Howie Dickenman
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Howie_Dickenman an entity of type: Thing
Howard Brandt Dickenman, Jr. (born November 9, 1946) is a retired American college basketball coach and the former men's basketball head coach for the Central Connecticut State University Blue Devils. He was the second-longest tenured head coach in program history. Previous to becoming the CCSU head coach, he spent fourteen years as an assistant coach for the Connecticut Huskies; the last ten years were as the top assistant under Hall-of-Fame coach Jim Calhoun. His first coaching job was assistant coach at New Britain High School in New Britain, Connecticut, a position he held for three years.
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Howie Dickenman
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Howie Dickenman
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Central Connecticut Blue Devils
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Central Connecticut State
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Central Connecticut
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Howie Dickenman
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1946-11-09
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1996
1997
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National Association of Basketball Coaches Literacy Champion Award
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Connecticut Sports Writers' Alliance Gold Key
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District One Coach of the Year
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Eastern Basketball Coach of the Year
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NEC Coach of the Year
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New England Division I Coach of the Year
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Norwich Sportsperson of the Year
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1946-11-09
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Howard Brandt Dickenman, Jr. (born November 9, 1946) is a retired American college basketball coach and the former men's basketball head coach for the Central Connecticut State University Blue Devils. He was the second-longest tenured head coach in program history. Previous to becoming the CCSU head coach, he spent fourteen years as an assistant coach for the Connecticut Huskies; the last ten years were as the top assistant under Hall-of-Fame coach Jim Calhoun. His first coaching job was assistant coach at New Britain High School in New Britain, Connecticut, a position he held for three years. A native of Norwich, Connecticut, Dickenman played collegiately at Central Connecticut State University from 1966 to 1969 as a 6'4" center. He was the first pick of the 17th round of the 1969 NBA Draft by the Phoenix Suns, though he never played in the league. He was recognized as the 1996 Norwich Native Son Award. Dickenman retired at the end of the 2015–16 season.
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Central Connecticut
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1996
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T–9th
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T–7th
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T–5th
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T–6th
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1997
2016
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282
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1966
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282–311 ()