Andy Enfield
Andrew William Enfield is an American basketball coach who is the head men's basketball coach at Southern Methodist University. He came to national prominence as head coach at Florida Gulf Coast when it made an unexpected run to the Sweet 16 round of the 2013 NCAA tournament as a No. 15 seed.
Originally from Shippensburg, Pennsylvania, Enfield played college basketball at Johns Hopkins University as a shooting guard and graduated with 18 school records. He held the all-time NCAA record for free throw shooting percentage. A basketball coach since 1994, Enfield began his career as an assistant coach for the NBA's Milwaukee Bucks and Boston Celtics, after which he went on a brief hiatus from coaching to work as a business executive. In 2006, Enfield returned to coaching as an assistant at Florida State. Enfield got his first head-coaching position at Florida Gulf Coast in 2011.
After two seasons at Florida Gulf Coast, Enfield became the head coach of the USC Trojans in 2013. Enfield led USC to six postseason appearances; five in the NCAA Tournament and once in the NIT ; the Trojans made it past the Second Round once with Enfield.
On April 1, 2024, Enfield was named the head coach at SMU, ahead of the program's move to the ACC, beginning with the 2024–25 season.
Early life and education
The son of local teachers Bill and Barbara Enfield, Andrew William Enfield graduated as class valedictorian from Shippensburg High School in Shippensburg, Pennsylvania. He attended Johns Hopkins University, where he was the first recruit of longtime head basketball coach Bill Nelson. Enfield was a shooting guard and currently holds 18 school records, such as career points, single-season points, career scoring average, career field goals, career three-pointers, career three-point percentage, career free throws, single-season free-throw percentage, and career minutes. He also set the NCAA record for career free throw percentage and was named a Division III Academic All-American in 1990 and 1991 and NABC All-American in 1991. Enfield graduated from JHU with a bachelor's degree in economics and earned an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship. He earned an MBA from the University of Maryland.Career
Career background
To supplement his income, Enfield and former Johns Hopkins lacrosse coach Dave Pietramala operated lacrosse and basketball camps, which focused on shooting. This evolved into consulting, where Enfield advertised himself as "the shot doctor." He moved to New York City and formed his first company which sold videos teaching basketball shooting techniques.In 2000, Enfield invested in and was hired as a vice president of finance at TractManager, a healthcare software startup. The company's founder/CEO, Thomas A. Rizk, said he "saw some genius in Andy in everything he did". Enfield remained with the company for more than five years and, as of March 2013, still owns stock in it; Rizk stated the company is worth significantly more than the $100 million figure he claimed was erroneously reported by Sports Illustrated.