Head Coach Marty Coyne
Marty Coyne is entering his 10th season as head coach of the Bloomsburg men's tennis team. He begins his ninth year at the helm of the women's squad.
While in charge of the men's program, he has led the team to eight consecutive appearances in the NCAA Division II Championships, advancing to the quarterfinal round in both 1996 and 1997. He has also been coachfor part of the school's 14 consecutive PSAC championships (1987-2000) and is a four-time PSAC Men's Coach of the Year. He was named East Region Coach of the Year following the 1995-96 campaign and holds a career record of 126-51(.711). Before the PSAC changed championship formats, Coyne coached 36 PSAC singles champions and 16 doubles titlists. Coyne holds the distinction of being one of the few individuals to win a PSAC title as both a player and coach.
On the women's side, he led the squad to its seventh consecutive trip to the NCAA Division II Championships, finishing with an overall record of 11-8. Under Coyne's guidance, Bloomsburg has claimed four PSAC crowns, two solo and two shared titles. During his eight years with the program, the Huskies have an overall record of 130-35 (.787) with 18 PSAC singles titlists and five doubles champions before the change to a team championship format. He was named PSAC Coach of the Year in both 1995 and 1996.
A former player at Bloomsburg, Coyne was an eight-time conference champion and one of the Huskies' first All-America performers. He was named to the All-America team in 1983. He also won every singles and doubles conference championships he competed for while playing with the Huskies. Coyne finished with a career record of 112-29, placing him second on the all-time winning percentage list.
He served as director of tennis at the Upper Bucks County YMCA in Quakertown prior to returning to Bloomsburg. Coyne has worked with numerous MSTA-ranked players as well as nationally ranked juniors.
A native of Hazleton, Coyne received a bachelor's degree in business education from Bloomsburg in 1983. He was honored in 1998 with induction into the Bloomsburg University Athletic Hall of Fame.
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