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Brian "Penny" Collins is an American college basketball coach, and current head coach of the Tennessee State Tigers basketball team.[1][2]

Brian Collins
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamTennessee State
ConferenceOVC
Record46–72 (.390)
Biographical details
Born (1984-03-23) March 23, 1984 (age 38)
Nashville, Tennessee
Playing career
2002–2006Belmont
2006Bakersfield Jam
2007Kouvot
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2007–2009Tennessee State (asst.)
2009–2012Cumberland (asst.)
2012–2015Columbia State CC
2015–2017East Tennessee State (asst.)
2017–2018Illinois State (asst.)
2018–presentTennessee State
Head coaching record
Overall110–100 (.524)
Accomplishments and honors
Awards
2013–14 REGION 7 COACH OF THE YEAR,2014–15 NJCAA DISTRICT 7 COACH OF THE YEAR, 2019–20 BOXTOROW COACH OF THE YEAR

Playing career


A Nashville native, Collins was a four-year starter at hometown Belmont under Rick Byrd, and was the captain of the Bruins first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance at the Division I level in 2006. He scored 1,199 points in his career, and left the school as the all-time leader in assists and steals at the Division I level.[2][3]

After graduation, Collins played professional basketball between 2006 and 2007 with the Bakersfield Jam of the NBDL and Kouvot in Finland.[4]


Coaching career


In 2007, Collins began his coaching career serving as a graduate assistant and director of basketball operations at Tennessee State until 2009, when he accepted an assistant coaching position at NAIA institution Cumberland.[2]

Collins landed his first head coaching job, taking the reins of Columbia State where he took over a team that went 10–17 in his first year, but compiled a 54–11 overall record in his final two seasons and led the team to two-straight NCJAA national tournament appearances.[5][6][7] After the 2015 season, Collins joined the staff at ETSU for two seasons before spending one season at Illinois St. as an assistant coach.[8][9]

On March 26, 2018, Collins was named the 21st head coach in Tennessee State history, replacing Dana Ford, who accepted the head coaching position at Missouri State.[2]


Head coaching record



NJCAA


Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Columbia State () (2012–2015)
2012–13 Columbia State 10–17 *7–11 *N/A
2013–14 Columbia State 28–417–1N/AELITE 8
2014–15 Columbia State 26–714–4N/ASWEET 16
Columbia State: 64–28 (.696)38–16 (.704)
Total:64–28 (.696)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion


NCAA DI


Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Tennessee State (Ohio Valley) (2018–present)
2018–19 Tennessee State 9–216–1210th
2019–20 Tennessee State 18–159–9T–5thCIT cancelled
2020–21 Tennessee State 4–193–1712th
2021–22 Tennessee State 14–188–10T–5th
Tennessee State: 46–72 (.390)26–48 (.351)
Total:46–72 (.390)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion


References






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