Pam DeCosta
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | August 27, 1964 Denver, Colorado, U.S. |
| Career information | |
| High school | Lutheran (Denver, Colorado) |
| College | Mesa State (1982–1986) |
| Playing career | 1986–1987 |
| Coaching career | 1990–present |
| Career history | |
| As a player: | |
| 1986–1987 | Oberhausen |
| As a coach: | |
| 1990–1992 | Metro State (asst.) |
| 1992–1993 | Denver East HS (girls' varsity) |
| 1993–1996 | Kansas (asst.) |
| 1996–1998 | Oklahoma (asst.) |
| 1998–2003 | Kansas (asst.) |
| 2003–2007 | Lynn |
| 2007–2011 | San Jose State |
| 2011–2019 | Oklahoma (asst.) |
| Career highlights | |
As player:
| |
Pamela Suzette DeCosta (born August 27, 1964)[1] is an American college basketball coach, most recently as a women's basketball assistant coach at Oklahoma. Born in Denver,[2] DeCosta played college basketball at Mesa State College and received her bachelor's degree at Metropolitan State University of Denver in 1991.[3]
Head coaching record
| Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lynn Fighting Knights (Sunshine State Conference) (2003–2007) | |||||||||
| 2003–04 | Lynn | 5–22 | 1–13 | ||||||
| 2004–05 | Lynn | 12–16 | 6–10 | ||||||
| 2005–06 | Lynn | 11–17 | 6–10 | ||||||
| 2006–07 | Lynn | 17–11 | 9–7 | 4th | |||||
| Lynn: | 45–66 (.405) | 22–40 (.355) | |||||||
| San Jose State Spartans (Western Athletic Conference) (2007–2011) | |||||||||
| 2007–08 | San Jose State | 3–28 | 1–15 | 9th | |||||
| 2008–09 | San Jose State | 2–28 | 1–15 | 9th | |||||
| 2009–10 | San Jose State | 6–23 | 2–14 | 9th | |||||
| 2010–11 | San Jose State | 2–27 | 2–14 | 9th | |||||
| San Jose State: | 13–106 (.109) | 6–58 (.094) | |||||||
| Total: | 58–167 (.258) | ||||||||
References
- ^ "NCAA® Career Statistics".
- ^ "KU loses aide". LJWorld.com. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
- ^ "Pam DeCosta". Oklahoma Sooners. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
External links
- Oklahoma bio
- San Jose State bio (pp. 6-7) Archived October 30, 2015, at the Wayback Machine