Friday, October 19, 2018

19 Days Until WCU Basketball Tip-off (at Wright State)

Welcome to the 2018 WCU basketball tip-off countdown.

We will count down the remaining days until WCU basketball tips off at Wright State in Dayton, Ohio on November 7th. In this season's countdown, we will meet the coaches and team members as we countdown.


19 Days until Tip-off


Mark Prosser



Position: Head Coach
Hometown: Wheeling, W.Va.
Alma Mater: Marist College









A former associate head coach at Winthrop University and 15-year NCAA coaching veteran, Mark Prosser was introduced as Western Carolina University's 18th head men's basketball coach by Director of Athletics Randy Eaton on March 27, 2018 in a press conference held on campus in the Ramsey Center Hospitality Room.

Prosser, who just completed his sixth year on the men's basketball staff at Winthrop, has ties to the Southern Conference including two stints alongside head coach Mike Young at Wofford College where he helped guide the Terriers to consecutive regular season championships in 2009-10 and 2010-11. WCU is the second head coaching position for Prosser. He is the son of the late Skip Prosser, who guided three programs to a total of eight NCAA tournament appearances during his career.

Between four different NCAA-member institutions, Prosser has been an integral part of recruiting, developing and coaching a total of 28 all-conference players including two conference players of the year, two conference defensive players of the year and a combined eight all-freshman team selections. Teams he has helped coach have appeared in nine conference championship title games and have made five NCAA Tournament post-season appearances, twice pulling off first-round upsets.

"Just over three weeks since Coach Larry Hunter resigned, our search ends today. We didn't find a guy; we found 'THE' guy," said Eaton. "Mark Prosser has everything we were looking for in our next head men's basketball coach: a plethora of experience assisting in building successful mid-major programs, both on-and-off the court; recruiting ties not only to the southeastern United States, but also a strong history of recruiting nationally and internationally; a proven leader of young men, leading them in life as much as the game; a family man, who along with his wife Emily, daughter Ava Grayce, and son Declan, has already become one of us; and a fit in our department, our campus, our community -- in short, the entirety of the Catamount Nation."

Eaton added, "Speaking with those in the college basketball industry who know the business better than I, or those who simply watch televised games, Mark's name continued to come up. Essentially, this is a slam dunk for WCU men's basketball."

Prosser comes to Cullowhee after six highly successful years on the bench at Winthrop. Alongside head coach Pat Kelsey -- a former player for and assistant coach with Prosser's father, Skip, at Xavier and Wake Forest -- the Eagles compiled an impressive record of 102-59 over the past five seasons, highlighted by four-consecutive Big South Tournament title game appearances and a 2017 NCAA Tournament berth. Prosser helped orchestrate the offense of the 2015-16 Winthrop squad that ranked 13th nationally with an average of 82.2 points per game including the 23rd-best free throw percentage (74.9-percent) and an average of 8.9 made 3-pointers made per game to rank 32nd overall in the NCAA.

During his tenure in Rock Hill, S.C., Prosser led the development of Big South Player of the Year and All-American honorable mention, Keon Johnson, and first team All-Big South selection, Xavier Cooks. He also was the primary recruiter of Keon Moore, who set the school's NCAA Division seasonal scoring record and was Winthrop's first All-Big South selection since 2006-07.

Prosser began his first of two coaching stretches at Wofford College in the summer of 2002 where he served as an assistant coach for the Terriers in Mike Young's first season as head coach. During that season, Wofford posted a 14-15 overall record, including a 79-77 win at Virginia Tech. In the SoCon, the Terriers were 8-8 and advanced to the quarterfinals of the conference tournament.

After one season, he parlayed the experience into an assistant coaching position on Pat Flannery's staff at Bucknell University in Lewisberg, Pa. As an assistant coach, Prosser helped the Bison to a 99-57 record in five years including three Patriot League regular season titles and a pair of tournament crowns. Those squads averaged 20 wins a season while Prosser was on the coaching staff.

It was at Bucknell that Prosser experienced the most post-season success as the Bison scored two NCAA Tournament upset victories during his tenure. In 2005, the 14th-seeded Bison upset No. 3 Kansas in the first round, earning the award for "Best Upset" at the 2005 ESPY Awards, and finished the year ranked 25th overall nationally with a 23-10 record. The following season, No. 9 seed Bucknell defeated No. 8 Arkansas in March Madness. In 2005-06, the Bison went undefeated in Patriot League play, the first team to do so in conference history. The team was ranked in the top 25 for the first time in school history and featured Patriot League Player of the Year Charles Lee. For the NCAA Tournament, the Bison were seeded 9th and defeated Arkansas in the first round. In the second round they were defeated by Memphis to end the season at 27-5, the best record in school history.

While at Bucknell, Prosser signed 2008 Patriot League All-Freshman team selection Todd O'Brien and was involved in the player development of Charles Lee, who went on to sign a professional contract with the NBA's San Antonio Spurs. Lee was a three-time All-Patriot League selection and the 2006 Patriot League Player of the Year.

In the summer of 2008, Prosser returned to the sidelines at Southern Conference-member Wofford. During his first season back in Spartanburg in 2008, the Terriers set a school record with 12SoCon wins. In addition, the team posted its first winning overall record since moving to the NCAA Division I level. The following year, Prosser helped Wofford reach a school-record 26 wins along with the Southern Conference Championship and a trip to the NCAA Tournament.

All told, with Prosser on the bench in Spartanburg, the Terriers posted a 63-36 (.636) overall record, highlighted by back-to-back SoCon regular season and tournament championships, and consecutive appearances in the NCAA Tournament. He helped Wofford to a then school-record 26 victories in 2009-10 with a second 20-win season in 2010-11 with a squad that led the SoCon in assists and was also first in assist/turnover margin. Wofford also was eighth in the nation in 3-point percentage and 12th in overall field goal percentage.

Prosser was instrumental in the development of three-time first-team All-SoCon selection Noah Dahlman, a post player who scored more than 2,000 career points and was twice dubbed SoCon Tournament MVP.

A native of Wheeling, W.Va., Prosser played collegiately at Marist College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., before a knee injury ended his career prematurely. He began his coaching career as a student assistant coach at Marist until his graduation in 2002, helping the Red Foxes to a share of the Metro-Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) regular season title in 2001-02.

Prosser and his wife Emily are the parents of two -- a daughter, Ava Grayce and a son, Declan.


Courtesy WCU Athletics Media Relations




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