Jim Berkman | |
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Sport(s) | Lacrosse |
Current position | |
Title | Head coach |
Team | Salisbury University |
Record | 358–36 (.909) |
Annual salary | $83,081[1] |
Biographical details | |
Place of birth | Watertown, New York |
Playing career | |
1979-1982 | St. Lawrence |
Position(s) | midfielder |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1983-1984 1985 1986-1988 1989-present |
Salisbury (asst.) Potsdam State St. Lawrence (asst.) Salisbury |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
As lacrosse coach:
As basketball coach:
As women's soccer coach:
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Awards | |
As lacrosse coach:
As lacrosse player:
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Records | |
James "Jim" Berkman is an American lacrosse coach. He has served as the head coach at Salisbury University since 1989, and before that spent one season as the head coach at SUNY Potsdam. Berkman's teams have won eight Division III national championships and 15 Capital Athletic Conference (CAC) championships. He has been named the Division III coach of the year four times and the CAC Coach of the Year seven times.
In 2008, Berkman surpassed Jack Emmer's former record of 326 wins to become the all-time winningest NCAA men's lacrosse coach. As of the end of the 2010 season, Berkman also possesses the highest all-time winning percentage of a lacrosse coach at any level.[2]
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Berkman grew up in Watertown, New York. He attended nearby St. Lawrence University, where he played basketball and lacrosse as a midfielder.[3] He scored thirty goals to finish his college career as the third all-time scorer for the Saints. In basketball, he averaged 8.2 points per game and finished his career as the all-time leader in assists.[4] As a senior in 1982, he was named a second-team lacrosse All-American and played in the North-South All-Star Game.[3] That year, he was named the Most Valuable Player on both the lacrosse and basketball teams and the Outstanding Male Senior Athlete.
He then attended graduate school for two years at Salisbury University, where he also served as an assistant lacrosse coach. In 1985, as the head coach at Potsdam State he led the lacrosse team to a school-record of nine wins. He then returned to his alma mater and, in addition to coaching lacrosse, he led the men's basketball team to the ICAC championship during the 1987-1988 season. The following year, he returned to Salisbury.[3]
Berkman took over as the Salisbury men's lacrosse head coach in 1989. Each season since, he has guided the team to the NCAA tournament, for a total of 21 consecutive appearances. He has compiled a 337-34 record. From the season they entered the Capital Athletic Conference (CAC) in 1995 until the 2009 NCAA tournament quarterfinals, He led Salisbury to 105 consecutive conference wins and 15 conference championships. The Sea Gulls under Berkman have secured the Division III national championship in 1994, 1995, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, and 2008, and appeared in the final in 1991, 2000, 2006, and 2010.[3][5]
The St. Lawrence Athletics Hall of Fame inducted Berkman in 2001. He was awarded the 1991 Francis "Babe" Kraus Award, the 2008 United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) Division III Coach of the Year honors, and the FieldTurf Tarkett Coach of the Year honors in 2006 and 2007. He was named the CAC Coach of the Year in 1991, 1996, 2002, 2003, and each year from 2005 to 2008.[3]
During the 2008 NCAA tournament, he surpassed Army coach Jack Emmer's former record of 326 wins to become the all-time winningest NCAA lacrosse coach.[6] By the end of the 2009 season, he had expanded it to 337 wins. Under Berkman, Salisbury has also secured numerous records for winning streaks. The Sea Gulls compiled an NCAA record 105-game conference winning streak from the start of the 1995 season through the 2009 NCAA tournament. They also compiled 69-, 55-, and 47-game consecutive winning streaks, an 87-game regular season winning streak, and an 80-game home winning streak.[3]
Berkman resides in Salisbury, Maryland with his wife, Jennifer, who is the Student Health Services director at Salisbury University.[3] Their son, Kylor, played as a midfielder on the lacrosse team coached by his father, and in 2009 became the first player to be named National Midfielder of the Year three consecutive years.[7] Their daughter planned to attend Mount Saint Mary's University in 2010 to play women's lacrosse.[3]