Kansas State University Athletics

Basketball (M) Tradition

Champs - Tradition Page Topper

A Championship Tradition

From famed players such as Bob Boozer, Rolando Blackman, Mitch Richmond, Michael Beasley, Jacob Pullen and Rodney McGruder to legendary coaches Jack Gardner, Fred "Tex" Winter, Lowell "Cotton" Fitzsimmons, Jack Hartman, Lon Kruger, Bob Huggins, Frank Martin, Bruce Weber and now Jerome Tang, K-State has one of the nation's proudest men's basketball traditions.

The Wildcats have been playing the game since 1903 and have racked up more than 1,700 victories, 32 NCAA Tournament appearances and 21 conference championships. The program has advanced to the Sweet 16 on 18 occasions, while making 13 trips to the Elite Eight and four ventures to the game's ultimate destination, the Final Four (1948, 1951, 1958, 1964).

This tradition of excellence began on January 16, 1903 when Kansas State took on Haskell College. After a two-year hiatus, the Wildcats returned to the court in 1905-06 under the direction of C.W. Melick. Melick was replaced after a year by a man that has become a true pioneer in Kansas State Athletics, Mike Ahearn. The man that once coached nearly every sport at the college and became the namesake for Ahearn Field House took the reins in 1906 and guided the Wildcats to three consecutive winning seasons. Guy Lowman replaced Ahearn after five seasons and guided the program to three straight winning seasons.

Head coach Z.G. Clevenger captured the first of the Wildcats' 17 conference crowns in 1916-17, when he helped K-State to a 15-2 overall record and the Missouri Valley Conference Championship. The team rallied off 13 straight wins to conclude the season by average margin of victory of 20 points. The season would produce the first All-American in school history, as guard F.I. Reynolds garnered first team honors. After a second-place finish the following year, Clevenger guided the program to another conference title in 1918-19 with a 17-2 mark. During his brief four-year tenure, Clevenger helped the program to a 54-17 (.761) record, including a 38-15 (.717) league mark.

After successful tenures by Charles Corsault (1923-33) and Frank Root (1933-39), the university hired Jack Gardner in 1939 as its ninth head coach. Gardner, who is enshrined in 11 different Halls of Fame, including the Naismith Hall of Fame, coached the Wildcats in two stints, from 1939-42 and again from 1946-53. After posting just 20 wins in his first three seasons, Gardner returned to Manhattan in 1947 and led the team to its first winning season in 16 years with a 14-10 mark.

The following season, the Wildcats made the most of their first NCAA Tournament appearance, advancing all the way to the 1948 Final Four, where they lost to eventual national runner-up Baylor in the Western Regional Finals, 60-52. The squad became the first in school history to win 20 games en route to capturing the Big Seven crown. The team tied for the league title in 1950 with a 17-7 record before Gardner guided the 'Cats to arguably the greatest season in school history.

With first team All-American Ernie Barrett leading the way, Gardner's Wildcats rattled off 25 wins to just four losses en route to capturing the Big Seven crown for the third time in four seasons. Entering the NCAA Tournament ranked fourth in the nation, K-State survived a scare from Arizona, 61-59, in the first round before beating No. 11 BYU and No. 24 Oklahoma A&M to advance to their second Final Four appearance. Facing No. 1-ranked Kentucky for the national championship, the Wildcats took a 29-27 lead into halftime. However, the Wildcats with an injured Barrett were overwhelmed in the second half in a 68-58 loss.

Under Gardner's guidance, K-State posted an 147-81 (.645) record, including a 127-47 (.730) record in his last seven years. He helped the program to a pair of 20-win seasons and two Final Four appearances. After helping the squad to back-to-back second-place conference finishes in 1952 and 1953, he handed the reins of the program to his assistant, Tex Winter, in 1953.

The man best known for helping Phil Jackson mold NBA championship teams with the Chicago Bulls and L.A. Lakers, Winter led Kansas State to 261 wins in his 15 seasons from 1954-68. He still owns the highest winning percentage (.691) and most league titles (eight) in school history and twice led the Wildcats to the Final Four (1958 and 1964). Winter guided K-State to postseason play seven times, including six trips to the NCAA Tournament.

