Buffie Burson

Buffie Burson can remember a discussion in a Bojangles' with Vic Mitchell before starting her job as women's basketball head coach at the University of North Georgia (UNG) in 1994. Mitchell, the head coach who she had worked with as an assistant coach for three years at Shorter University, told her play design was the easiest part of coaching. She has spent the past 25 years proving him right.

Burson won her 500th game at UNG in a 68-63 triumph against Flagler College on Dec. 17, 2018. She has led teams to conference titles more than 10 times. Her 2018-19 team won 30 games and reached the NCAA Division II Elite Eight for the first time.

For Burson, success at UNG has extended far beyond the basketball court. Part of that comes from lessons she learned from her father, Jimmy Burson, who played football at Auburn University and in the NFL before a long tenure as a high school football coach.

"He got his players to really play hard without demeaning them or yelling at them," Burson said. "He was so smart in how he coached his players and how he loved his players and how his players loved him and the relationships they had. Even back then, I could recognize coaching was about relationships and building that trust."

Her family pedigree played a role in her career choice.

"It's the only lifestyle I've ever known, which is being around athletics and being around coaches," Burson said. "I grew up in that lifestyle."

Burson played softball, soccer and basketball as a child. But her hatred of rainouts in other sports led Burson to stick with basketball. She played basketball at the University of Montevallo and worked as a graduate assistant there for two years before the move to Shorter.

After three years at Shorter, Burson came to Dahlonega and has built a legacy of winning and community impact. Growing up in Alpharetta and playing against North Georgia in college gave Burson a comfort level.

"It always felt like home to me," Burson said.

Among her coaching highlights were the 1997 conference championship in her third season at North Georgia, and the 2006 Peach Belt Conference (PBC) title in North Georgia's first season in NCAA Division II.

"North Georgia attracts great people," Burson said. "It's been amazing to coach them."

Recent seasons have been among Burson's best, with a string of regular-season and tournament PBC titles and multiple appearances in the NCAA Division II tournament. She credits a willingness to adjust for her program's continued success.

"If you want to be a great coach, you can definitely be one. You have to be authentic," Burson said. "Continue to have a growth mindset."

Some career highlights have nothing to do with wins and losses, though. Burson's team granted a wish for a Make-A-Wish child one year. Burson said UNG Athletics enourages teams to be a part of those kinds of moments. Burson is grateful that mentality is a focus.

"We're put on Earth to serve and help," Burson said.

Kylee Smith

Kylee Smith

Kylee Smith set a Peach Belt Conference record for career strikeouts and helped the UNG softball program secure two appearances in the NCAA Division II championship during her five seasons.
Jordan Tetley

Jordan Tetley

Jordan Livesay Tetley had the opportunity to learn from longtime UNG women's basketball head coach Buffie Burson both as a player and as a graduate assistant coach.
Taylor Malasek

Taylor Malasek

Taylor Malasek's leadership extends far beyond the field of competition. "I can't ask someone to do something I'm not willing to do."
Vaishali Jorge

Vaishali Jorge

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Zach Brown

Zach Brown

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