John Beilein

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John Beilein

Title Head coach
College Michigan
Sport Basketball
Born February 5, 1953 (1953-02-05) (age 55)
Place of birth Flag of the United States Burt, New York
Career highlights
Overall 554-322 (.632)
Championships
NIT Championship (2007)
CAA Tournament Championship (1998)
CAA Regular Season Championship (2001)
MAAC Tournament Championship (1996)
MAAC Regular Season Championship (1994)
Playing career
1971–1975 Wheeling Jesuit
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1978–1982
1982–1983
1983–1992
1992–1997
1997–2002
2002–2007
2007–present
Erie CC
Nazareth
LeMoyne
Canisius
Richmond
West Virginia
Michigan

John Beilein (pronounced bee-line; born February 5, 1953 in Burt, Niagara County, New York) is the men's basketball head coach at the University of Michigan. He is the 16th head coach of the Wolverines. Beilein has won 554 career games.

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[edit] Coaching career

In 1975, Beilein graduated from Wheeling College (now Wheeling Jesuit University) with a bachelor of arts degree in history; he had competed on the school's basketball team. After graduating he began his coaching career, at Central High School in Newfane, New York, and remained there for three years. He went on to earn a Master of Arts in education from Niagara University in 1981.

Throughout his coaching career, Beilein has always held head coaching positions, never as an assistant. Beilein served as the coach of Erie Community College from 1978 to 1982, Nazareth College for the 1982-1983 school year, and Le Moyne College from 1983 to 1992. In 1992 he arrived at Canisius College, which was also the first position in which he hired assistant coaches. [1].

At Canisius - his first NCAA Division I coaching position - Beilein reached the NCAA tournament once and the National Invitation Tournament twice in his five seasons. In 1997 he moved to the University of Richmond. There, he compiled a 100-53 record in five seasons, recording a winning record each season, and again reached the NCAA tournament once, where his 14th seeded team upset nationally ranked South Carolina, and the NIT twice.

In 2002, Beilein accepted the head coaching position at West Virginia University. At WVU he posted a 104-60 record over five seasons. In 2004-05, his team went 24-11 and reached the "Elite Eight" (fourth round) of the NCAA tournament. The following year, WVU went 22-11 and reached the "Sweet Sixteen" (third round). In 2006-07, Beilein's Mountaineers, despite losing about 80% of their scoring from the previous season, went 27-9 and won the NIT championship.

On April 3, 2007 the University of Michigan announced that it had hired Beilein to coach its men's basketball team. He replaced Tommy Amaker, who was fired after failing to reach the NCAA Tournament in his six seasons.

[edit] Coaching style

Beilein is known for his offense which emphasizes constant motion, passing, back-door cuts, disciplined teamwork, and precision shooting. The offense usually starts out with four players outside the three-point arc with one player at the top of the key. In addition to working this formation to try to open up space for players to cut to the basket, West Virginia also took a high amount of three-point shots. He is also notable for employing the rare 1-3-1 zone defense.

[edit] Personal life

Beilein is married to Kathleen Beilein. They have three sons (Patrick, who played for his father at WVU; Mark, a former football player and WVU grad; and Andy, who is enrolled as a freshman at the University of Michigan next fall) and a daughter (Seana Hendricks). Patrick was playing professional basketball in Europe. The Beileins live in Ann Arbor and attend a Catholic Church in town regularly.

[edit] Career Division I coaching record

Season Team Overall Record Conference Record Postseason RPI Ranking
1992-93 Canisius 10-18 5-9 --- NA
1993-94 Canisius 22-7 12-2 NIT 1st Round NA
1994-95 Canisius 21-14 10-4 NIT Semifinal NA
1995-96 Canisius 19-11 7-7 NCAA 1st Round NA
1996-97 Canisius 17-12 10-4 --- NA
1997-98 Richmond 23-8 12-3 NCAA 2nd Round NA
1998-99 Richmond 15-12 10-6 --- 169
1999-00 Richmond 18-12 11-5 --- 112
2000-01 Richmond 22-7 12-4 NIT 2nd Round 54
2001-02 Richmond 22-14 11-5 NIT Quarterfinal 75
2002-03 West Virginia 14-15 5-11 --- 102
2003-04 West Virginia 17-14 7-9 NIT 3rd Round 74
2004-05 West Virginia 24-11 8-8 NCAA Elite Eight 25
2005-06 West Virginia 22-11 11-5 NCAA Sweet Sixteen 18
2006-07 West Virginia 27-9 9-7 NIT Champions 17
2007-08 Michigan 10-22 5-13 --- 154
Overall record at Canisius: 89-62 (.589)
Overall record at Richmond: 100-53 (.654)
Overall record at WVU: 104-60 (.634)
Overall record at Michigan: 10-22 (.313)