Winter was named UPI National Coach of the Year in 1958 after he led K-State to the Final Four by knocking off Oscar Robertson and second-ranked Cincinnati in an 83-80 double-overtime thriller. Junior center Bob Boozer was one of three Wildcats to be named a first team All-America, along with teammates Jack Parr and Roy DeWitz. K-State advanced to their fourth Final Four in 1964. Winter's Wildcats knocked off Texas Western and No. 5 Wichita State to reach Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo. Two-time Big Eight selection Willie Murrell averaged 25.3 points per game during the run, which ended in a 90-82 loss to eventual national champion UCLA.

Lowell "Cotton" Fitzsimmons followed Winter as head coach in 1968, guiding the Wildcats to 34 wins, including 19 in league play, and finishing among the Big Eight's top two teams both seasons. His 1968-69 team was the league runner-up in his initial campaign, then won the Big Eight crown in his second and final season in 1969-70 as he was selected as the Big Eight Coach of the Year. His final squad eclipsed the 20-win mark and advanced to the Sweet 16. Fitzsimmons left K-State to become head coach of the Phoenix Suns, the first of three coaching stints with the franchise. He went on to coach 21 seasons in the NBA, compiling 832 victories with five different teams.

K-State's long line of successful coaches continued in 1970 when then-athletic director and former All-American Ernie Barrett hired Jack Hartman from Southern Illinois as head coach. Hartman led the Wildcats for 16 seasons, becoming the the program's all-time winningest coach with 295 wins and guiding it to three conference titles (1972, 1973, 1977), two conference tournament titles (1977, 1980) and seven NCAA Tournament appearances. Hartman's teams advanced to the Elite Eight on four occasions (1972, 1973, 1975, 1981) and six times to the Sweet 16 (1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1981, 1982).

Former Wildcat and two-time Big Eight Player of the Year Lon Kruger followed Hartman as head coach in 1986. Kruger became the first coach in K-State history to guide four consecutive teams to the NCAA Tournament, including the Midwest Regional Finals in 1988 where the Wildcats lost to eventual champion Kansas. Following the season, Mitch Richmond was named an All-American. Kruger, who left K-State for Florida in 1990, has gone on to win over 600 games in his illustrious coaching career and became the first head coach in NCAA history to take five different schools (K-State, Florida, Illinois, UNLV and Oklahoma) to the NCAA Tournament.

Kruger's assistant Dana Altman took the reigns following the 1990 season, guiding the Wildcats to three postseason appearances, including the 1993 NCAA Tournament. Best remembered for his ability to win close games, and for pulling off some of the biggest upsets in school history, Altman led the Wildcats to three consecutive winning seasons from 1992-94. His 1994 squad, led by Askia Jones, upset No. 1 Kansas, 68-64, before a nationally-televised audience on ESPN in Lawrence en route to winning 20 games for the first time since the 1988 season and advancing to the NIT Final Four at Madison Square Gardens in New York.

Tom Asbury took over the program in 1994, guiding the Wildcats to the 1996 NCAA Tournament in his second season. Asbury would help the program to back-to-back postseason appearances at the NIT in 1998 and 1999. His 1999 squad won 20 games for the first time since the 1994 season.

Jim Wooldridge arrived on campus in 2000 and continued to build on the great tradition established many years ago. He built a strong foundation that helped the program capture back-to-back winning seasons in 2004-05 and 2005-06, including a 17-win season in 2004-05 and narrowly missing the postseason.

K-State began a new era on March 23, 2006 when the Wildcats chose legendary head coach Bob Huggins as the school's 22nd head coach. Although he stayed just one season, Huggins made an immediate impact on the school, as he guided the program to a 23-12 overall record and a fourth-place finish in Big 12 play with a 10-6 mark. It was the most wins since tallying 25 during the 1987-88 season and first 20-win season since 1998-99, while the 10 conference wins were the most in the Big 12 era and the most since the Mitch Richmond-led 'Cats earned 11 Big Eight wins in 1987-88. Huggins also guided the squad to its first postseason appearance in eight seasons with its invitation to the NIT, helping the Wildcats to the second round.

