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Kent State Women's Basketball Camps
Head Coach Bob Lindsay
For 18 seasons, Bob Lindsay has defined the meaning of success in the
Mid-American Conference. The winningest coach in MAC basketball history, Lindsay
has racked up 344 career victories and 219 conference wins.
Coming off
his 17th consecutive season of 15 or more victories and 16th straight season
with at least 10 league wins, Lindsay expects similar success from the 2007-08
squad. The longest tenured head coach in the MAC is on pace to become the 50th
active NCAA Division I coach with 350 career victories.
“Women’s
basketball at Kent State State University under Bob Lindsay is a shining example
of excellence in action over a long period of time both on and off the court,”
Athletic Director Laing Kennedy said.
Over his last 15 years, Lindsay has
put together eleven 20-win seasons with the Golden Flashes. He also has led Kent
State to four NCAA Tournament appearances since 1996.
During the 2004-05
season, Lindsay became the first women’s coach, and the third overall, to win
300 games in the MAC. That same season, he led a Kent State team with one senior
to a share of the MAC East Division championship and fell one win shy of
advancing to the NCAA Tournament.
In his 18 years as the Golden Flashes’
mentor, Lindsay has amassed a career record of 344-183 (.653) and a Mid-American
Conference regular-season record of 219-76 (.730), the best-ever marks for a
league head coach. Lindsay became the first women’s basketball coach, and the
fourth MAC hardwood coach overall, to reach 200 victories when his Golden
Flashes upset nationally ranked Virginia 85-74 on Jan. 24, 2000. He won his
250th game in the 2002 MAC Tournament quarterfinals with an 83-63 victory over
Ohio University on March 3.
In 2006, Lindsay became the first MAC head
coach to reach 200 conference wins.
Under Lindsay’s tutelage, Kent State
players have been named to the All-MAC First Team 16 times, including 2006 MAC
Player of the Year Lindsay Shearer, two-time MAC Player of the Year Amy Sherry
(1995 and 1996), 2000 MAC Player of the Year Dawn Zerman and 2002 First Team
All-MAC selection Kate Miller. Twenty-four others have been selected to the
second team or received honorable mention. In addition, 12 players have been
all-freshman team honorees; three of those players were named the MAC Freshman
of the Year. In 2006, the Flashes won three of the five postseason awards given
by the MAC coaches and News Media Association as Shearer (MAC Player of the
Year), Malika Willoughby (MAC Defensive Player of the Year), and La’kia Stewart
(MAC Sixth Man of the Year) were honored for their outstanding performances.
Shearer, one of the most decorated women’s basketball players in school history,
was selected to the Academic All MAC squad for the third consecutive year. She
also was named ESPN The Magazine Academic All-American of the Year. In addition,
she received an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship.
Lindsay took over a
substandard program in 1989 and turned it into one of the conference’s best. In
just his second season, the Flashes made a dramatic turnaround, winning 12 more
games than the previous year. Lindsay’s teams continued to improve in his third
and fourth seasons in both MAC and non-conference play. During the postseason,
Lindsay has been equally impressive, challenging for a league title or NCAA
berth 15 of the 18 seasons since he was named Kent State’s head coach May 17,
1989. After a number of injuries yielded a tough start to the 2006-07 season,
Lindsay’s squad turned things around to start MAC play winning eight of 10 games
to begin the calendar year.
In 2003-04 Lindsay guided a young, relatively
inexperienced bunch (one senior) to a second place finish in the MAC East after
finishing the regular season on a tear by winning their last eight games and
10-of-11, earning a first round bye in the MAC tournament and the school’s
first-ever postseason WNIT bid. Kent State also handed the MAC regular season
champion Miami RedHawks its only two conference defeats of the season.
In
2002-03, Lindsay led the Golden Flashes to a 10-6 MAC record, earning 10 or more
MAC wins for the 12th straight year, despite not having Preseason All-MAC pick
Andrea Csaszar the whole year due to injury.
In 2001-02 Lindsay might
have had his best coaching job at Kent State as the Golden Flashes won their
fifth consecutive East Division crown and their third MAC Tournament title in
five years despite having only seven healthy players in the conference
season.
Following a 5-22 record in his first season, Lindsay’s teams have
posted a 339-161 (.686) record during the past 17 years and have never lost more
than 13 games in a single season. The Golden Flashes have qualified for the MAC
Tournament each of the past 16 seasons and have advanced to the MAC Tournament
championship game in 11 of the last 16 years, winning the event in 1998, 2000
and 2002. The Golden Flashes have won or shared five of the last nine
regular-season conference crowns, posting a perfect 18-0 record during the
1997-98 season. Overall, Lindsay’s teams have never finished worse than fifth in
the final conference standings since his first season as head
coach.
Lindsay has been named the MAC Coach of the Year twice (1996,
1998) and the WBCA District IV Coach of the Year once (2000) while leading his
team to the NCAA tournament in each of those seasons. The 1995-96 club, seeded
10th after receiving just the second at-large bid in conference history, upset
seventh-seeded Texas A&M University 72-68 in the first round of the national
tournament. The Golden Flashes then bowed out to host and second-seeded Penn
State University 86-59 in the second round. In 1998, the 13th-seeded Golden
Flashes lost to host Iowa State University, the fourth seed, 79-76 in the NCAA
Tournament’s first round. In 1999-2000, ninth-seeded Kent State fell to
eighth-seeded University of Arizona 73-61 in the first round. The Golden Flashes
fell to Kansas State University 93-65 in the first round in 2002.
Along
the way, Kent State has gained national attention and respect. The Golden
Flashes have received votes in the national weekly Top 25 polls seven of the
last 12 seasons; following the 1995-96 season Kent State was ranked 32nd in the
CNN/USA Today Women’s Basketball Poll.
One reason for Kent State’s
dominance has been its play at home. The Golden Flashes boasted a 43-game home
court winning streak, the longest active streak in the nation at the time.
During Lindsay’s tenure Kent State is 172-34 (.878) at Memorial Athletic and
Convocation Center, including a 122-14 (.897) mark during the past 12
years.
Lindsay came to Kent State from the College of the Holy Cross, an
NCAA Division I program that had won 20 or more games in four of the five years
prior to his departure. Lindsay was first assistant at Holy Cross from 1984-89.
During that time the Lady Crusaders compiled a 103-42 (.710) record and competed
in the NCAA Tournament championships in 1985, ‘86 and ‘88.
While at Holy
Cross, Lindsay recruited and coached one Rhodes Scholar finalist, three academic
all-Americans and three conference players of the year.
In 1989 he was
inducted into the United States Lacrosse Coaches Association’s Century Club for
100 career wins. Lindsay was active in regional administration of the sport,
serving as vice president of the New England Intercollegiate Lacrosse
Association.
A native of Worcester, Mass., Lindsay graduated from the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst with a bachelor’s degree in physical education. Lindsay
was a starting defenseman in lacrosse, playing on teams that were nationally
ranked with one club advancing to the USILA/NCAA final four.
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