ABOUT THE AWARD
The Skip Prosser Man of the Year award
honors those who not only achieve success on the basketball
court but who display moral integrity off of it as well.
In six years with the Deacons, Prosser posted a 126-68 record.
For his career, he was 291-146 in 14 seasons including six as
the head coach at Xavier and one year at Loyola (Md.).
At Wake Forest, Prosser's teams averaged 21 wins per season
while playing in arguably the nation's most difficult league,
the Atlantic Coast Conference. Prosser won 100 games at an ACC
school quicker than all but two coaches in the 55-year history
of the conference.
Before arriving at Wake Forest prior to the 2001-02 season,
Prosser enjoyed highly-successful stints at Loyola (Md.) for one
season and at Xavier for seven seasons. Prosser is the only
coach in NCAA history to take three different schools to the
NCAA Tournament in his first season at each of those schools.
When Prosser took over the reins at Wake Forest, he inherited a
program rich in basketball tradition and history. How he almost
immediately took the program to a new, higher level is
remarkable.
In each of his first four seasons in Winston-Salem, Prosser
guided Wake Forest to an NCAA Tournament appearance. The Deacons
advanced to at least the second round of the NCAA Tournament in
each of those years. In 2004, Wake Forest advanced to the Sweet
16 for the first time since 1996.
Prosser's success at Wake Forest was not relegated to the NCAA
Tournament. In 2003, the Deacons won the ACC regular season
championship outright for the first time in more than 40 years.
In the 2004-05 season, Wake Forest rose to No. 1 in the national
polls for the first time in the illustrious history of the
school. The Deacons, in fact, were ranked in the Associated
Press top 25 for a school record 60 consecutive weeks under
Prosser.
Under Prosser, the Deacons were one of the ACC's winningest
teams over the last six years. In both 2003 and 2005, Wake
Forest went 13-3 in the ACC. During Prosser's tenure, the
Deacons were 52-44 in league play. In the ACC Tournament, Wake
Forest went 3-2 over the last two years combined.
Wake Forest, which defeated 18 different nationally-ranked teams
under Prosser, won a school record 27 games in 2005. Almost
annually over the last six years, Wake Forest has been one of
the nation's highest-scoring teams. In 2003, the Deacons became
the first ACC team ever to lead the nation in rebounding.
A key to Prosser's success at Wake Forest was recruiting some of
the nation's top high school players and developing those
players into all-stars. Prosser was able to win national
recruiting wars to sign McDonald's All-Americans Chris Paul and
Eric Williams. After playing for Prosser, Paul, Josh Howard and
Darius Songaila were all selected in the NBA Draft and are
currently enjoying outstanding professional careers.
While playing under Prosser, Paul was named the 2004 ACC Rookie
of the Year and earned first team All-American honors in 2005.
Howard was a unanimous selection - the first unanimous selection
since 1974 - for ACC Player of the Year. Howard was also a first
team All-American and was named National Player of the Year by
several sources.
Prosser was named ACC Coach of the Year in 2003, giving him
conference coach of the year honors in two different leagues.
What Prosser accomplished at Wake Forest was not limited to
on-the-court success.
He embraced Wake Forest's academic standards and stressed
performance in the classroom by his players. Every senior that
he coached at Wake Forest earned his diploma in four years. From
Day One, Prosser made academics a priority with his players.
Mandatory study halls are the norm, class attendance is checked
and Prosser even named academic counselor Jane Caldwell the
team's "MVP" in 2002 and in 2007.
With an exciting style of basketball, a strong relationship with
the student body and raucous pre-game festivities, Prosser and
his staff turned Lawrence Joel Coliseum into one of the loudest
facilities around. With black and gold tie-dyed T-shirts filling
the arena and the mascot riding a Harley-Davidson, the
atmosphere in Wake's home arena turned 180 degrees.
Prosser and company made home games more than just a basketball
game, but an event, resulting in increased attendance. In
2005-06, for the first time in school history, Wake Forest sold
completely out of season tickets. There were 14,665 tickets sold
or distributed to every home game.