Hoping to continue the momentum started in 2006-07, the school chose Huggins' top assistant, Frank Martin, as the Wildcats' 23rd head coach on April 6, 2007. Martin built upon the school's tremendous tradition with an unprecedented five consecutive 20-win seasons and five postseason appearances, including trips to the NCAA Tournament in 2008, 2010, 2011 and 2012. He departed K-State in 2012 for South Carolina, wrapping up his five-year tenure with a 117-54 overall record, including a 50-32 mark in Big 12 play. His 117 wins were the most by a coach in K-State history in his first five seasons and the most-ever by the school in a five-year span. Martin was the first Wildcat head coach to post five consecutive 20-win seasons and the first to guide the school to the postseason in each of his five seasons. The four NCAA Tournament appearances in a five-year span are the most since the squad went to four consecutive tournaments from 1986-90.

Armed with one of the nation's top recruiting classes, Martin became just the second rookie coach in school history to lead his team to the NCAA Tournament and the first since Lon Kruger did so in 1986-87, as the Wildcats advanced to the Big Dance for the first time since the 1995-96 season. Once there, Martin helped the program capture its first NCAA Tournament victory since 1988 with a thrilling 80-67 win over fifth-seeded USC in the first round of the MIdwest Regional in Omaha, Neb., on March 20.

Under Martin's tutelage, Michael Beasley had one of the greatest seasons ever by a college freshman in NCAA history in 2007-08, as he averaged 26.2 points and 12.4 rebounds per game in earning National Player of the Year honors from both CBS Sports.com and Rivals.com and National Freshman of the Year honors from CBS Sports.com, Rivals.com, CollegeHoops.net, The Sporting News and U.S. Basketball Writers Association. Beasley became just the second player in school history to earn consensus first team All-America honors and the first since Bob Boozer in 1959. In addition, he became the just the second player in league history to be named both the Big 12 Player and Freshman of the Year by the coaches and The Associated Press.

Armed with arguably the nation's top backcourt of All-Americans Denis Clemente and Jacob Pullen, K-State posted one of its greatest seasons ever in 2009-10, totaling a school-record 29 wins en route to the school's first Elite Eight appearance in 22 seasons. The squad earned its highest-ever seed (No. 2) in the NCAA Tournament and recorded three wins (North Texas, BYU and Xavier) at the tournament for just the fourth time in school history before losing a hard-fought 63-56 contest to eventual national runner-up Butler in the West Regional Final. The Wildcats finished in the Top 10 of both major polls, including seventh in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Top 25 poll, for the first time since ranking ninth in 1973. 

In all, K-State set 23 team and individual records in 2009-10, including shattering marks for scoring (2,949), field goals (981), 3-point field goals (253), free throws (734) and blocked shots (187). For his efforts, Martin was the runner-up to Syracuse's Jim Boeheim for The Associated Press' National Coach of the Year in 2010, while he was a finalist for the Naismith Men's College Basketball Coach of the Year. Martin was a near unanimous choice for a number of Big 12 Coach of the Year awards, collecting them from the league coaches, AP, The Sporting News and Kansas City Star. Both Clemente and Pullen earned All-America distinction, becoming just the second set of Wildcats to earn the honor in the same season. Pullen became just the second Wildcat to tally first team All-Big 12 honors from the league coaches since 1997.

K-State faced huge expectations in 2010-11 with multiple preseason Top 10 rankings and a preseason All-American in Jacob Pullen. Despite some bumps in the road, the Wildcats recorded its fifth consecutive 20-win season, including its fourth in a row under Martin, and advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the third time in four seasons. Overall, the squad posted a 23-11 overall record, including a tie for third place in the Big 12, and knocked off six ranked foes, including the nation's No. 1 team for the second consecutive season. Pullen became one of the program's all-time greats, earning All-America honors and first team All-Big 12 accolades for the second straight season. He also surpassed Mike Evans to become the school's all-time leading scorer with 2,132 points. In all, Pullen left K-State owning seven career records, including wins (95), games played (135), double-digit scoring games (105), 3-point field goals (299) and steals), and ranking in the Top 5 in 17 total career categories.

One of the winningest active Division I coaches, Bruce Weber was named the 24th head men's basketball coach at K-State on March 31, 2012. He guided the Wildcats to 20-win seasons and NCAA Tournament appearances five times during his tenure, including consecutive 25-win campaigns in 2017-18 and 2018-19 for the first time in school history. He helped the school to its first 25-win season in five years and a trip to the Elite Eight in 2017-18 then followed its with another 25-win campaign, a second Big 12 regular-season championship and a third consecutive trip to the NCAA Tournament in 2018-19. K-State was one of just 24 schools nationally, including 15 in power conferences, to win at least 25 games in each of those seasons.

