University of Memphis Athletics
Men's Basketball
Brown, Larry

Larry Brown
- Title:
- Assistant Coach
- Phone:
- 901-678-2346
Larry Brown, who is the eighth-winningest coach in NBA history and the only head coach to win both an NCAA national championship (University of Kansas, 1988) and an NBA championship (Detroit Pistons, 2004) in his career, was named a Memphis assistant coach prior to the 2021-22 season. Prior to the 2022-23 campaign, he was named Special Advisor to the Head Coach.
Brown was enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002. He is also the recipient of the 2021 Chuck Daly Lifetime Achievement Award, presented annually by the National Basketball Coaches Association. Furthermore, he is the only head coach in NBA history to lead eight different teams to the playoffs.
In 26 seasons an NBA head coach, Brown won 1,098 games and made the playoffs 18 times to go along with eight 50-win seasons, three conference championships and the 2004 title as head coach of the Pistons. He was the 2000-01 NBA Coach of the Year with the Philadelphia 76ers, where he coached NBA Player of the Year Allen Iverson and led the 76ers to their best record since 1984-85 at 56-26. Tigers head coach Penny Hardaway and Brown’s longstanding relationship dates back to when Brown coached Hardaway on the 2005-06 New York Knicks team.
Brown spent seven seasons on the collegiate level during the 1980s, two at UCLA and five at Kansas, leading his squads to three Final Four appearances and one NCAA title. He was named Naismith College Coach of the Year in 1988.
Brown also has two Olympic Gold Medals (1964, player; 2000, assistant coach) and one bronze medal (2004, head coach).
Most recently, Brown was the head coach at SMU from 2012-16, where he went 94-39 in four seasons with two postseason trips. He was the head coach of Auxilium Torino in Italy’s Lega Basket Serie A in 2018.
Brown began his coaching career in the ABA, where he led the Carolina Cougars from 1972-74 before taking the helm in Denver for two seasons. He continued with the Nuggets following their move to the NBA in 1976-77 before moving on to coach UCLA for two seasons. There, he led a freshman-dominated team to the 1980 NCAA title game before falling to Louisville.
After two years with the NBA's New Jersey Nets, Brown began his tenure at Kansas in 1983, where he went 135-44 in five seasons, leading the Jayhawks to the 1988 NCAA Championship, Kansas' first National Championship in 36 years.
Brown played collegiately at North Carolina under legends Frank McGuire and Dean Smith and served as an assistant coach at North Carolina from 1965-67.
Larry Brown By The Numbers
Brown was enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002. He is also the recipient of the 2021 Chuck Daly Lifetime Achievement Award, presented annually by the National Basketball Coaches Association. Furthermore, he is the only head coach in NBA history to lead eight different teams to the playoffs.
In 26 seasons an NBA head coach, Brown won 1,098 games and made the playoffs 18 times to go along with eight 50-win seasons, three conference championships and the 2004 title as head coach of the Pistons. He was the 2000-01 NBA Coach of the Year with the Philadelphia 76ers, where he coached NBA Player of the Year Allen Iverson and led the 76ers to their best record since 1984-85 at 56-26. Tigers head coach Penny Hardaway and Brown’s longstanding relationship dates back to when Brown coached Hardaway on the 2005-06 New York Knicks team.
Brown spent seven seasons on the collegiate level during the 1980s, two at UCLA and five at Kansas, leading his squads to three Final Four appearances and one NCAA title. He was named Naismith College Coach of the Year in 1988.
Brown also has two Olympic Gold Medals (1964, player; 2000, assistant coach) and one bronze medal (2004, head coach).
Most recently, Brown was the head coach at SMU from 2012-16, where he went 94-39 in four seasons with two postseason trips. He was the head coach of Auxilium Torino in Italy’s Lega Basket Serie A in 2018.
Brown began his coaching career in the ABA, where he led the Carolina Cougars from 1972-74 before taking the helm in Denver for two seasons. He continued with the Nuggets following their move to the NBA in 1976-77 before moving on to coach UCLA for two seasons. There, he led a freshman-dominated team to the 1980 NCAA title game before falling to Louisville.
After two years with the NBA's New Jersey Nets, Brown began his tenure at Kansas in 1983, where he went 135-44 in five seasons, leading the Jayhawks to the 1988 NCAA Championship, Kansas' first National Championship in 36 years.
Brown played collegiately at North Carolina under legends Frank McGuire and Dean Smith and served as an assistant coach at North Carolina from 1965-67.
Larry Brown By The Numbers
- 42 Seasons as a Head Coach
- NBA Championship (Detroit, 2004)
- NCAA National Championship (Kansas, 1988)
- Three ABA Coach of the Year Awards (Carolina, 1972-73; Denver, 1974-75; Denver, 1975-76)
- NBA Coach of the Year Award (Philadelphia, 2001)
- NCAA Coach of the Year Award (Kansas, 1988)
- 10-Time NBA Coach of the Month
- 4 ABA Playoffs
- 18 NBA Playoffs
- 8 NCAA Tournaments
- 3 Final Fours
- 3 NBA Conference Finals
- 3 NBA Finals