| By Steve Behr
Sometimes, a coach can have two tours of duty at one school.
Appalachian State has hired Buzz Peterson to be its new head
mens basketball coach. An official announcement will be
made Wednesday morning. No contract terms have been released.
It is the second tour at Appalachian State for Peterson, who
coached the Mountaineers from 1996-2000, guiding them to a 79-39
record. Appalachian State won three North Division championships
in his four seasons in Boone and reached the NCAA Tournament
in 2000 after beating College of Charleston in the finals of
the Southern Conference Tournament.
Appalachian State lost to Ohio State in the first round of the
NCAAs. Peterson holds an 8-3 record in SoCon Tournament games.
Peterson, a North Carolina graduate, left Appalachian State
for Tulsa, where he led the Golden Hurricanes to an NIT championship.
One year later, he was hired to be the head coach at Tennessee,
where he lasted four years before being fired from that position
after going 61-59.
Peterson coached two seasons at Coastal Carolina before being
hired by the Charlotte Bobcats to be the teams director
of player personnel.
Peterson replaces Houston Fancher, who was dismissed following
the end of a 2008-09 season that saw the Mountaineers finish
13-18. Fancher was an assistant to Peterson for four years before
taking over the program in 2000 when Peterson went to Tulsa.
Other candidates emerged when Peterson first turned down the
position back on April 9. Citadel coach Ed Conroy was one, but
told the Charleston (S.C) Post and Courier that he was staying
put. Current Missouri assistant and former Charlotte and Texas
A&M head coach Melvin Watkins and Wake Forest assistant
Pat Kelsey were also candidates. Kelsey took a job as an assistant
coach at Xavier Monday.
Peterson takes over a team that returns five starters and loses
just one senior, guard Eduardo Bermudez. Leading scorer Kellen
Brand (14.8 points per game) and Donald Sims (13.7 per game)
were the most productive players offensively for the Mountaineers
last year.
Appalachian State finished fourth in the SoCons North
Division and beat Georgia Southern in the first round of the
SoCon Tournament.
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