The Deacons responded by going 81-17 at home, including a
24-game homecourt win streak and a 16-0 record in Joel Coliseum
in 2002-03 and another 16-0 mark at home in 2004-05.
Prosser's 14 years as a head coach were a model of consistency.
His teams won at least 21 games in nine of the last 11 seasons.
His teams advanced to the NCAA Tournament nine times and to the
NIT three times.
Prosser's career winning percentage (.666) was one of the
highest among active coaches.
"I don't have a career record," Prosser said. "The players won
those games."
Prosser won regular season titles in three different leagues
(ACC, Atlantic 10, MCC) and postseason conference tournament
crowns in two leagues (Atlantic 10, MAAC). He was named
conference Coach of the Year in two different leagues and was
one of just 10 active Division I coaches to lead three different
teams into the NCAA Tournament.
In 21 years as a college coach, Prosser coached in 18 postseason
tournaments.
Prosser saw many of his players go on to enjoy successful
careers in the NBA and overseas. In 2002, Songaila was taken in
the second round of the NBA Draft by the Boston Celtics and he
currently plays for the Washington Wizards. Howard was selected
in the first round of the 2003 Draft by the Dallas Mavericks. In
2005, Paul was an NBA "lottery pick" and a near-unanimous
selection for NBA Rookie of the Year in 2006 for the New Orleans
Hornets.
At Xavier, Prosser coached players such as David West, James
Posey, Torraye Braggs and Lionel Chalmers, who played last
season in the NBA. As an assistant at Xavier, Prosser helped
recruit future NBA players such as Derek Strong, Aaron Williams,
Larry Sykes, Tyrone Hill and Brian Grant.
In Prosser's first season at Wake Forest in 2001-02, he led the
Deacons to a 21-13 record (despite facing seven teams ranked in
the top 10), a third-place finish in the ACC and an NCAA
Tournament appearance. Prosser led Wake to a 9-7 record in the
league, tying for third place behind two recent NCAA champions
-- Maryland and Duke. The Deacons swept rivals North Carolina
and NC State, won an NCAA Tournament game for the first time
since 1997 and set a school record for points scored, assists
and three-point attempts in one season.
Only four coaches in the 50-year history of the ACC won more
league games in their rookie year than Prosser did. He became
the first rookie coach at Wake Forest since 1927 to post a
winning record. Prosser was a finalist for the Naismith National
Coach of the Year Award.
But the 2001-02 season was just a stepping stone. In 2002-03,
Prosser guided Wake Forest to its highest level since the Tim
Duncan era.
Wake Forest finished the 2002-03 season with a 25-6 overall
record and a final No. 8 ranking in the Associated Press poll --
then Wake's highest finish in the poll since 1995. The Deacons
finished 13-3 and in first place in the ACC for the first time
since 1995. It was WFU's first outright ACC regular season title
in 41 years.
Prosser's Deacons were not ranked in any of the preseason polls
and were picked to finish as low as seventh in the ACC, but
Prosser molded a rotation of seven freshmen and sophomores with
All-American senior Josh Howard into one of college basketball's
top teams in 2002-03.
For his efforts, Prosser was named the ACC Coach of the Year. He
was also named district coach of the year by the NABC and the
USBWA, and he was a finalist for the Naismith National Coach of
the Year.
In 2003-04, Wake Forest fielded one of the nation's youngest
rosters (no scholarship seniors) and faced one of college
basketball's most difficult schedules. Prosser helped guide the
youth-laden team to 21 victories, a third-place finish in the
ACC, an ACC-best 14th consecutive postseason appearance and a
berth in the NCAA Sweet Sixteen.
Along the way, the Deacons rose to as high as No. 3 in the
national polls and beat two teams ranked in the top five -- No.
3 Duke and No. 4 North Carolina. The win over North Carolina --
a 119-114 triple-overtime thriller in Chapel Hill to open the
ACC season -- went down as one of the greatest ACC games in the
51-year history of the league.
The 2003-04 Deacons ranked third nationally in scoring offense
and led the ACC in field goal percentage. Sophomore Justin Gray
earned first team All-ACC honors and Paul was named ACC Rookie
of the Year.
