Dave Bezold

David Jude Bezold (born 1965) is an American college basketball coach and a former head coach of the men's basketball team at Northern Kentucky University. He oversaw the team's reclassification to Division 1.[1] He graduated from Holy Cross High School in Covington, Kentucky in 1984.

Dave Bezold
Biographical details
Born1965 (age 5455)
Taylor Mill, Kentucky
Playing career
1984–1988Viterbo
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1990–2004Northern Kentucky (asst.)
2004–2015Northern Kentucky

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Northern Kentucky Norse (Great Lakes Valley Conference) (2004–2012)
2004–05 Northern Kentucky 14–158–127th
2005–06 Northern Kentucky 17–1112–72nd (East)
2006–07 Northern Kentucky 24–913–61st (East)
2007–08 Northern Kentucky 21–814–5T-1st (East)NCAA Div II Tournament Regional Final
2008–09 Northern Kentucky 24–714–41st (East)NCAA Div II Tournament First Round
2009-10 Northern Kentucky 17–138–104th (East)
2010–11 Northern Kentucky 21–912–6T–3rd (East)NCAA Div II Tournament Second Round
2011–12 Northern Kentucky 23–713–52nd (East)NCAA Div II Tournament First Round
Northern Kentucky: 161–7994–55
Northern Kentucky Norse (Atlantic Sun Conference) (2012–2015)
2012–13 Northern Kentucky 11–169–9T–4th
2013–14 Northern Kentucky 9–215–138th
2014–15 Northern Kentucky 13–177–7T–4th
Northern Kentucky: 33–5421–29
Total:194–133

      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

gollark: Maybe you could make a good scifi thing a hundred years in the future or something about faster computers/better optimization algorithms/distributed system designs/something making central planning more tractable. Although in the future supply chains will probably be even more complex. But right now, it is NOT practical.
gollark: In any case, if you have a planned system and some new need comes up... what do you do, spend weeks updating the models and rerunning them? That is not really quick enough.
gollark: If you want to factor in each individual location's needs in some giant model, you'll run into issues like:- people lying- it would be horrifically complex
gollark: Information flow: imagine some farmer, due to some detail of their climate/environment, needs extra wood or something. But the central planning models just say "each farmer needs 100 units of wood for farming 10 units of pig"; what are they meant to do?
gollark: The incentives problems: central planners aren't really as affected by how well they do their jobs as, say, someone managing a firm, and you probably lack a way to motivate people "on the ground" as it were.

References


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