Ronald Moore joined Fran McCaffery’s first staff at the University of Pennsylvania, named as an assistant coach in April 2025.
Moore makes his college coaching debut with the Quakers after a long professional career in Europe.
Moore played his college ball for McCaffery at Siena College and served as the floor general for arguably the greatest three-year run in the program’s history. The Saints won three Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) championships and made NCAA Tournament appearances every year from from 2008-10, winning NCAA first-round games over Vanderbilt (2008) and Ohio State (2009).
Moore graduated as Siena’s all-time assists leader (823) and held the two best single-season totals in program history with 261 as a senior in 2009-10 and 224 as a junior in 2008-09. A member of the winningest class in program history (97) and the only class to post four 20-win seasons, Moore scored 1,070 career points and also graduated third all-time with 223 career steals.
A 2010 District I First Team selection by the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC), Moore was a national finalist for the Bob Cousy Award which honors the nation’s top collegiate point guard. He also was a first-team All-MAAC selection as a senior, second-team All-MAAC as a junior, and a two-time MAAC All-Tournament Team selection (2009, 2010),
Moore was inducted into the Siena College Athletics Hall of Fame in 2017.
Moore grew up in nearby Plymouth Meeting, Pa., and attended Plymouth-Whitemarsh High School. As a senior, he was a third-team All-Southern Pennsylvania selection by the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Moore and his wife, Kristin, live in Plymouth Meeting with son Cameron and daughter Ava. Three members of Moore's family have also been involved in the sport at a high level. His uncle, Jimmie Baker, played in the old American Basketball Association (ABA). His older brother, Chuck Moore, played college basketball for Vanderbilt and his cousin, John Salmons, enjoyed a 13-year career in the NBA.