, New Jersey. He won a
NJSIAA state championship as head varsity coach at Wilson High. With his chance to learn under
Tom Davis (whom Williams got to know when Davis was an assistant coach at Maryland), Williams left to become an assistant basketball coach at
Lafayette College in 1971 and continued at
Boston College in 1977 until he became a head coach. He was also the head soccer coach at Lafayette College during his assistant coaching job. Williams held three head coaching positions prior to Maryland. In 1978, Williams obtained his first head coaching position at
American University. He led American to relative success, coaching them to several
NIT berths. In 1982, Williams returned to
Boston College, leading the Eagles to two NCAA tournament appearances, and one NIT appearance in his four-year tenure. In 1986, Williams took over at
Ohio State of the
Big Ten Conference. Under Williams, the Buckeyes advanced to one NCAA tournament appearance and two NIT appearances in three seasons.
Maryland The
Maryland Terrapins, an original member of the
Atlantic Coast Conference, announced Williams as its next head coach on June 13, 1989. The basketball program and the Maryland athletic program as a whole were still reeling from the aftershock of the 1986 death of Maryland basketball star
Len Bias and struggles under coach
Bob Wade, a former high school coach from
Baltimore. Williams coached the 1989–90 team to a respectable 18–13 record and an
NIT berth. However, in March 1990, the NCAA imposed harsh sanctions on the school for several major violations, mostly dating to the Wade era. Maryland was banned from postseason play in 1991 and 1992, and was kicked off live television for 1990–91. Additionally, Maryland docked itself several scholarships over two years. With his recruiting efforts severely hamstrung, Williams found it very difficult to rebuild the program. However, with the help of
Walt Williams, Maryland stayed competitive through a low point of the program's history. After a surprise appearance in the 1994 Sweet 16, the Terrapins were a fixture in the national rankings until 2005. Maryland's teams during this era featured future NBA players such as
Joe Smith,
Steve Francis,
Juan Dixon,
Steve Blake,
Lonny Baxter,
Keith Booth,
Terence Morris and
Chris Wilcox, and a cast of supportive role players, exemplified by
Byron Mouton. In 2001, Williams led Maryland to the first Final Four in school history, losing to Duke in the semifinals. On April 1, 2002, Williams led the Terrapins to their first NCAA National Championship, defeating
Indiana 64–52. Williams was the first coach to win a national championship without a single
McDonald's All American on the roster since its inception. He became the first coach to direct his alma mater to a national title since
Norm Sloan accomplished the feat with
North Carolina State in 1974. The 2002 team also won a school-record 32 games, as well as the school's first outright ACC title in 22 years—only the third time since 1981 that a team from North Carolina hadn't won at least a share of the title. In March 2004, Maryland won the ACC Tournament Title, defeating Duke 95–87, led by Tournament MVP
John Gilchrist. In the 2004–2005 season, Maryland failed to make the NCAA tournament for the first time since the 1993–1994 season, which was then the longest streak in the ACC. This began a relatively mediocre stretch for Maryland, where they failed to make the tournament three out of the next five years. In 2010, the Terrapins shared the regular-season conference title with Duke. The same season, Williams also earned his second ACC Coach of the Year award. 2011 saw the Terrapins struggle to a 19–14 mark, failing to make the post-season for the first time since 1993. On May 5, 2011, Williams announced his decision to retire from coaching basketball. He has remained with the Maryland athletic department as Assistant Athletic Director and Special Assistant to the Athletic Director. On January 26, 2012; Maryland honored Williams by renaming the playing surface at the
XFINITY Center "Gary Willams Court."
