
PJC Dragons Head Basketball Coach Leaves for Midland College
Press Release From PJC
Ending a brief but successful few years at Paris Junior College,
Dragons Head Basketball Coach Ross Hodge has accepted the head
coach's position with Midland College.
A former PJC player, Hodge was named Conference Coach of the Year and
twice Region XIV Coach of the Year. He has led the Dragons to
consistently high achievements both regionally and nationally.
"I just feel very blessed to be leaving a great situation at PJC, and
coming into a great situation," Hodge said Thursday from Midland,
where he was to appear at a 1 p.m. press conference. "I just want to
thank everyone at PJC for the opportunity to take over a very good
program there in Paris."
Hodge also expressed his appreciation to PJC's faculty and staff, as
well as fans of the Dragons.
"Obviously," he said, "Paris is very special in my heart. I'll miss
everybody."
The Dragons ended this season as Region XIV Tournament runners-up and
North Zone co-champions with a 25-6 overall record and a national
ranking of sixth in defensive points allowed. PJC was also ranked in
the top 10 for the third straight year. Last year Hodge led the
Dragons to the Region XIV Conference Championship and an 8th-place
national finish in NJCAA National Tournament.
Hodge also served as assistant to former Dragons Head Coach Bill Foy.
"We wish Coach Hodge the best of luck in his new position," said PJC
President Dr. Pamela Anglin. "He'll be missed, though I told him that
we'd see him in Hutch." (The NJCAA National Tournament is played
annually in Hutchinson, Kan.)
Hodge's resignation is effective immediately. He beat out many
candidates to replace Midland's former head coach Grant McCasland,
who left April 20 to take the head coaching position with Midwestern
State University in Wichita Falls, Texas.
Hodge's tenure has produced several All-Americans and many All-
Conference players with most moving on to play at the university level.
In the 2007-08 season the Dragons won the most games in school
history (30), achieved the highest national ranking in school history
(No. 4), and started out the season 19-0.
In Hodge's first season the Dragons won the 2006-2007 TEAC regular
season conference championship while having the best regular season
record in school history (26-4) and finishing with a No. 7 national
ranking.
From 2003 to 2005 Hodge was an assistant to Sam Walker at Texas A&M
University — Commerce while earning his master's degree in
kinesiology. The TAMU-C Lions won the Lone Star Conference regular
and tournament championship, falling one game short of the Elite
Eight in the national tournament.
Hodge's playing career started at Seagoville High School under
Leonard Bishop, and he moved on to play basketball at PJC. In the two
years he played for Foy at PJC, Hodge was the point guard for a team
that won 20 games both years and made two regional tournament
appearances.
Hodge went on to play at TAMU-C and set the school record for assists
in a single season, finishing second in the nation in that category.
He received his bachelor's degree in Kinesiology in 2003.
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