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Associate Head Coach/Defensive Coordinator

Tasha Butts

Tasha Butts - Women's Basketball - Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
Years at Tech 2019-2023
Alma Mater Tennessee, 2004
Tasha Butts - Women's Basketball - Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets

A coaching veteran and former WNBA player, Tasha Butts spent four years on the Georgia Tech women’s basketball staff , arriving in April 2019 as an assistant coach. She was promoted to associate head coach in April 2021. A Georgia native, Butts returned to the Peach State after eight years as an assistant coach at LSU. She was named the head coach at Georgetown University on April 11, 2023.

In her second season on The Flats, Butts helped guide the Yellow Jackets to a 17-9 overall record and a 12-6 ledger in the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2020-21 during a global pandemic. In a historic season, Tech made its 10th overall appearance in the NCAA Tournament and advanced to the Sweet 16 for just the second time in program history.

During her time at LSU, Butts was part of four 20-win seasons and six NCAA Tournament appearances highlighted by back-to-back Sweet 16 runs in 2012 and 2013. Butts helped return LSU to national prominence in 2018 when the program cracked the AP Top 25 poll for the first time in four years.

Prior to her stint at LSU, Butts recorded three successful seasons (2008-11) as an assistant coach at UCLA. The Bruins reached the NCAA Tournament twice, compiling a 72-26 overall mark and second-place finishes in the Pac-10 Conference in both 2010 and 2011.

A four-year letterwinner at Tennessee, Butts helped the Lady Vols to a 124-17 record from 2000-04 and reached the Sweet 16 all four years, including to back-to-back National Championship games her junior and senior seasons (2003, 2004).

THE TASHA BUTTS FILE
PERSONAL
HometownMilledgeville, Ga.
Alma MaterTennessee, 2004
PLAYING EXPERIENCE
2000-04Tennessee
COACHING EXPERIENCE
2007-08DuquesneAssistant Coach
2008-11UCLAAssistant Coach
2011-2019LSUAssistant Coach
2019-2023Georgia TechAssistant Coach/Associate Head Coach

FULL BIO
A coaching veteran and former WNBA player, Tasha Butts spent four years on the Georgia Tech women’s basketball staff, arriving as as an assistant coach in April 2019. She was promoted to associate head coach in April 2021. A Georgia native, Butts returned to the Peach State after eight years as an assistant coach at LSU. She was named the head women’s basketball coach at Georgetown University on April 11, 2023.

Butts has helped guide Georgia Tech to back-to-back appearances in the NCAA Tournament, most recently earning an at-large bid in 2021-22. During the season, the Jackets spent 14 weeks in the national rankings, climbing as high as No. 11 in the Associated Press poll. A marquee win for GT during the season took place on Dec. 9, 2021 when the Jackets upended No. 3/2 UConn, 57-44, to snap a 240-game winning streak against unranked opponents.

In 2020-21, Butts helped guide the Yellow Jackets to a 17-9 overall record and a 12-6 ledger in the Atlantic Coast Conference during a global pandemic. In its historic season, Tech made its 10th overall appearance in the NCAA Tournament and advanced to the Sweet 16 for just the second time in program history. The Yellow Jackets finished third in the ACC, marking the highest outright finish in program history and earned the highest ACC Tournament seed in program history at No. 3. Working primarily with the guards, Butts helped tutor Lotta-Maj Lahtinen to become the ACC Most Improved Player – Tech’s first in women’s basketball history. Additionally, Lahtinen was named All-ACC first team (Blue Ribbon Panel) and All-ACC second team (head coaches). Lahtinen and Lorela Cubaj were both named WBCA NCAA Division I Coaches’ All-America honorable mention. Tech finished the season ranked No. 22 in the final USA Today/WBCA Coaches Poll.

In her first season on The Flats, Butts helped the Yellow Jackets to a 20-11 overall record, 10-8 in the ACC. Tech defeated four top-25 teams in 2019-20, including topping No. 4 NC State on the road, 65-61, to mark the highest ranked road win in program history. The Yellow Jackets were awaiting their postseason bid when the season was cut short due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Butts was also one of just 14 assistant coaches from around the country chosen to participate in Advocates for Athletic Equity’s (AAE) annual “Achieving Coaching Excellence” Professional Development Program for basketball coaches in June 2016. The program is recognized as helping to boost the careers of some of the top minority coaches in the college game. In her first year at Georgia Tech, Butts was selected to participate in the 2020 Women Coaches NEXT UP program. Butts was selected among a competitive field by the WBCA and Women Leaders in College Sports to participate in the program. She has also served as a WBCA mentor.

