Malcolm Wynn
Men's Basketball Head Coach
mwynn0403@curry.edu
Wynn leads the Colonels' men's basketball squad for his fourth season in 2006-2007.
In 2004-2005, he guided Curry to its second-consecutive 15-win season, a 15-11 overall record and an 11-5 mark in Commonwealth Coast Conference games. Wynn is the only men’s basketball coach in school history to post winning seasons in his first two years. The Colonels finished third in the CCC South Division and pulled off a major upset in the conference quarterfinals by winning at Colby-Sawyer, the #2 seed in the North Division. Curry nearly advanced to the tournament finals, falling just short, 64-62, at division rival Roger Williams in a thrilling semi-final battle.
In his inaugural campaign in 2003-2004, Wynn led Curry to a 15-12 record, a regular-season title in the Commonwealth Coast Conference (CCC) South Division, and an appearance in the ECAC Division III New England Tournament. At year's end, Wynn's peers selected him as CCC "Coach of the Year."
Wynn's coaching resume stretches all the way back to 1984, when he began a 13-year stint as varsity assistant and junior varsity head coach at Brookline (Mass.) High School.
In 1994, Wynn also took on the head coaching duties at Roxbury Community College (RCC), and quickly brought himself and the Tigers to national prominence in the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA).
Over the course of seven seasons, he compiled a stellar 142-42 (.771) record. Wynn led RCC to the 2000 NJCAA Division III National Championship and was subsequently named as NJCAA National Coach of the Year. One year later, he guided the Tigers to a 31-1 record and third-place finish in the NJCAA National Tournament.
Starting in 1996, his teams won four NJCAA State Championships and five NJCAA Region XXI Championships. Wynn was also a four-time recipient of both NJCAA Region XXI and District 8 Coach of the Year honors.
Currently a resident of Cambridge, Mass., he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Communications from Illinois State University in 1978.
In addition to coaching, Wynn also serves as a Market Research Consultant for Reebok International in Canton, Mass.
Chenault Terry
Men's Basketball Assistant Coach
The 2006-2007 season will be Terry’s fourth as an assistant with the Colonels. A 1984 graduate and standout basketball player for Don Bosco Tech, his high school squads won state championships in 1982 and 1983. Terry earned Second-Team All-State honors in 1983 and First-Team All-State honors in 1984.
Terry attended Howard University for one year (1984-1985), played forward for the Bison basketball squad, and made the MEAC All-Rookie Team. After taking a year off from school, he transferred to Santa Barbara City College (SBCC) in California. Terry played one season of basketball at SBCC and earned an Associate’s degree in Liberal Arts in 1987. He then went on to Northeastern University, joining the Huskies’ men’s basketball team for two years before earning a B.S. in Communications in 1990.
Terry returned to his high school alma mater in 1995 and spent two seasons as an assistant basketball coach. During the summer of 2000, he was an AAU assistant coach for the under-16 YABC team. Four years later, he returned to AAU coaching as head mentor for the under-15 and under-16 WBA teams.
The Boston native has worked as a claims reviewer for Harvard Vanguard for the last five years.

Malcolm Wynn, Jr.
Men's Basketball Assistant Coach
Malcolm Wynn, Jr. returns to his father’s coaching staff for a third season in 2006-2007. Born and raised in Chicago, Illinois, he graduated from Brookline (Mass.) High School, where he played two seasons as a shooting guard. Wynn then went on to Roxbury Community College, where he earned an Associate’s degree in Criminal Justice in 1996.
He began his coaching career with the WBA Hawks (6th and 7th graders), then spent two seasons (1994-1996) as varsity assistant basketball coach at his high school alma mater.
Since 1997, Wynn has been employed full-time in the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Department. He currently serves as a deputy sheriff in Boston and resides in Quincy, Mass.