Basketball Operations Staff Adds Four New Faces
“I’m very pleased to add this talented group of professionals to our staff. We’re fortunate to add two experienced assistant coaches with a successful track record of positive player-coach relationships, strong work ethics, dedication and loyalty,” Bickerstaff said. “They will be positive components in a well-rounded coaching staff, and each brings a different set of talents to our organization. I’ve known both Gary and John for a number of years and I know they share the philosophies that we’ve already embraced with our basketball operations staff.
“We’ve become very familiar and comfortable with Drew through our work with him at XOS Technologies and we are confident that he will provide us excellent service with his input and video preparation,” Bickerstaff said. “Mark and I worked together in the past and I know the value he can bring the Bobcats and how deeply he cares for the medical well-being of players.”
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For two seasons he was an assistant coach and assistant director of player personnel in the Continental Basketball Association, first for the Rockford Lightning and then for the Quad City Thunder. Kloppenburg was interim head coach for four games in 1999-2000 with Rockford and coached current NBA player Earl Boykins. In the summer of 1999, he was head coach for Panteras de Miranda of the Venezuelan Professional League and he has conducted basketball clinics in Greece, Belgium, Iceland and Japan. His coaching career began at Lassen College, where he was head coach of the women’s team for four seasons and head coach of the men’s team for six seasons.
The son of former Seattle SuperSonics Assistant Coach Bob Kloppenburg, he graduated from UC-San Diego with a degree in Spanish Literature and he is bilingual in English and Spanish. Kloppenburg has three children, Sonja (22), Ian (16), and Carlotta (11).
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His professional career began in the NFL as a cornerback for 11 seasons with the New England Patriots (1968-73) and the Philadelphia Eagles (1973-79). Following his playing career he served as defensive coordinator at North Carolina Central University for 11 seasons and, while there, served as director for the National Youth Sports Program for two years.
Most recently, Outlaw worked as a consultant to the U.S. Department of Education in the office of safe and drug free schools. A standout collegiate football player at Jackson State University, he and his wife Linda are the parents of one son, J.J., a football player at Villanova University.
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From 1996-2002 he was the video coordinator for the Charlotte Hornets and Sting, assisting the coaching and basketball operations staffs with preparation and evaluation of players and teams using video and statistical data. During his tenure Perry also served as director of scouting for the Sting in 1999. A 1992 graduate of Wake Forest with a degree in Mathematics, he also earned a master’s degree in sport management from University of Richmond.
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Most recently, Coffelt worked as an athletic trainer at the HealthSouth Outpatient Therapy clinic in his native St. Louis, where he provided physical therapy for patients at the clinic and also served as athletic trainer for a local high school. He worked previously on the athletic training staff at University of Missouri. A 1998 graduate of Lindenwood University, Coffelt is married to his wife, Amy.
The Bobcats, who select fourth in the 2004 NBA Draft following an expansion draft of players from other NBA teams, will play their inaugural season in 2004-05 at the Charlotte Coliseum before moving to Charlotte’s new Uptown Arena beginning with the 2005-06 NBA season.







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