Weber's 184 wins ranked as the third-most by a head coach in school history and the most since Jack Hartman retired in 1986. He was the fourth coach (Hartman, Winter and Martin) to take K-State to at least five NCAA Tournaments in a tenure, while only Hartman (with seven) has more 20-win seasons.

Armed with All-American candidate Rodney McGruder, Weber led the Wildcats to a 27-8 overall record and a share of their first conference title since 1977 with a 14-4 Big 12 mark. It was the school's 20th overall conference championship and the 18th won in the regular season. The 27 wins were the second-most in a single-season in K-State history and just the fifth 25-win season overall, while the 14 conference wins tied the 1958-59 team for the most in school history. The squad also advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the 27th time in school history, including a school-record tying fourth consecutive season, and received its third highest seed - No. 4 in the West Regional - since the NCAA began seeding teams in 1979. It marked the first time since 1990 that the school has advanced to four straight NCAA Tournaments.

Three Wildcats - McGruder, Jordan Henriquez and Martavious Irving - became the winningest senior class in school history with 101 victories from 2009-13. They became just the second senior class to advance to four consecutive NCAA Tournaments.

Weber's second season included another NCAA Tournament appearance and 20-win campaign, as K-State compiled a 20-13 record to go with a 10-8 mark in Big 12 play in 2013-14. The season was highlighted by a 10-game winning streak from Nov. 23, 2013 to Jan. 7, 2014, which tied for the ninth-longest in school history, and a 15-game home court winning streak that was the longest in Bramlage Coliseum history and the longest since 1982.

Despite a trying season in 2014-15 that saw K-State drop 10 games by 10 points or less, including seven by 5 points or less, Weber still helped the Wildcats collect five Top 25 wins, including back-to-back over Top 15 foes Kansas and Iowa State. The victory over the Jayhawks marked the first time in 32 seasons that the Wildcats posted consecutive wins over their archrivals at home. 

Playing a schedule that included a school-record 14 Top 25 opponents, Weber guided K-State to a 17-win campaign in 2015-16 which included the fifth over a No. 1 team in school history - No. 1 Oklahoma on Feb. 6, 2016 - to go with wins over NCAA Tournament participant Texas Tech, NIT participant George, 22-win Ole Miss and CIT champion Columbia. The youthful Wildcats tied for the third-youngest in the NCAA with 10 newcomers. 

After a two-year absence, K-State returned to the NCAA Tournament in 2016-17, as the Wildcats tallied a 21-14 overall record to go with an 8-10 mark in Big 12 play. Weber led the Wildcats to its first postseason victory in five seasons with a 95-88 win over Wake Forest in the First Four in Dayton before falling to nationally-ranked Cincinnati in the NCAA South Regional. Among the 21 victories were eight over teams that advanced to the postseason, including NCAA Tournament participants Baylor (twice), Oklahoma State and West Virginia. Senior Wesley Iwundu repeated his selection to the Coaches' All-Big 12 Third Team, while fellow senior D.J. Johnson, who set school records for both single season (62.3) and career field goal percentage (59.5), nabbed honorable mention accolades. Iwundu became the first Wildcat to tally at least 1,000 points, 500 rebounds, 300 assists and 100 steals in a career.

Led by All-Big 12 selections Barry Brown, Jr., and Dean Wade, the Wildcats posted a 25-12 overall record and a fourth-place finish in the Big 12 with a 10-8 mark in 2017-18, which included nine victories over postseason teams and season sweeps of conference foes Baylor, Iowa State, Oklahoma State and Texas. The 10 Big 12 victories were the most since also winning 10 in 2013-14, while the fourth-place finish was the best since winning the league title in 2012-13. The team finished 19th in the final USA Today Coaches Top 25 poll, which was the program’s highest such final ranking since 2009-10.
 