Coaching profile In March 2010, Williams was the 5th winningest active coach in the country and the 3rd winningest coach all-time in the ACC (behind only
Dean Smith and
Mike Krzyzewski). In his 31 years as a head coach, Williams has amassed an overall record of 654–368 (.640) and 447–240 (.651) at Maryland. He passed
Lefty Driesell as the school's winningest coach in 2006. Williams has an overall NCAA tournament record of 29–16 (.644), 25–13 (.658) at his alma mater. His 29 wins in the NCAA tournament places him seventh among active coaches in that category. Williams has coached Maryland to fourteen NCAA tournament appearances, including a streak of eleven consecutive appearances (1993–94 season to 2003–04 season), as well as four post season NIT appearances, allowing Maryland to own the longest current consecutive streak of postseason appearances in the ACC (
Wake Forest, who had previously had the longest active streak, failed to qualify for the postseason in 2007). Additionally, Williams has 71 wins over top 25 ranked opponents, 33 wins over top 10 ranked opponents (at least one every season from 96–97 to 09–10), 20 wins over top 5 opponents, three ACC regular season titles (co-champions in 1995 and 2010, and outright champions in 2002), and an ACC tournament title (2004). Williams' NCAA Tournament accomplishments include seven Sweet Sixteens, two Elite Eights, two Final Fours, and a
national championship in 2002. Williams also leads active coaches with seven wins over top-ranked teams, the most recent coming against
North Carolina on January 19, 2008. Since 1995, Coach Williams and Maryland have averaged 22.5 wins per season. Williams has led the Terrapins to at least 20 wins in 10 of the last 13 seasons and is tied with
Rick Pitino for 6th among active coaches with 17 career 20-win seasons. Williams had a discordant relationship with his former athletic director,
Debbie Yow, who is now the athletic director at
North Carolina State University. In April 2011, Yow, after hiring
Mark Gottfried to be the new head coach of the Wolfpack basketball team, accused the Maryland coach of attempting to "sabotage" N.C. State's search process by advising candidates that she was difficult to work with. Williams immediately denied the accusation.
Milestones since 2005–06 season A home victory over
Virginia on January 19, 2005, moved Williams into a tie with former Virginia head coach
Terry Holland as the fifth winningest coach in ACC history. On January 21, 2006, a home victory over
Virginia Tech earned Williams his 142nd ACC win, moving him into a tie with former Carolina head coach
Frank McGuire for third place in that category. Four nights later, a victory over
Georgia Tech gave him third place outright. On February 7, 2006, a 76–65 home victory over Virginia gave Williams his 349th win, allowing him to pass
Lefty Driesell as the university's all-time winningest head coach. On February 3, 2007, a road victory over Wake Forest earned Williams his 150th ACC victory. He is the third coach in conference history to accomplish this feat; only
Dean Smith and
Mike Krzyzewski have won more conference games. On February 6, 2008, a 70–65 road victory over
Boston College gave Williams his 600th win. Gary Williams is one of only 8 active NCAA basketball head coaches with at least 600 wins. On November 21, 2008, an 89–74
overtime home victory over
Vermont gave Williams his 400th victory at his alma mater. In ACC history, Williams stands alongside Smith and Krzyzewski as the only coaches to amass this number of wins. On February 21, 2009, Williams upset #3 (AP/ESPN Coaches Polls)
University of North Carolina, 88–85 in overtime. Then on March 12, Williams' Terps earned another victory over a top 10 opponent, defeating #8 Wake Forest, the second-seeded team, 75–64 in the quarterfinals of the
2009 ACC tournament, following a 74–69 victory over N.C. State in the opening round. The victory over the Demon Deacons was Williams' 17th ACC Tournament victory, tying Lefty Driesell for the most in school history. Williams coached in his 1,000th game on January 22, 2010, an 88–64 victory over NC State. On March 9, 2010, he was named the ACC coach of the year. On March 19, 2010, Williams coached Maryland (#4 rank in the Midwest Region) to a first-round victory, by a score of 89–77, over Houston (#13 rank in the Midwest Region) in the opening round of the 2010 NCAA Men's Basketball Championship. Two days later, Williams engineered a comeback in the final seconds of the second-round game against
Michigan State, only to lose to a
buzzer beater shot by
Korie Lucious. The final score was 85–83. A win would have put Williams in the Sweet Sixteen for the 9th time in his coaching career. On March 25, 2014, Williams was elected to the
National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame. In April of the same year, he was also voted into the
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, making him the first coach in history to be inducted into both institutions in the same year. ==Personal life==