Karen Aston

Karen Aston
Sport(s) Basketball
Current position
Team Texas
Biographical details
Born July 26, 1964
Bryant, Arkansas
Playing career
1985-1987 UALR
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1994-1996
1996-1998
1998-2006
2006-2007
2007-2011
2011-2012
2012-present
Baylor (asst.)
North Texas (asst.)
Texas (asst.)
Baylor (assoc. head coach)
Charlotte
North Texas
Texas

Karen Sue Aston (born July 26, 1964 in Bryant, Arkansas) is an American basketball player and coach. Since April 2012 she has served as the head women's basketball coach at the University of Texas at Austin. Her most recent prior position was head coach of University of North Texas[1]

Background

In her career as a college assistant coach, Aston has served under three coaches in the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. As associate head coach at Baylor, she worked for Kim Mulkey; in an earlier stint at Baylor she served under Sonja Hogg. Prior to becoming Baylor's associate head coach, she served eight seasons in the same capacity at the University of Texas at Austin under Jody Conradt.

Charlotte

Aston was introduced as the 49ers' new head coach on April 27, 2007. She replaced Amanda Butler, who left Charlotte after six seasons (two as head coach) to coach her alma mater, the University of Florida. Aston inherited a 49ers team that had made five consecutive postseason appearances including a WNIT berth in 2007. After a WNIT appearance in 2008, she led the 49ers to the 2009 Atlantic 10 Conference Tournament Title, and an 11th seed in the 2009 NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Tournament. After a run to the final four of the WNIT in 2011, Aston abruptly resigned on April 6, 2011 and soon thereafter accepted the head coaching position at North Texas in order to be closer to her family in Arkansas.

North Texas

On April 11, 2011, Karen Aston was named the sixth head coach of the University of North Texas women's basketball program. She returned to the university where she had coached as an assistant from 1996-98 under longtime UNT head coach Tina Slinker. Aston took over a program that had gone 5-25 the previous year, and tripled that win total her first year with a 15-16 overall record. On February 18, 2012, Aston earned her 100th victory as a head coach.[2]

Head Coaching Record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Charlotte (Atlantic 10 Conference) (2007–2011)
2007-2008 Charlotte 18-14 9–5 4th WNIT First Round
2008–2009 Charlotte 23–9 11–3 2nd NCAA 1st Round
2009-2010 Charlotte 18-14 9–5 4th WNIT Second Round
2010-2011 Charlotte 27-10 9–5 3rd WNIT Final Four
Charlotte: 86–47 (.647) 38–18 (.679)
North Texas (Sun Belt Conference) (2011–2012)
2011-2012 North Texas 15-16 7-9 3rd WNIT Second Round
North Texas: 15–16 (.484) 7–9 (.438)
Texas (Big 12 Conference) (2012–present)
2012-2013 Texas 12-18 5-13 8th
2013-2014 Texas 22-12 11-7 3rd NCAA 2nd Round
2014-2015 Texas 24-11 9-9 T-3rd NCAA Sweet Sixteen
Texas: 58–41 (.586) 25–28 (.472)
Total: 159–104 (.605)

      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

  1. http://www.dentonrc.com/sharedcontent/dws/drc/sports/stories/DRC_UNTAstonforWeb.273b4daf0.html
  2. http://www.meangreensports.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=1800&ATCLID=205382552

External links