Weber’s ability to rally his team through adversity was put on further display during K-State’s memorable run to the Elite Eight, as the Wildcats were forced to play the entire NCAA Tournament without their leading scorer and rebounder Wade, who became just the fourth player in school history to be named to the All-Big 12 First Team. Highlighted by special performances from Brown, sophomore Xavier Sneed and freshman Mike McGuirl, the squad knocked off No. 8 seed Creighton, Cinderella and No. 16 seed UMBC and No. 5 seed Kentucky before falling to 11-seeded Loyola Chicago in South Regional Final. It marked the 12th Elite Eight in school history, including just the second in the last 25 seasons.

In 2018-19, Weber led K-State to a 25-9 overall record, which included a share of the Big 12 regular-season title with a 14-4 conference mark, and a trip to the NCAA Tournament for the fifth time in his tenure, including the third consecutive season. The school's seventh 25-win season was highlighted by a nine-game Big 12 winning streak from January 9 to February 12, 2019, which came after the Wildcats started league play 0-2. It was the school's longest conference winning streak in the Big 12 era and the longest since winning 11 in a row in Big Eight play from January 14 to February 26, 1974. In all, the team won 14 of its last 16 conference games, including season sweeps of Baylor, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, TCU and West Virginia, and posted a league-best 7-2 mark on the road, which was the best by a Wildcat team in conference play since the 1958-59 season.

Four Wildcats earned All-Big 12 honors in 2018-19, as Brown and Wade became the first duo to be named to the All-Big 12 First Team in the same season. Brown was one of three unanimous selections to the All-Big 12 First Team, while Wade became just the second Wildcat to be named to the league's First Team in back-to-back seasons, joining Jacob Pullen (2010, 2011). In addition, Brown became the first Wildcat to be selected the conference's Defensive Player of the Year since Rolando Blackman earned the honor in consecutive seasons in the Big Eight in 1979 and 1980.

Following three consecutive non-winning seasons from 2019-20 to 2021-22, K-State turned to Jerome Tang as its 25th head men's basketball coach on March 21, 2022. Tang, who was one of the chief architects in helping build Baylor into a national powerhouse in his 19 seasons as an assistant and associate head coach, made an impact in his first season, guiding the Wildcats to a 26-10 overall record, including a tie for third place in the Big 12 with an 11-7 mark, and the school's 13th trip to the Elite Eight. The 26 wins are the third-most in school history and the most since the program produced 27 in 2012-13, while the 11 in league play were the most since the Big 12 Championship season of 2018-19. The team finished No. 9 in the final USA Today Coaches poll, which was school's second-highest ranking since the coaches began doing a post NCAA Tournament poll in 1994. Along the way, the Wildcats tied the school record with seven wins over Top 25 opponents, including a victory over defending national champion and No. 2/2 Kansas at home, a road victory over No. 6/6 Texas and a home-and-home sweep of Baylor. The team also regained their home court advantage at Bramlage Coliseum, producing a 15-1 record for the most home wins since also winning 15 in 2013-14.

Seniors Markquis Nowell and Keyontae Johnson formed one of the nation's top tandems in the country, averaging 35 points per game, en route to becoming the first Wildcat duo to earn AP All-America honors in the same season. Nowell capped his K-State career by becoming the first Wildcat to ever win the Bob Cousy Award as the nation's top point guard, while he was named the NCAA East Regional's Most Outstanding Player after his memorable performance in the NCAA Tournament. He averaged 23.5 points, 13.5 assists and 4.0 steals during his 4-game NCAA Tournament run, including 25 points and 15.5 assists in the games against Michigan State and Florida Atlantic. Nowell dished out a tournament and school-record 19 assists in the win over the Spartans. He finished his college career with just the second 30-point, 10-assist game in school history, as he led the way with game-highs in points (30), assists (12) and steals (5) in playing all 40 minutes against the Owls. He is the first player with at least 25 points and 10 assists in a game in the Elite Eight or later since Marquette’s Dwyane Wade had a triple-double (29 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists) against Kentucky in 2003. Johnson, who was also selected to the NCAA East Regional All-Tournament, was the unanimous Big 12’s Newcomer of the Year, while both were named to the All-Big 12 First Team by the league coaches and the AP.

Tang was named Big 12 Coach of the Year by the league coaches and The Associated Press, while he was selected as the Naismith Men’s College Coach of the Year.
 

