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}}</ref> On defense Crean emphasizes contesting each of the opponent's steps on the court. Crean utilizes the halfcourt defense which requires great ball pressure, help from teammates, challenging shots, and defensive rebounding.
}}</ref> On defense Crean emphasizes contesting each of the opponent's steps on the court. Crean utilizes the halfcourt defense which requires great ball pressure, help from teammates, challenging shots, and defensive rebounding.
He will Sh*t on you

Crean is considered an excellent recruiter and one of college basketball's best talent evaluators.<ref name="JS12092006"/> A hallmark of Crean's programs is the notion that players are joining a family and making sure that players' families are involved in the program.<ref name="JS04041999B">{{cite news
Crean is considered an excellent recruiter and one of college basketball's best talent evaluators.<ref name="JS12092006"/> A hallmark of Crean's programs is the notion that players are joining a family and making sure that players' families are involved in the program.<ref name="JS04041999B">{{cite news
| first = Michael
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Revision as of 15:40, 14 January 2013

Tom Crean
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamIndiana
Record64–76 (.457)
Annual salary$3.16 million [1]
Biographical details
Born (1966-03-25) March 25, 1966 (age 58)
Mount Pleasant, Michigan
Alma materCentral Michigan, B.A. (1989)
Head coaching record
Overall254-172 (.596)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
C-USA Regular Season Championship (2003)
Awards
C-USA Coach of the Year (2002, 2003)
Clair Bee Coach of the Year (2003)
Sporting News Big Ten Coach of the Year (2012)
ESPN.com National Coach of the Year (2012)

Thomas Aaron Crean (born March 25, 1966) is an American college basketball coach. He is currently the head coach of the Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team. Prior to that he served as head coach at Marquette University (1999–2008), where the program had averaged 20 wins a year and made six postseason appearances, including the 2003 NCAA Final Four. In 2012 ESPN.com named him National Coach of the Year and Sporting News named him the Big Ten Coach of the Year.

Personal life

Crean was born and raised in Mount Pleasant, Michigan, where he played basketball for four years. According to Crean, "I didn't play a lot, but I knew I wanted to coach."[2] While a student at Central Michigan University, Crean was an assistant coach at Mount Pleasant High School for five seasons,[3] and at Alma College. Crean received his bachelor's degree in parks and recreation from Central Michigan in 1989.[2] Crean is married to Joani Harbaugh, whom he met through a mutual friend, Ron Burns, at a gym where she was working as an aerobics instructor.[4] Her father, Jack Harbaugh, was the head football coach at Western Kentucky University at the time Crean was an assistant basketball coach. She is also the sister of the first pair of brothers to serve as head coaches in NFL history:[5] Baltimore Ravens head football coach John Harbaugh and San Francisco 49ers head football coach Jim Harbaugh (a former quarterback at both the University of Michigan and in the NFL). Crean and his wife have three children: Megan, Riley, and Ainsley.[6]

Assistant coaching career

Crean spent two stints at Michigan State, first during the 1989-1990 season as a graduate assistant under then head coach Jud Heathcote at the behest of then assistant coach Tom Izzo, whom Crean had befriended on the summer camp circuit.[7] From 1990 to 1994 Crean served as the associate head coach under Ralph Willard at Western Kentucky. When Willard left Western Kentucky to become head coach at Pittsburgh in 1994, Crean was considered to replace him as head coach.[8] Ultimately Crean followed Willard to Pittsburgh, serving as associate head coach for one year.[3]

In 1995 Crean returned to Michigan State as assistant coach under the leadership of Tom Izzo. Izzo and Crean became such good friends that Crean lived in Izzo's house and Izzo was an usher in Crean's wedding. According to Crean at the time, "It was a great opportunity for me to go back home. We've been friends a long time. I don't think I would have left Ralph for anything else."[9] During this period Crean served at various times as recruiting coordinator and, for the last two seasons, associate head coach.[10] In each of Crean's four seasons, Michigan State's win total increased, culminating with a 33-5 season and a 15-1 Big Ten ledger in 1999. Michigan State later went on to honor Crean with a 2000 National Championship ring; even though he wasn't on the staff at the time, he'd helped recruit and develop many of the players on the title team.

Marquette University

On March 30, 1999, Crean was named head coach at Marquette University.[3] According to Crean, "Once Marquette became available, that's where my sights were. I had unbelievable respect for the tradition and the name. When I thought of Marquette, I thought of a true basketball school and to me that had a lot to do with it."[11] Crean immediately made a number of changes at Marquette, creating a new team image by increasing the significance of the team's media day and instituting a "Midnight Madness" event commonly held by schools on the night teams are allowed to begin practice.[12] Crean's first recruiting class was considered by experts to be among the top twenty in the country, Marquette's first in a long time.[13]

In his nine years with Marquette, Crean's teams earned five NCAA Tournament bids, one more than the previous four Marquette coaches had in the 16 years prior to his arrival. During his tenure there Crean recruited, developed and coached a number of skilled players that made significant contributions in both the NCAA and NBA, including Dwyane Wade, Dominic James, Steve Novak, and Travis Diener.

