Greg Kampe
FameRank: 3

"Greg Charles Kampe" is an United States/American college basketball coach and the current head men's basketball coach at Oakland University. He guided the Golden Grizzlies to their first NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship/NCAA Division I tournament and tournament win in 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament/2005. Through the 2013–14 season, he has compiled a 519–386 record in 30 seasons at Oakland University.

Kampe is one of nine Division I basketball coaches who have been at the same school for at least 25 seasons. Kampe is the third longest-tenured Division I head coach, behind Jim Boeheim and Mike Krzyzewski. Kampe won The Summit League's coach of the year four times, the most recent being in 2010 and 2011.

Kampe won his 500th career game January 26, 2013.

More Greg Kampe on Wikipedia.

He's doing very well for us. He's fitting in very well and doing what we want. We feel he's one of our defensive stoppers. We usually have him guard the other team's best wing player.

We came into the game as a very good rebounding team and nobody had done that to us this year. I don't know if we got tired or what but give them credit they just killed us on the boards the last 10 minutes of the game, I mean everything went to them and that was the difference.

That kind of set us back too.

He played hard, and he hustled. I saw him playing with some enthusiasm ... while everyone else on our team, you'd have to question.

This is phenomenal for our program. We get two home games at the Palace and television rights. For the next four years we can tell recruits that they get a chance to play against Michigan State and play them at home. This is the next step for us from making the tournament to becoming more than a 15-minute program.

Wooten does what he wants to do when he wants to do it. He's pretty good.

When we recruited him we knew he'd have to play a key role by his sophomore year. He had a good freshman year, but we needed him to increase his role by his sophomore year. Am I surprised at how he's done? No. Glad? Yes.

Being able to get this agreement is another step for OU to be a player in the college basketball landscape.

Maybe they were easy shots, and we weren't guarding him. I know he had one wide-open shot in front of our bench, so that's not baffling. If it's a H-O-R-S-E shot, he ought to be able to make it. He's a scholarship player.