Education
Wenzel, a guard (and two year team captain) born in Bronx, New York, graduated from Rutgers University in 1971 with a degree in history, and headed to the University of Utah for his graduate work.
basketball coach basketball player
Wenzel, a guard (and two year team captain) born in Bronx, New York, graduated from Rutgers University in 1971 with a degree in history, and headed to the University of Utah for his graduate work.
College playing/Coaching career
In 1973, he earned his master"s degree in education from Utah. While at Utah, Wenzel began his coaching career as a graduate assistant. Upon graduation he moved back east and became an assistant coach at Yale, staying there for one season.
He moved on to Duke in 1975, staying with the team through 1980 and playing an important role in the team"s run to the 1978 Final Four.
After one season as an assistant at South Carolina, Wenzel was hired by Jacksonville University as its head coach. In five years at Jacksonville (1982–1987), Wenzel led his team to an 88–86 overall record, including an National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament appearance in 1986 and an National Institute of Technology appearance in his final year.
During a 1985 home game against South Alabama, Wenzel suffered a near-fatal cerebral aneurysm. He recovered completely and returned to coach Jacksonville the following season.
His return would earn him the United States. Basketball Writers Association"s Most Courageous Award for 1986.
Wenzel resigned to be an assistant with the New Jersey Nets for the 1987-1988 National Basketball Association season, but returned to college the following year to be the head coach of his alma mater. Under Wenzel, Rutgers reached the National Collegiate Athletic Association Tournament twice. The first of those appearances came in 1989, when the #13 seeded Scarlet Knights fell to Iowa in the first round.
In 1991, Rutgers returned to the Big Dance as a #9 seed, but fared no better as they were defeated by Arizona State in the first round.
Wenzel also led Rutgers to two National Institute of Technology appearances. The first of those (1990) saw the Scarlet Knights advance to the quarterfinals of the tournament, falling to eventual third-place finisher Penn State.
Rutgers returned to the tournament two years later, but lost a close second round game to Manhattan. The 1991-1992 season marked the last time Rutgers would finish with a winning record under Wenzel.
The team struggled for the next four seasonswith a move from the Atlantic 10 to the Big East in 1995 not making things any easierand after an 11–16 finish to the 1996-1997 campaign, Wenzel was fired and replaced by Kevin Bannon.
He has not coached since. Broadcasting
Shortly after his firing by Rutgers, Wenzel jumped into broadcasting and was hired by Entertainment and Sports Programming Network as a color commentator for its college basketball coverage. He added commitments for Columbia Broadcasting System in 2001, and works for them during the National Collegiate Athletic Association Championship, previously alongside Craig Bolerjack and currently with Spero Dedes.
Personal
Wenzel is currently the Associate Head of School for Advancement at The Bolles School in Jacksonville, Florida.