Over his final seven seasons at Marquette, Crean compiled an aggregate record of 160-68 (.702). The 2002-03 season was one of the best in Marquette history. The team made a Final Four appearance for the first time since winning the NCAA Championship in 1977. Crean has referred to the team's run as "one of the greatest four or five days of my life."[14]

Later that year, Marquette accepted an offer to leave Conference USA for the Big East Conference after the 2004–2005 season. Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese cited his friendship with Crean as contributing to the invitation, saying, "That, to me, was one of the great appeals, to get Tommy as well as Marquette into the league."[15]

Indiana University

2008–2011

"The tradition at Indiana could be stacked up against the tradition of any other college sports team anywhere because of everything that has gone on here, in the sense of how many players have played here, how many championships have been won here. The players were household names to me, so it's very, very easy for me to promote that and to want to be a part of that and to welcome that. That's our lifeline ... The tradition is what Indiana stands for and what I want it to stand for, and so we want to reward that and embrace that at every possible turn."

Tom Crean, 2008[16]

On April 1, 2008, Crean was hired as head coach of the Indiana University Hoosiers, succeeding interim head coach Dan Dakich. Dakich had replaced former coach Kelvin Sampson, who resigned after NCAA recruiting violations. Crean inherited a thoroughly depleted team. Between Crean's hiring and the start of the 2008–09 season, freshman Eric Gordon opted to leave early for the NBA and star forward DJ White graduated. Two players kicked off the team by Dakich were not allowed back by Crean, one was dismissed by Crean and two transferred.[17] As a result, Crean began with a roster consisting only of two walk-ons who had scored a combined 36 points in their careers. Despite the long odds, Crean was known to approach games and practices as if Indiana could compete in each one and to continue stressing Hoosier Hysteria and the long tradition of success at the school.[18]

With a depleted roster and damaged recruiting lure, Crean's first three seasons saw losing records of 6–25 (the worst in school history), 10-21, and 12-20. However, during this period Crean's recruiting classes progressively improved, most notably with the signing of five-star recruit and McDonald's All-American Cody Zeller, an Indiana native and lifelong Indiana Hoosier fan. Zeller was the highest ranked recruit to join the Indiana program since the Sampson era.

2011–present

The 2011-2012 season was a watershed one for Crean and the program, which saw a 27–9 record and a sweet 16 appearance. The season also saw home wins over #1 ranked Kentucky, #2 ranked Ohio State, and #5 ranked Michigan State. This made Crean the first coach to knock off the #1 and #2 ranked teams in the same season and the first Indiana squad ever to defeat three programs ranked in the top five in a single season. The Hoosiers earned a number four seed in the 2012 NCAA Tournament and defeated New Mexico State in the second round. After defeating VCU in the third round, the Hoosiers lost in the Sweet Sixteen to rival Kentucky, who would go on to win the national championship.

The fifteen game win improvement in 2011-2012 was the largest single turnaround in the NCAA that season.[19] Crean's guidance of the program to success from "unthinkable depths" was widely regarded as one of the most remarkable rebuilding projects in NCAA basketball history.[18] As a result, he was named the mid-season Jim Phelan National Coach of the Year,[20] the Sporting News Big Ten Coach of the Year,[21] and the ESPN.com National Coach of the Year.[22]

For the 2012-2013 season, Crean signed five highly-touted recruits, self-dubbed "The Movement." Combined with the returning players from the previous season, Indiana is regarded as one of the early favorites for the title in 2013 and is ranked #1 in both the Associated Press and USA Today preseason polls.[23][24]

Coaching style and philosophy

Crean's basketball philosophy emphasizes fast breaks and defensive pressure. On offense he has a reputation for the magnitude of his offensive sets and their multitude of options, with one opposing coach estimating about 400 different sets run.[25] Shot selection is extremely important, with a focus on spacing, inside-out attacks, penetration and kick.[26] On defense Crean emphasizes contesting each of the opponent's steps on the court. Crean utilizes the halfcourt defense which requires great ball pressure, help from teammates, challenging shots, and defensive rebounding. He will Sh*t on you Crean is considered an excellent recruiter and one of college basketball's best talent evaluators.[11] A hallmark of Crean's programs is the notion that players are joining a family and making sure that players' families are involved in the program.[27] Crean is also known to excel in public relations, charming alumni and press.[28] At Marquette he began the tradition of Midnight Madness, which was seen as an immediate success.[29] Between 1999 and 2006, Marquette saw a 70% overall increase in attendance, three total attendance records broken, and 1.5 million fans pass through the turnstiles.[11]

On the court Crean is known to walk the sidelines with an intensity normally reserved for football coaches.[18] For inspiration, Crean has a library filled with biographies of coaches and business executives, with favorites being Jim Collins' management guide "Good to Great" and the story of Bill Belichick's rise in New England, "Patriot Reign".[18].

