Alex Pribble
Alexander Reed Pribble is an American basketball coach who is the current head coach of the Idaho Vandals men's basketball team.
Playing career
Born in Greenbrae, California and raised in nearby Fairfax, Pribble graduated from Sir Francis Drake High School in 2003 and played college basketball at California [Golden Bears men's basketball|California] under Ben Braun, initially as a walk-on before earning a scholarship. He was part of the Golden Bears' 2006 [NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|2006 NCAA Tournament] squad, and graduated in 2007 with a bachelor's degree in sociology.Coaching career
Following graduation, Pribble served as a graduate assistant at Cal before becoming the head boys' basketball coach at Tamalpais High School in Mill Valley, California from 2008 to 2011, where he guided the school to its first playoff berth in eight years during the 2009–10 season. Pribble returned to the college ranks at San Francisco State in NCAA Division II, then to 2013–14 [Eastern Washington Eagles men's basketball team|Eastern Washington] in Division I. During the 2014–15 [Eastern Washington Eagles men's basketball team|2014–15] season, he was part of the Eagles' Big Sky Conference regular season co-champions and 2015 [Big Sky Conference men's basketball tournament|conference tournament] championship, which earned them a berth in the Division I men's basketball tournament|NCAA tournament].His first college head coaching job came in 2015 at Saint Martin's University in Lacey, Washington. In four seasons at the helm, Pribble guided the Saints to an record, and the program's first two appearances in the NCAA Division II tournament, including a Sweet 16 appearance in 2019 [NCAA Division II men's basketball tournament#West – San Diego, California|2019].
Following the 2019 season, Pribble joined the staff at 2019–20 [Seattle Redhawks men's basketball team|Seattle University], serving under head coaches Jim Hayford and Chris Victor. On March 16, 2023, the University of Idaho named Pribble as head coach, the 31st in program history, replacing Zac Claus.