During her time at LSU, Butts was part of four 20-win seasons and six NCAA Tournament appearances highlighted by back-to-back Sweet 16 runs in 2012 and 2013. She helped ink the three top-20 recruiting classes (2011, 2017, 2019), while signing seven top-100 prospects, including a McDonald’s All-American in 2017. In eight seasons at LSU, Butts coached and mentored six all-SEC academic honor roll recipients and developed seven all-SEC selections.

Butts helped return LSU to national prominence in 2018 when the program cracked the AP Top 25 poll for the first time in four years. The Tigers finished the season ranked No. 24. Butts worked closely with LSU’s backcourt, helping the Tigers top the SEC in scoring defense in 2019 (20th nationally) and rank third in the nation in steals in 2017.

At LSU, Butts helped develop Raigyne Moncrief-Louis and Danielle Ballard, who both garnered all-SEC freshman team honors in their careers and were listed among LSU’s Top 10 for scoring during their freshmen seasons. Louis would become the 2017 SEC Defensive Player of the Year and a two-time all-SEC honoree. The only player in LSU history to record 1,600 points, 700 rebounds, 250 steals and 300 assists in a career, Louis was a 2018 WNBA Draft pick.

Under Butt’s guidance, Ballard broke LSU’s single-season record for steals (100) and became the first player in program history – men or women – to reach 100 steals in a season in 2012-13. Louis would top Ballard four seasons later with a program-record 107 steals.

Prior to her stint at LSU, Butts recorded three successful seasons (2008-11) as an assistant coach at UCLA. At UCLA, Butts worked mainly with perimeter players and assisted with all other facets of the program. The Bruins reached the NCAA Tournament twice, compiling a 72-26 overall mark and second-place finishes in the Pac-10 Conference in both 2010 and 2011. The 2010-11 season was one for the record books as the Bruins set records for regular-season victories (26), Pac-10 win (16) and scoring defense (55.3 points per game), while earning a No. 3 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

At UCLA, Butts mentored eight all-Pac-10 academic players, three all-Pac-10 honorees and two all-Pac-10 freshman team selections. In 2011, the program rose to a No. 7 national ranking, reached the Pac-10 Tournament Championship game and advanced to the NCAA Tournament second round, finishing the season with a 29-5 overall record.

During the 2007-08 season, Butts served as an assistant coach at Duquense University where her responsibilities included recruiting, opponent scouting, academics, equipment liaison, scheduling and development of perimeter players.

A four-year letterwinner at Tennessee, Butts helped the Lady Vols to a 124-17 record from 2000-04. Tennessee made a run to the Sweet 16 her freshman campaign and advanced to the 2002 Final Four in her sophomore season. She then helped the Lady Vols to back-to-back National Championship games her junior and senior seasons (2003, 2004). As a senior, Butts earned second-team All-Southeastern Conference honors after averaging 10.4 points per game and ranking second in the league in three-point field goal percentage (43.0).

Additionally, Butts was part of four SEC regular-season championship teams, as Tennessee compiled a 55-1 SEC record in her four years. She left UT ranked fourth all-time in games played (141) and tied for seventh in three-point shots made (103). Butt’s career-high 37 points against Vanderbilt on Feb. 16, 2004, tied for 11th on the Lady Vols’ single-game scoring list.

Butts graduated from Tennessee with a bachelor of science in sports management and minor in business administration in 2004. She was chosen by the Minnesota Lynx with the 20th selection in the 2004 WNBA Draft and saw action in all 30 games as a rookie, helping the club equal a franchise record with 18 wins and earn a spot in the playoffs.

Following the 2004 WNBA season, she returned to her alma mater and served as a graduate assistant coach with Pat Summitt and Fargas. The Lady Vols won the 2005 SEC Championship that season and advanced to the Final Four.

Butts played overseas in fall 2005 for Essa/Barreiro in Portugal, averaging nearly 18.0 points per game. The following season, she played for Raanana Hertizliya in Israel, where she scored 15.5 points per game. Butts also played briefly with the Charlotte Sting and Houston Comets of the WNBA.

A native of Milledgeville, Ga., Butts attended Baldwin High School where she was a consensus All-American and the Georgia Gatorade Player of the Year. She remains the all-time leading scorer at the school and her high school jersey No. 23 was retired in December 2000. In August 2004, the city of Milledgeville honored Butts with a key to the city and a proclamation of achievement on “Tasha Butts Day.”

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