Britt Moore Head Coach MBB 2017

Britt Moore

  • Title
    Head Men's Basketball Coach
  • Alma Mater
    King's (Pa.) '04/Drexel '10M
  • Email
    moorebr@etown.edu
  • Office
    Thompson Gym 108F
  • Phone
    717-361-1141
  • Twitter
    BlueJaysMBB
Britt Moore’s collegiate playing career began at Elizabethtown College. Now in the coaching profession, his journey is coming full circle. Moore was named the 12th head coach in Blue Jays men’s basketball history and enters his ninth season with the program in 2025-26

Moore enters 2024-25 with a career-coaching record of 143-183 with a 65-105 record at Elizabethtown.

Moore continued to improve in his third season at the helm of the Blue Jays, recording his largest win total (12). He led Etown to a Spooky Nook Tournament title with wins over NCAA Tournament qualifier, Penn State Harrisburg, and St. Mary's. The Blue Jays also scored its second win in as many years over conference rival Scranton, 70-68. Connor Moffat became the second player to earn All-Landmark accolades under Moore, securing second team honors.

In his second season, Moore improved the team's win total from five to 10 and the team's conference record from 2-12 in his first year to 5-9 in 2019-20. The 2019-20 team earned the program's first win over a ranked opponent since 2003, topping then undefeated No. 25 Scranton, 67-64.

He has also pushed his players in the classroom since his arrival at Elizabethtown, helping the program achieve its first ever NABC Team Academic Excellence Award and its first NABC Honors Court Honoree in Ethan Dubois since 2010 in 2019.
 
Before taking the head coaching position at Elizabethtown, Moore spent six seasons as the head coach at the University of Pittsburgh-Bradford, taking his Panther teams to the Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference (AMCC) Tournament each season.
 
Pitt-Bradford averaged 13 wins per season under Moore and advanced to the AMCC semifinals in 2013 and 2016.
 
Moore made an immediate impact on the Panthers in 2011-12, his first season as head coach. Pitt-Bradford, which returned just 14 percent of its scoring from 2010-11, finished in the top 25 of Division III in free throw percentage and reached the AMCC quarterfinals. Two of Moore’s players received all-conference recognition.
 
In 2012-13, Moore led the program to its best start in more than two decades and a 13-13 overall record. The Panthers showed a knack for the dramatic, twice rallying from 19 points down to win in overtime and going 3-0 in the final week of AMCC play to snare a spot in the conference tournament.
 
Moore’s best season in Bradford came a year later, in 2013-14. The Panthers went 16-11 and reached the AMCC semifinals after eliminating La Roche in the quarters. His teams won 10 games or more in all six of his seasons with the Panthers and Moore totaled 78 victories overall.
 
Moore developed four of 1,000-point scorers in Keith Burgess, Tyler Ferguson, Evan Greening and Eric Matheson, and 11 players earned All-AMCC honors under his guidance. Pitt-Bradford was the only team in the league with two All-AMCC First Team picks (Matheson and Greening) in 2015-16. Greening also captured a spot on the D3hoops.com All-Great Lakes Region Second Team and was a member of the Allstate NABC Good Works Team.
 
Prior to heading west, Moore was an assistant coach at Albright College in Reading, Pennsylvania, for five seasons, including the final two as associate head coach to Rick Ferry. Moore was involved in the day-to-day operations of a program that enjoyed four winning seasons in five years. Albright went 80-48 during Moore’s time with the team, including 21-6 in 2009-10 when the Lions won the MAC Commonwealth Conference championship and qualified for the NCAA Division III Tournament.
 
Moore started his coaching career as an assistant at Misericordia University in Dallas, Pennsylvania, spending the 2004-05 and 2005-06 seasons with the Cougars.
 
Moore, originally from West Stockbridge, Massachusetts, played in 25 games for Elizabethtown as a sophomore in 2000-01. The Blue Jays went 20-6 –just the second 20-win season in team history—and finished as MAC Commonwealth Conference runners-up.
 
Moore eventually moved back to the Wilkes-Barre area to be closer to family, ending his playing career at King’s College, where he was a two-time letter winner from 2002-04. Moore led the MAC Freedom Conference in field goal and three-point field goal percentage as a junior in 2002-03, and led the Monarchs to consecutive postseason appearances in 2002-03 and 2003-04. He was also a member of the MAC’s All-Academic team.
 
Moore graduated from King's College in 2004 with a bachelor's degree in communications and earned his master's degree in sport management from Drexel University in 2010.
 
Moore and wife, Kristy, have two children, Katie and Ellis.


 
BRITT MOORE YEAR-BY-YEAR COACHING RECORD
Overall Conference
Year School Wins Losses Pct. Wins Losses Pct. Postseason & Honors
2011-12 Pitt-Bradford 10 15 .400 9 9 .500 AMCC Quarterfinals
2012-13 Pitt-Bradford 13 13 .500 8 10 .444 AMCC Quarterfinals
2013-14 Pitt-Bradford 16 11 .593 11 7 .611 AMCC Semifinals
2014-15 Pitt-Bradford 15 11 .577 12 6 .667 AMCC Quarterfinals
2015-16 Pitt-Bradford 12 15 .444 10 8 .556 AMCC Semifinals
2016-17 Pitt-Bradford 12 13 .480 10 8 .556 AMCC Quarterfinals
2017-18 Elizabethtown 5 19 .208 2 12 .143
2018-19 Elizabethtown 10 14 .417 5 9 .357
2019-20 Elizabethtown 12 12 .500 5 9 .357
2020-21 Elizabethtown Season Canceled - COVID-19
2021-22 Elizabethtown 8 16 .333 3 11 .214
2022-23 Elizabethtown 10 14 .417 4 10 .286
2023-24 Elizabethtown 10 15 .400 7 11 .389
2024-25 Elizabethtown 10 15 .400 7 11 .389
Coaching Totals
6 Seasons Pitt-Bradford 78 78 .500 60 48 .556
8 Seasons Elizabethtown 65 105 .382 33 73 .311
14 Seasons 143 183 .439 93 121 .435

Updated on 6/12/2025