Wake Forest set a number of records and reached a number of
firsts in 2004-05. The Deacons, with a record of 27-6, set a
school record for single-season victories. In November, Wake
rose to No. 1 in the national polls for the first time ever. The
Deacons were ranked no lower than seventh in the national polls
from beginning to end and finished with a national AP ranking of
fifth.
There were other impressive numbers in 2004-05. Wake went 6-3
against ranked teams and 7-1 in games decided by five points or
less. The Deacons broke an NCAA record by making 51 consecutive
free throws and they finished third nationally in scoring
offense.
Individually, three players were named All-ACC (Paul was first
team, Gray and Williams were named to the second team). Paul was
an Academic All-American as well. Prosser was named Wake
Forest's head coach on April 24, 2001, replacing Dave Odom.
Prior to coming to Winston-Salem, Prosser enjoyed success at
Xavier University from 1995-2001, compiling a 148-65 (.695)
record in seven seasons.
Xavier earned a record of 71-35 (.669) in conference play during
his tenure -- second only to Temple in the Atlantic 10. The
Musketeers earned back-to-back Atlantic 10 West regular season
crowns in 1997 and 1998. In his last five seasons at Xavier, the
Musketeers beat crosstown rival Cincinnati four times. Two of
those victories came against Bearcat teams ranked No. 1 in the
nation.
At Xavier, 83 percent of Prosser's players graduated (100
percent of the seniors) -- one of the highest graduation rates
in the country.
Prosser spent 15 years at Xavier, first as an assistant coach
under Pete Gillen for eight seasons. After a one-year stint as
head coach at Loyola (Md.) College, Prosser returned to Xavier
as the head coach, replacing Gillen.
In Prosser's final season at Xavier in 2000-01, the Musketeers
posted a 21-8 record with just one senior in the starting
lineup, earning an NCAA Tournament bid. The previous season,
1999-00, Xavier finished 21-12, securing its fourth straight
20-win season and its fifth 20-win season in six years under
Prosser.
In 1997-98, XU earned an 11-5 mark in the Atlantic 10 and went
on to capture the league's postseason tournament. In 1996-97,
Xavier won the first of two consecutive Atlantic 10 Conference
West Division titles by going 13-3 in the league despite having
no seniors among its top six players.
Prosser was named the Basketball Times Mideast Coach of the Year
and the NABC District 10 Coach of the Year. In 1995-96, Xavier
jumped from the MCC to the Atlantic 10 and many critics doubted
the move. The Musketeers lost five of their top six players from
the 1994-95 team, but managed to finish with an 8-8 A-10 regular
season record. Prosser's teams went on to silence those critics
by going 57-23 in Atlantic 10 play from 1997-2001. Prosser's
first Xavier team in 1994-95 won the Midwestern Collegiate
Conference regular season title with a perfect 14-0 mark (23-5
overall). Prosser was named the MCC Coach of the Year that
season.
Prior to taking over as head coach at Xavier, Prosser spent one
season (1993-94) as head coach at Loyola (Md.) College and
enjoyed a true Cinderella season. He took over a squad that
finished 2-25 the previous season. But Prosser led Loyola to a
17-13 mark in 1993-94, making the NCAA Tournament for the only
time in that school's history. It marked the biggest turnaround
in NCAA Division I basketball in 1994. The underdog Greyhounds
won three MAAC Tournament games en route to winning the
championship and capturing the automatic NCAA bid.
Before his stop at Loyola, Prosser spent eight years as the top
assistant under Gillen. Prosser was a member of Gillen's first
staff at Xavier in 1985. During Prosser's time as a Xavier
assistant, the Musketeers compiled a record of 180-67, capturing
five Midwestern Collegiate Conference Tournament championships
and five MCC regular season titles while earning seven NCAA
Tournament berths. Xavier advanced to at least the second round
of the NCAA Tournament in four of seven appearances, including
the Sweet 16 in 1990.
Xavier's recruiting efforts enjoyed great growth during
Prosser's time as an assistant. As an assistant coach, he
concentrated his efforts on the guards including Byron Larkin,
Stan Kimbrough, Jamal Walker, Michael Davenport, Jamie Gladden
and Michael Hawkins, all of whom scored more than 1,000 career
points.
