To our newsletter
To our newsletter

Dixon returns to Gadsden State as women’s basketball head coach

Photo: Marty Dixon recently returned to Gadsden State as women’s head basketball coach. Pictured is Dixon coaching the team from 2015-16 Lady Cardinals. (Chris McCarthy/Messenger)

Courtesy of Gadsden State

Gadsden State Community College will have a familiar face on the sidelines this winter.
Marty Dixon has returned as the head coach of the Lady Cardinals basketball team. He previously coached from 2015 to 2019 and joined the team as assistant coach earlier this year. He replaces Bryan Phillips, who resigned in August.
“I agreed to come back as an assistant coach because Bryan was having a hard time finding an assistant with the time and experience that I have,” Dixon said. “I came back to help him build the program.”
Dixon practiced with the basketball team all summer, so it was only natural that he assumes the head coaching position.
“I talked with my wife, and we decided together that I should apply for the job,” he said. “I’m glad to be back.”
Gadsden State Athletic Director Blake Lewis is happy that Dixon is back in the GSCC fold.
“I’m looking forward to working with Coach Dixon as he leads the women’s basketball program. He comes to the Cardinal family with great experience as a head coach. I know that he’s going to make sure our team is competitive and among the best.”
Dixon has a long history in basketball. He played the sport along with baseball at Sardis High School, from which he is a 1982 graduate. In 1988, Dixon graduated from Jacksonville State University with a bachelor’s degree in general science. His coaching and teaching career started at White Plains High School before going to Cedar Bluff, where he coached for two years. Dixon also coached at Hewett-Trussville, Pell City and Ragland high schools.
Dixon retired from coaching in 2003 but continued teaching at the Etowah County Alternative School while he and his wife, Texann cared for their daughter Anna, who passed away in 2009 after battling a rare genetic disease. Dixon retired from teaching in 2014 and took the reins as the head coach at Gadsden State the following year. He retired for the second time from coaching in 2019.
“We started having grandkids, so I went from basketball coach to ‘Pops’ to my four grandchildren,” he said.
During his time at Gadsden State, Dixon’s teams made it to the semifinals of the Alabama Community College Conference Championships. A member of his team, Diamond Jolly, was named an All-American, the first in 38 years at Gadsden State.
“I really enjoyed coaching at Gadsden State,” he said. “I intend to build a successful program. Right now, we’re getting to know each other. I didn’t recruit these girls and I didn’t watch them in high school, so there’s a learning curve.”
Dixon said his 15-member roster includes nine freshmen, which is a challenge.
“There’s a lot of hard lessons,” he said. “There’s a big difference between playing in high school and playing at the community college level, particularly when it comes to the speed of the game. We have to play at our pace and make whoever we are playing to play at that speed.”
The Lady Cardinals have played three jamboree games. They ended up 1-1 at the Northeast Mississippi Jamboree and lost in a game against Berry College.
“I have to admit that we are playing pretty sloppy,” he said. “We have to cut out the mistakes. We’re having too many turnovers and lapses for two or three minutes at a time. We stop doing what we are supposed to be doing, and it’s hurting us.”
Dixon said they had one of the best practices they’ve had so far this past Sunday.
“We’re figuring it out, and we are working together better,” he said. “I believe we will be competitive this season.”
The Lady Cardinals open regular season play on Wednesday, Nov. 1 against the Talladega College junior varsity at Beck Field House

Latest Sports

Area gridders make all-region team
Local teams ranked in first ASWA basketball poll
Ashville hires homegrown product as football coach
Yellow Jackets inflicting potent sting so far
Rodriguez leaving JSU for West Virginia

Latest E-Edition

E-Edition FRONT PAGE 12-20-24
E-Edition 12-20-24

Download the latest E-Edition by clicking here.

E-Edition 12-20-24