John Andrzejek Head Shot 2024

John Andrzejek

  • Title
    Assistant Coach
John Andrzejek coached two seasons at Florida from 2023-25, helping lead the Gators to the 2025 national championship before moving on to become head coach at Campbell. In Andrzejek’s second season at UF, he took over the Florida defense and helped the Gators rise from 94th in defensive efficiency to sixth in the nation.

The Gators third national championship in program history and first in 18 years capped a 36-4 record in the 2024-25 season. Florida also earned its fifth SEC Tournament title and sixth Final Four appearance, both the team’s first since 2014.

The championships all came as part of a memorable 12-game win streak to end the season that began March 1. The 12-game run to close the season included nine top-25 wins, a total that eclipsed any full-season total in program history. Eight of the nine ranked wins in that run were vs. teams in the top 12, and UF finished the season with a program-record 12 top-25 wins.

The Gators’ run to the title tied for the toughest path all-time for a #1-seed (1993 North Carolina) and the third-toughest in NCAA Tournament history. Florida’s epic run featured four comeback wins, including rallying from 12 points down in the national championship game, closing the game on a 35-21 run over the final 16 minutes. The resilient Gators rallied from nine down in the Final Four to defeat top-seeded Auburn, from nine back with 3:00 to play in the Elite Eight vs. Texas Tech and from six down with nine minutes remaining in the second round vs. UConn.

The Gators entered the NCAA Tournament with a No. 1 seed for just the third time in program history, joining the 2007 and 2014 squads as top-seed earners. Florida used the SEC Tournament to get hot, posting a dominant run becoming the first team to knock off three straight ranked opponents to win the event. The Gators averaged 95.0 points per game vs. #21 Missouri, #5 Alabama and #8 Tennessee, including an SEC Tournament-record 104 points in the semifinal win vs. Alabama.

Florida’s 27 regular season wins marked the second-most in program history (29, 2013-14), and the Gators posted a 14-4 record in an SEC that ranked among the best conferences in college basketball history. UF’s 13-0 start to the season was the team’s second-best start in program history, as the Gators navigated its nonconference slate undefeated (17-0, 2005-06).

Florida finished the season 8-2 in top-10 matchups, including wins in the final seven, after entering the season 6-16 all-time in such matchups. UF also doubled its all-time wins vs. the #1 team, routing top-ranked Tennessee in Gainesville and picking up a road win at Auburn.

The 73-43 win over the Vols was the largest defeat of a #1 team since UCLA’s 32-point win vs. Houston in the 1968 Final Four and the third-largest against a top-ranked team all-time. The Gators bounced back from an early 10-point deficit at Auburn, outscoring the Tigers 43-23 over the final 14 minutes of the first half and eventually leading by as many as 21. The pair of #1 wins were Florida’s first ever in regular season play. Coupled with the Auburn win, the Gators’ road win at #7 Alabama gave UF multiple top-10 road wins in a season for the first time.

The Gators’ +15.2 scoring margin for the season led the SEC and was the third-highest in program history, while UF led the nation and set program records in points (3,391), field goals (1,182) and rebounds (1,673), also setting the UF record in 3-point field goals (390). The Gators’ 84.8 points per game were also the second-highest ever at Florida, only behind the 2023-24 mark of 85.6.

In 2024-25, the Gators had their first ever first-team All-American in Walter Clayton Jr., who added Final Four and NCAA West Region Most Outstanding Player and SEC Tournament MVP honors. Will Richard earned Final Four and SEC Tournament All-Tournament Team honors, leading the Gators with 18 points and eight rebounds in the national championship game.

Clayton added first-team All-SEC recognition, while Alex Condon garnered third-team honors. The senior trio of Clayton, Alijah Martin and Richard were the highest-scoring trio in Florida history during the season, and Clayton posted a Florida-record 713 points.

In his first season at UF, Andrzejek helped the Gators back to the NCAA Tournament in 2024. UF posted 24 wins in 2023-24, its most since 2016-17, and advanced to the SEC Tournament championship game for the first time since 2014.

The Gators tallied four top-25 wins in 2023-24 and had their highest-scoring team in program history with 85.7 points per game, ranking in the top 10 nationally in scoring offense, rebounds per game, offensive rebounds per game and offensive rebounding percentage.

Florida’s overtime win at 10th-ranked Kentucky marked Florida’s first top-10 road win since 2003 and the 12th all-time win at Kentucky. Florida backed up the win at Kentucky with a home victory over #12 Auburn, an 81-65 rout that UF led by as many as 29. The Gators closed their home season in style with a 105-87 win vs. #16 Alabama, the most points UF has ever scored in regulation vs. a ranked opponent. Just 10 days later, Florida blitzed 18th-ranked Alabama, 102-88, in the SEC Tournament quarterfinals.

