After he completed his playing career and undergraduate degree at Mercer in 1986, Gibson spent the next two seasons as an assistant coach at Mercer while earning his graduate degree. He left after the 1988 season and spent the next six years as a high school coach in South Florida. He returned to Mercer as an assistant for the 1994 season.[1]
After a ten-year stint as a Mercer assistant in the late 1990s and early 2000s, Gibson succeeded Barry Myers as the Bears' head coach for the start of the 2004 season. For his first two seasons, Link Jarrett, who would later coach against Gibson in the Southern Conference at UNC Greensboro, served as one of Gibson's assistants. The Bears made their first postseason appearance under Gibson in 2006, when they finished 3rd in the Atlantic Sun Conference (A-Sun) to qualify for the A-Sun tournament. As the second seed (second-place North Florida was ineligible), Mercer went 2–2. They defeated East Tennessee State in the opening game, then lost to Stetson, 6–5 in extra innings, in their second. In the losers bracket, the Bears knocked out top-seeded Jacksonville before being eliminated with another one-run loss to Stetson.[1][2][5][6][7]
Mercer made three more A-Sun Tournament appearances from 2007–2009 before reaching its first NCAA tournament in 2010. At the A-Sun tournament, Gibson's team went 4–0 to win the conference's automatic bid, defeating East Tennessee State and Jacksonville two times each. Gibson said of the win, "It’s an unbelievable feeling to win here and to be going to the NCAA tournament. It’s about those 27 guys that care for each other, love each other and play hard for each other. It’s the best group I’ve had, as far as chemistry goes. I’m really proud of them." As the third seed in the Atlanta Regional, Mercer went 1–2. Georgia Tech shut them out in the opener, then defeated Elon before being eliminated by Alabama. The Bears returned to the NCAA tournament in 2013 and went 0–2 in the Starkville Regional. Gibson was named the 2013 A-Sun Coach of the Year, and Kendall Rogers of Perfect Game named him a rising college coach after the season.[2][5][8][9][10]
National championPostseason invitational champion Conference regular season championConference regular season and conference tournament champion
Division regular season champion
Division regular season and conference tournament champion
Conference tournament champion
↑Ryan, Sean (February 4, 2014). "Mercer Sold on Young". CollegeBaseballInsider.com. Archived from the original on July 15, 2014. Retrieved July 3, 2014.