Prosser came to Xavier as an assistant coach in 1985 after an
illustrious coaching career on the high school level in Wheeling
(WV). He took over as head coach at Central Catholic High School
in Wheeling in 1979. His six-year ledger read 104-48, including
a state AA championship in 1982. The 1982 team set a school
record for victories, finishing 25-2.
His last team, in 1984-85, made it to the state finals. In all,
Prosser guided the Maroon Knights to one state title (1982),
five regional championships (1981-82-83-84-85) and three
conference crowns (1982-83-85).
Dino Gaudio, an assistant at Xavier under Gillen from 1987-93
and currently Wake Forest's head coach, was Prosser's top
assistant coach for four years at Central Catholic. Prosser
began his coaching career at Linsly Institute in Wheeling,
spending time as the freshman coach (1972-76) and junior varsity
coach (1976-77) before being promoted to head varsity coach
(1977-79). Linsly compiled a record of 33-9 with Prosser as the
varsity coach.
Leaving Xavier and the city of Cincinnati was not easy. Wake
Forest athletic director Ron Wellman searched nationwide for a
new coach and he sought the advice of some of basketball's top
minds. Prosser's name continued to surface over and over again.
"When I started the process, I called the people who I thought
knew the best college basketball coaches in the nation. They all
said the same thing about Skip Prosser: 'If you can hire him,
you better get him.' Not only is he a great basketball coach,
but he's a great person.
"Skip Prosser knows the rules and he follows them. He doesn't
push the rules as far as he can and see what he can get away
with. He knows the rules and he follows them strictly. Secondly,
he graduates his players. He is committed to the academic
process. Thirdly, he is a great representative of our
university. And fourth, he wins. His record shows that he knows
how to win basketball games."
Prosser expected his players to attend class and graduate. He
expected his players to be solid representatives of the
University. On the court, he expected his players to work
extremely hard and compete for championships.
"I won't make a lot of promises but I won't make excuses,
either," Prosser said prior to his first season at Wake. "Our
goal is to compete for championships every year. Our style will
be to play very quickly. We expect to win every time we play and
we expect to be the hardest-playing team on the court.
"I hate to lose to anybody. I'm not a good loser. I abhor the
losses a lot more than I enjoy the wins." Prosser expected his
team to hold the same goals as the university.
"Wake Forest has the vision to be the best university it can be
and to be one of the best in the country. The same is true with
our basketball team. We want to be the best team we can be and
we want to compete with the best teams in the country."
Prosser and Wake Forest were a perfect fit. "I've been through a
lot of springs with calls and inquiries and invitations to visit
other campuses," Prosser said upon his hiring. "Something about
Wake Forest rang true for me." On his visit to Wake Forest,
Prosser liked the people, the area, the school's academic
reputation and the intimate size. And then there was the
prospect of coaching in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
"As the commercial says: The greatest risk is not taking one,"
Prosser said.
A 1972 graduate of the United States Merchant Marine Academy at
Kings Point (NY), with a degree in Nautical Science, Prosser
played three years of basketball as a guard and one year of
rugby as a collegian. He received his master's degree in
secondary education from West Virginia University in 1980.
Prosser attended Carnegie (Pa.) High School, where he was a
standout football and basketball player.
George Edward "Skip" Prosser, who was born on Nov. 3, 1950 in
Pittsburgh (Pa.), is survived by the former Nancy Franklin, and
two sons, Scott (28) and Mark (27). Mark played basketball at
Marist College, and is an assistant coach at Bucknell.
Prosser was the 19th head coach in Wake Forest history and just
the fourth since 1972. Carl Tacy coached 13 seasons, from
1973-85. Bob Staak was the Deacon coach for four years, from
1986-89. Dave Odom took over in 1990 and coached 12 seasons
before resigning to take the head coaching position at the
University of South Carolina.
"Coaching isn't wins and losses," Prosser said. "It's teaching.
That's the reason I got into coaching and the reason I've stayed
in coaching.
"I hope that I remain in the business of education."
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