Ray Giacoletti

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Ray Giacoletti (born April 14, 1962 in Peoria, Illinois) is a former men's basketball coach. He played collegiate basketball at Minot State University in North Dakota from 1980-1984, where he was a four-year letterman and a team captain for two seasons. He received his degree in physical education in 1985.

Giacoletti was a finalist for the Naismith Coach of the Year Award in 2005, he was also named the 2005 Playboy National Coach of the Year. He currently is the assistant coach at Gonzaga University.


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[edit] Coaching History

Giacoletti began coaching in 1984 when he was named a student assistant coach at Minot State while finishing up his degree. Giacoletti then became a graduate assistant at Western Illinois University during the 1985-86 season. After spending a year at Western Illinois, Giacoletti became an assistant coach for Oral Roberts University during the 1986-87 season.

After 3 seasons at the collegiate level, Giacoletti moved to the professional ranks, where he spent two seasons as an assistant coach for the Fresno Flames of the old World Basketball League. Giacoletti then returned to college coaching in the 1989 season, where he was named an assistant head coach under Bob Bender at Illinois State. After three seasons with Illinois State, Bender was named the head coach of the University of Washington, where Giacoletti accepted an assistant position with the program. He was the assistant coach with the Washington Huskies from 1993-1997, when he accepted the head coaching job at North Dakota State.

Accepting the head coaching job with North Dakota State, Giacoletti returned to the state where he spent his collegiate years. In his first season as a head coach, Giacoletti guided North Dakota State to an 18-9 (.667) record. In his second season, North Dakota State finished with a 14-13 record and in his third season as coach, they went 16-11. Giacoletti would then leave North Dakota State for the head coaching job at Eastern Washington University. His final overall record at North Dakota State was 48-33.

In 2000 Giacoletti was named the head coach of the Eastern Washington Eagles. He would guide the Eagles to their best four year stretch in program history. Giacoletti would compile a 69-50 (.580) record as head coach at Eastern Washington, including a 41-17 (.707) record in Big Sky Conference play. In his third season as head coach of Eastern Washington, Giacoletti led the Eagles to an 18-13 record and the school's first post season tournament in school history, making the 2003 National Invitation Tournament. Giacoletti's best season was the 2003-2004 season, where the Eagles went 17-13 (11-3 in Big Sky play) and won the Big Sky Conference Championship. Giacoletti then guided the team to its first ever Big Sky tournament championship and the school's first ever NCAA Tournament appearance. Eastern Washington would lose to highly favored Oklahoma State in the first round.

After successful stints with North Dakota State and Eastern Washington, Giacoletti was named the head coach of the University of Utah Utes. He replaced the legendary Rick Majerus, who retired in the middle of the 2003-2004 season. In his three seasons at Utah, Giacoletti led Utah to a 54-40 (.574) record.

In Giacoletti's first season, the Utes went 29-6 (.829) and won the Mountain West Conference. After beating a surging UTEP team in the first round, the 6th seeded Utes stunned 3rd seeded Oklahoma in the 2nd round to advance to the NCAA Sweet 16. It was the school's first Sweet 16 since the 1998 season, where Utah finished as the NCAA runner-up to Kentucky. Ironically, it was Kentucky who would beat Utah once again, ending the 2nd winningest season in school history.

Giacoletti is credited for molding Andrew Bogut into not only the John R. Wooden Award winner, but the #1 draft pick in the 2005 NBA draft. Giacoletti was named the 2005 Mountain West Coach of the Year, after guiding the Utes to a 13-1 conference record, the best record in conference history.

Giacoletti's second season was dramatically different from his first. Gone was All-American Andrew Bogut, as well as Marc Jackson, Justin Hawkins and Richard Chaney, all major players in Utah's Sweet 16 run the season before. The Utes struggled with a young team and finished with the school's first losing record since the 1989 season, with a record of 14-15.

Giacoletti's third season saw his young team continue to struggle and the Utes had their worst season since 1983-84 (11-19). A day before Utah's final regular season game, versus conference rival BYU, he resigned as Head Basketball coach effective at the end of the season.[1]

On March 26, 2007, Giacoletti replaced former Gonzaga assisant coah Bill Grier as assisant coach.[2]

Giacoletti's overall coaching record is 171-123 (.582) in 10 seasons. Giacoletti owns a 2-2 overall record in the NCAA Tournament and an 0-1 record in the National Invitation Tournament.

[edit] Head Coaching Record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Tournament Finish Rank#
North Dakota State Bison (North Central Conference) (1997-2000)
1997-98 North Dakota State 18-9 9-9 5-T
1998-99 North Dakota State 14-13 8-10 5-T
1999-00 North Dakota State 16-11 9-9 6
At North Dakota State 48-33
Eastern Washington Eagles (Big Sky Conference) (2000-2004)
2000-01 Eastern Washington 17-11 11-5 2
2001-02 Eastern Washington 17-13 10-4 2
2002-03 Eastern Washington 18-13 9-5 2 NIT First Round
2003-04 Eastern Washington 17-13 11-3 1 NCAA First Round
At Eastern Washington 69-50
Utah Utes (Mountain West Conference) (2004-2007)
2004-05 Utah 29-6 13-1 1 NCAA Sweet Sixteen #14
2005-06 Utah 14-15 6-10 6
2006-07 Utah 11-19 6-10 6-T
At Utah 54-40
Career 171-123
     National Championship          Conference Tournament Championship
#Rankings from final Coaches Poll of the season.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Giacoletti steps down day before rivalry game with BYU, Salt Lake Tribune, 3 March 2007.
  2. ^ Giacoletti joins 'Zags staff Sports Illustrated, 26 March 2007 .


Dobie • Magoffin • Rueber • Wood • Davis • Movold • Borleske • Dewey • Cortright • Saalwaechter • Lowe • Reed • Bentson • Cowman • Belk • Skaar • Inniger • BilleterGiacolettiMcDermottMilesPhillips

Hinch • Lienau • Fertsch • Eustis • Woodward • Reese • Brumlay • Reese • McKie • Krause • Folda • Krause • Folda • Hofman • Wade • Aggers • Giacoletti • Burns

Milne • Richardson • Bennion • Nordgren • Fitzpatrick • ArmstrongPetersonGardnerFosterPimmArchibaldMajerusHunsakerMajerusGiacolettiBoylen

[edit] External link

Preceded by
Tom Billeter
North Dakota State Bison Head Coach
1997–1999
Succeeded by
Greg McDermott
Preceded by
Steve Aggers
Eastern Washington Eagles Head Coach
2000–2003
Succeeded by
Mike Burns
Preceded by
Rick Majerus
University of Utah Head Basketball Coaches
2004-2007
Succeeded by
Jim Boylen