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COURTNEY NEW MCC MEN’S BASKETBALL COACH
Nathan Courtney is in as the new men’s basketball coach at Meridian
Community College, according to college president Dr. Scott Elliott.
Elliott explained that shortly after agreeing to become MCC’s new cage coach
that Brown was offered a more lucrative university-level job in Georgia;
therefore, the Eagles immediately turned to Courtney. A Mississippi native,
Courtney comes to MCC with 11 years of college and university coaching
experience, most recently as an assistant coach at Indian Hills Community
College (Ottumwa, Iowa) – indisputably one of the nation’s premier junior
college programs.
“My belief is that most things work out as they are intended,” Elliott said. “I
certainly feel that’s the case here. We were excited about Dale Brown, who
enjoyed a prolific playing career on both the junior college and university
levels, but we’re not in the business of holding people back. In Dale’s case, I
believe he accepted our position in good faith, but he was then offered a job at
Clark University in Atlanta that was going to pay him considerably more than we
could offer. Dale’s got a wife and three kids to provide for, so all we could do
was be happy for him from a personal perspective.”
That said, Elliott expressed gratification that MCC was able to quickly turn to
Courtney, originally from Lumberton, Mississippi. Besides Indian Hills, Courtney
has coaching stints at Missouri State, Marshalltown Community College, Barton
College, and the University of Dubuque. Moreover, he has worked summer camps for
the University of Iowa.
“The fact that Nathan is coming to us from Indian Hills kind of says it all,”
Elliott noted. “Indian Hills has one of the richest basketball traditions in
junior college sports history. At one time, Indian Hills won three consecutive
NJCAA national championships – the only college to ever accomplish that. During
Nathan’s time on the Indian Hills staff, the college went to the NJCAA national
tournament twice. So, he’s been to the big show, and he knows what it takes to
get there as a coach.”