Coaching Records

Most Wins

Coach (Years) Record
1. Jack Hartman (1970-86) 295-169
2. Fred "Tex" Winter (1954-68) 262-117
3. Bruce Weber (2012-22)            184-147
4. Jack Gardner (1939-42, 46-53) 147-81
5. Frank Martin (2007-12) 117-54
6. Charles Corsaut (1923-33) 89-81
7. Tom Asbury (1994-2000) 85-88
8. Jim Wooldridge (2000-06) 83-90
9. Lon Kruger (1986-90) 81-46
10. Dana Altman (1990-94) 68-54
11. Z.G. Clevenger (1916-20) 54-17
12. Frank Root (1933-39) 38-72
13. Guy Lowman (1911-14) 34-16
Lowell "Cotton" Fitzsimmons (1968-70) 34-20
15. Mike Ahearn (1906-11) 28-27
16. Jerome Tang (2023-present) 26-10
17. Bob Huggins (2006-07) 23-12
18. Carl J. Merner (1914-16) 19-15
19. E.A. Knoth (1920-21) 14-5
Fritz Knorr (1944-46) 14-33
21. Cliff Rock (1943-44) 7-15
22. C.W. Melick (1905-06) 6-9
Chili Cochrane (1942-43) 6-14
24. E.C. Curtis (1921-23) 5-28

Best Winning Percentage

Coach (Years) Record
1. Z.G. Clevenger (1916-20) .761
2. E.A. Knoth (1920-21) .737
3. Jerome Tang (2022-present) .722
4. Fred "Tex" Winter (1954-68) .691
5. Frank Martin (2007-12) .684
6. Guy Lowman (1911-14) .680
7. Bob Huggins (2006-07) .657
8. Jack Gardner (1939-42, 46-53) .644
9. Jack Hartman (1970-86) .636
10. Lon Kruger (1986-90) .633
11. Lowell "Cotton" Fitzsimmons (1968-70) .630
12. Carl J. Merner (1914-16)                   .559
13. Dana Altman (1990-94) .557
14. Bruce Weber (2012-22) .556
15. Charles Corsaut (1923-33) .529
16. Mike Ahearn (1906-11) .509
17. Tom Asbury (1994-00) .491
18. Jim Wooldridge (2000-06) .480
19. C.W. Melick (1905-06) .400
20. Frank Root (1933-39) .345
21. Cliff Rock (1943-44) .318
22. Chili Cochrane (1942-43) .300
23. Fritz Knorr (1944-46) .298
24. E.C. Curtis (1921-23) .152

Most Wins in a Single-Season

Coach (Year) Record
1. Frank Martin (2009-10) 29
2. Bruce Weber (2012-13) 27
3. Jerome Tang (2022-23) 26
4. Jack Gardner (1950-51)
Fred "Tex" Winter (1958-59)
Lon Kruger (1987-88)
Bruce Weber (2017-18)
Bruce Weber (2018-19)
25
25
25
25
25
9. Jack Hartman (1976-77) 24
Jack Hartman (1980-81) 24
11. Jack Hartman (1972-73) 23
Jack Hartman (1981-82) 23
Bob Huggins (2006-07) 23
Frank Martin (2010-11) 23
15. Jack Gardner (1947-48) 22
Fred "Tex" Winter (1957-58) 22
Fred "Tex" Winter (1960-61) 22
Fred "Tex" Winter (1961-62) 22
Fred "Tex" Winter (1963-64) 22
Jack Hartman (1979-80) 22
Frank Martin (2008-09) 22
22. Frank Martin (2007-08)
Bruce Weber (2016-17)
21
21
24. Tom Asbury (1998-99) 20
Dana Altman (1993-94) 20
Lon Kruger (1986-87) 20
Jack Hartman (1975-76) 20
Jack Hartman (1974-75) 20
Lowell "Cotton" Fitzsimmons (1969-70)
Bruce Weber (2013-14)
20
20

NCAA Tournament Appearances

Coach (Years) Record
1. Jack Hartman (1970-86) 7
2. Fred "Tex" Winter (1954-68) 6
3. Bruce Weber (2012-22) 5
4. Lon Kruger (1986-90) 4
Frank Martin (2007-12) 4
6. Jack Gardner (1939-42, 1946-53) 2
7. Lowell "Cotton" Fitzsimmons (1968-70) 1
Dana Altman (1990-94) 1
Tom Asbury (1994-2000) 1
Jerome Tang (2022-present) 1