In UF’s first SEC Tournament semifinal since 2019, the Gators battled back from 18 points down to defeat Texas A&M, marking the fifth-largest comeback in team history and earning the first trip to the SEC Tournament championship game since 2014.

The Gators’ success grew directly out of the coaching staff’s evaluation and recruiting efforts in 2023, as four incoming transfers were regular starters, including three All-SEC players in Walter Clayton Jr., Zyon Pullin and Tyrese Samuel along with Micah Handlogten, who was one of the nation’s top offensive rebounders. Unranked freshmen Alex Condon and Thomas Haugh provided valuable frontcourt minutes, with Condon earning SEC All-Freshman recognition.

Clayton and Pullin became Florida’s first duo of All-SEC guards in 11 years and Florida’s #8 scoring duo over the past 50 seasons. Clayton, Pullin and Samuel became the first trio in Florida history to all score 500 points in a season. Samuel, who earned AP All-SEC honors, posted 11 double-doubles, the most by a Gator since Al Horford’s 16 in 2006-07. Handlogten (108) and Samuel (102) put up the #2 and #3 offensive rebounding totals in school history, respectively, and became the first Florida teammates to post 100 offensive rebounds in a season.

Seven different players combined for 38 total 20-point performances, including eight games with multiple 20-point scorers and one game (the road win at Kentucky) with three 20-point scorers. Those eight games with multiple 20-point scorers match Florida’s total such games over the previous six seasons.

Pullin, who earned first-team All-SEC honors, posted a Florida-record 3.77 assist-to-turnover ratio, a number that also ranked #1 among all SEC players during the 2000s.

Clayton earned SEC All-Tournament Team honors, averaging 18.5 points as the Gators played four games in four days. The Lake Wales native followed that up with 33 points in the NCAA Tournament game vs. Colorado, including 26 in the second half and the Gators’ final 16 points of the game.

Samuel stuffed the stat sheet with 22 points, 13 rebounds and four blocked shots in the win at Kentucky, becoming the first player in the nation since Tim Duncan to post that line in a top-10 road win.

Alex Condon, UF’s leading shot-blocker, also became the first Gator in the 2000s to grab 10 offensive rebounds in a game (at Ole Miss) and became the first Florida freshman in the 2000s to post multiple 15-rebound games.

In four seasons at Washington State, where he helped the Cougars to a 69-61 record and a pair of postseason berths, along with a winning Pac-12 record in each of the past two seasons.

During Andrzejek’s time in Pullman, WSU notched a home win vs. No. 8 Oregon (1/16/20) and claimed a road victory at No. 5 Arizona last season (1/7/23). The team produced a pair of NBA Draft selections, CJ Elleby (2020) and Mouhamed Gueye (2023), both of whom also garnered first-team All-Pac-12 recognition. Andrzejek coached a total of five all-conference selections during his four seasons at WSU.

Andrzejek was instrumental in recruiting a number of notable players at Washington State, including Gueye, Pac-12 All-Freshman Efe Abogidi, second-team All-Pac-12 honoree Michael Flowers and four-year starter DJ Rodman, son of NBA star Dennis Rodman.

Prior to coming to WSU, Andrzejek spent one year as an assistant coach and offensive coordinator at Dartmouth in 2018-19 and coached at Johns Hopkins in 2017-18 following a season as director of basketball operations at University of San Francisco in 2016-17.

While completing his undergraduate degree in philosophy in just two and a half years from Columbia in 2013, Andrzejek served as the Lions’ team manager during the 2012-13 and 2013-14 campaigns before being hired as the director of basketball operations in July of 2014.

At Columbia, the Hamilton, N.Y., native worked alongside Golden and several other current Florida staffers, including Carlin Hartman, Kevin Hovde and Jonathan Safir.

In addition to his collegiate coaching experience, Andrzejek has spent time as an assistant coach for USA East Coast All-Stars teams that played throughout Finland, Estonia, France, and Italy in 2014 and 2015.

Andrzejek Timeline
2023-24 Florida Assistant Coach
2019-23 Washington State Assistant Coach
2018-19 Dartmouth Assistant Coach
2017-18 Johns Hopkins Assistant Coach
2016-17 San Francisco Director of Basketball Operations
2014-16 Columbia Director of Basketball Operations
2011-14 Columbia Student Manager