Board of Directors

Corliss Fingers

Vice President

Corliss Fingers is close to completing her first decade at Bethune-Cookman, now in her eighth year with the Wildcats Athletics Department, having served as the Director of Strength & Conditioning, in addition to her newest role. After seven years as the Director of Strength & Conditioning working with a variety of sports — more specifically football, the North Carolina native is settled into her newest role as Assistant Athletic Director for Student-Athlete Wellness. In her role, Fingers is responsible for the development of a strategic plan and annual evaluation of the high-performance area to ensure progress towards achieving the strategic goals. She also serves as the department head for 16 sports of the Wildcats with rehabilitating and reconditioning programs. Fingers, a 30-year veteran in the strength & conditioning field, arrived at Bethune-Cookman prior to the 2015-16 athletic term from Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. She spent four years at Southern, serving in a similar capacity with the Jaguars program. In that regard, she also served as the first-ever female strength & conditioning coordinator in the history of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). In 2013, she was instrumental in Southern capturing the school's third SWAC Football Championship game crown, defeating Jackson State by a score of 34-27. The following year, the Jaguars returned to the league title game, falling to Alcorn State, 38-34. Away from the gridiron, Fingers also worked with the men's basketball team that reached the NCAA Tournament in 2006. Before her four-year stint at Southern, Fingers served for 15 years at the University of Maryland from 1996-2011, serving as an assistant strength & conditioning coach for the Terrapins. While at Maryland, she was directly responsible for the complete athletic preparation for 20 of the Terrapins' 27 intercollegiate Division I programs participating in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). She was a critical part of the Women's Volleyball program's string of three consecutive ACC Championships, and was a valuable contributor to the football program's three consecutive New Year Day's bowl games from 2001-03. In the spring of 2005, Fingers was elevated to Assistant Director of Strength Training for football, to go along with her other duties and responsibilities. It marked the first time a female had been appointed to that position. But of all her achievements in the strength and conditioning field, perhaps none have been as rewarding as the national championship earned in 2006 by the University of Maryland's women's basketball program. Fingers' contribution in the preparation of the Lady Terrapins was a critical element in capturing Maryland's first Women's Basketball National Championship and setting a NCAA Division I record of 34 wins in a season. Prior to Maryland, Fingers spent two years at her alma mater — the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, from 1994-96, serving as an assistant strength & conditioning coach. While at UNC, Fingers worked directly with the women's basketball program, helping them to a 1994 national championship. Corliss' interest in sports began at the age of 5 when she began competing in track & field. She continued her successful track and field career through college where she competed for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In 1992, she graduated from UNC with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Physical Education with a concentration in Wellness and Fitness. Following graduation, she was a personal trainer and taught various levels of aerobic conditioning at a local gym. Corliss began her career as a collegiate strength and conditioning coach in 1994 where she served for three years as an assistant under Head Strength Coach, Jeff Madden. Corliss Fingers (formerly Corliss White) married Dr. Earnest M. Fingers on October 9, 2005. Together, the couple has one son, Lenny, who is a recognized multi-black belt martial artist as a teenager, and ranked in the world for his class and age in skill and mastery.