After a championship stint within the region as a head coach at his alma mater, Kent McBride is in his second season as head coach at Cal U in 2017-18.
McBride helped guide the Vulcans to a three-win improvement during his initial year while mentoring a roster with no seniors and only one returning starter. Cal U finished with a 10-18 overall record and a 7-15 mark in PSAC action after splitting the last 14 games of the year. The Vulcans started the transition to a more fast-paced offense, as they averaged over 70 points for the first time in six years and set a school record with 255 three-pointers.
Prior to Cal U, McBride posted an 83-63 record in five seasons as head coach at Concord. He guided the program to its first conference title since 1997 and only its second-ever appearance in the NCAA Tournament during the 2015-16 season. The Mountain Lions finished that year with a 22-10 record and captured the MEC Tournament Championship as the fourth seed. Concord claimed a double-overtime victory over West Liberty, the No. 1 team in the country and the top seed in the league, in the semifinals of the league tournament before erasing an eight-point, second-half deficit against Notre Dame (Ohio) in the championship. The Mountain Lions earned the automatic qualifier after winning the MEC title and appeared in its first NCAA Tournament in nearly two decades.
McBride enjoyed instant success when returning to his alma mater as head coach in the 2011-12 season. Concord advanced to the semifinals of the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WVIAC) Tournament and finished with a 17-12 overall record, as the program was just two years removed from a six-win campaign.
During his time with the Mountain Lions, McBride mentored nine players that received all-conference recognition. He helped develop All-MEC First-Team guard Rob Reed, who finished fifth in the league as a senior in scoring at 21.5 points per game. Reed eclipsed the 1,000-point milestone despite playing only two seasons at Concord and ranked fourth in the country as a senior with 119 three-pointers made.
McBride started his coaching career at West Virginia Wesleyan during the 2006-07 season and spent two years as an assistant coach. In his second year with the program, the Bobcats registered a seven-win improvement and tallied their most wins since the 2001-02 campaign.
A native of Mullens, West Virginia, McBride then served as assistant coach with Glenville State for two years. He helped mentor one of the leading scorers in the country in senior Justin Caldwell, who ranked fifth in NCAA Division II and paced the WVIAC at 23.5 points per game after playing the previous three years at West Virginia Wesleyan.
McBride was a point guard for the Mountain Lions from 2002-06 under head coach Steve Cox, who is Concord's all-time winningest coach. He started 83 of 84 games over his last three years and scored over 900 points, while tallying over 500 assists and 200 steals during his career. As a sophomore, McBride started every game while helping the Mountain Lions post a 22-7 overall record – their winningest season in over a decade.
McBride earned his bachelor's degree from Concord in mathematics with a minor in business administration in 2006. He later completed a master's degree in business administration from West Virginia Wesleyan in 2008. McBride and his wife, Holly, have one son, Campbell.