Awards and Recognition

Crean has been chosen to coach a number of national teams. In 2001 he was selected by USA Basketball as one of eight coaches for the USA Basketball men's national team trials in Colorado Springs.[30] In 2004 he served as an assistant coach for USA Basketball's under-20 team in the FIBA Americas World Championship. The team won its second title since the tournament began in 1993.[31]

Crean has also been selected by the media and his peers for the following awards:

  • 2003 Conference USA coach of the year [32]
  • 2003 Clair Bee Coach of the Year
  • 2004 Conference USA coach of the year [33]
  • 2011-2012 mid-season Jim Phelan National Coach of the Year [20]
  • 2012 Sporting News Big Ten Coach of the Year.[21]
  • 2012 ESPN.com National Coach of the Year [22]

Coaching tree

A number of Crean's assistants have become head coaches elsewhere.

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Marquette (Conference USA) (1999–2005)
1999–00 Marquette 15–14 8–8 4th (American) NIT 1st Round
2000–01 Marquette 15–14 9–7 3rd (American)
2001–02 Marquette 26–7 13–3 2nd (American) NCAA 1st Round
2002–03 Marquette 27–6 14–2 1st (American) NCAA Final Four
2003–04 Marquette 19–12 8–8 8th NIT Quarterfinals
2004–05 Marquette 19–12 7–9 9th NIT 1st Round
Marquette (Big East Conference) (2005–2008)
2005–06 Marquette 20–11 10–6 T–4th NCAA 1st Round
2006–07 Marquette 24–10 10–6 T–5th NCAA 1st Round
2007–08 Marquette 25–10 11–7 T–5th NCAA 2nd Round
Marquette: 190–96 (.664) 90–56 (.616)
Indiana (Big Ten Conference) (2008–present)
2008–09 Indiana 6–25 1–17 11th
2009–10 Indiana 10–21 4–14 T–9th
2010–11 Indiana 12–20 3–15 11th
2011–12 Indiana 27–9 11–7 5th NCAA Sweet Sixteen
2012–13 Indiana 15–1 3–0
Indiana: 70–76 (.479) 22–53 (.293)
Total: 260–172 (.602)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Bibliography

  • Coaching Team Basketball. Wheaton, IL: McGraw-Hill, 2006. ISBN 978-0-07-146565-6. (with Ralph Pim.)

References

  1. ^ "Indiana extends Tom Crean to 2020". ESPN. 2012. Retrieved 2012-12-09. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  2. ^ a b "Crean's Road to Final Four Began in Michigan". Grand Rapids Press. Booth Newspapers. 2003-04-05. p. C4. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  3. ^ a b c Nickel, Lori (1999-03-30). "Marquette Will Name Crean as its New Coach Today". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  4. ^ Nickel, Lori (1999-09-16). "Man in Motion". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  5. ^ Ken Murray (January 7, 2011). "Jim Harbaugh joins Ravens' John Harbaugh to form first pair of NFL head coaching brothers". Baltimore Sun. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  6. ^ "Player Bio: Tom Crean". Indiana Athletics. 2009. Retrieved 2010-01-13. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  7. ^ Weiss, Dick (2002-03-04). "Marquette's Marquee Name Crean Bringing Glory Days Back". New York Daily News. Mortimer Zuckerman. p. 65 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  8. ^ Dulac, Gerry (1994-04-12). "Willard Adds Aide and Woos Recruits". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Block Communications. p. B3. Meantime, Willard's assistant at Western Kentucky, Tom Crean, will join him at Pitt. That became official yesterday when Jacksonville Coach Matt Kilcullen was named to replace Willard at Western Kentucky. Crean was being considered for the Western Kentucky job. Crean is married to the former Joanie Harbaugh, who attended Pitt when her father, Jack, was assistant head football coach under Mike Gottfried. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  9. ^ Dulac, Gerry (1995-06-08). "Miller May Succeed Crean as Pitt Assistant". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Block Communications. p. D2. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  10. ^ "Spartans Assistant Hired as Marquette Coach". The Columbus Dispatch. Dispatch Broadcast Group. 1999-03-31. p. 2E. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  11. ^ a b c Rosiak, Todd (2006-12-09). "Road to Marquette Shaped Crean". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  12. ^ Nickel, Lori (1999-10-06). "New-look MU has Touch of Crean". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 9 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  13. ^ Nickel, Lori (1999-11-11). "Crean's First MU Class Draws Rave Reviews". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 9 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  14. ^ Scoggins, Chip (2006-03-15). "The Big East Surprise". Star Tribune. Avista Capital Partners. p. 1C. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  15. ^ Rosiak, Todd (2003-11-05). "MU Makes Move Official". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 8 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  16. ^ Ryan Corazza. "How We're Gonna Be Indiana Again". ESPN The Magazine accessdate=May 9, 2012. {{cite web}}: Missing pipe in: |publisher= (help)
  17. ^ Decker, John. Thomas Dismissed, Ellis and Bassett Also Gone. Hoosier Nation, 2008-05-02.
  18. ^ a b c d Carpenter, Les. "Tom Crean pulled Indiana from unthinkable depths to the NCAA tournament in four arduous years". Yahoo Sports. Retrieved 20 March 2012.
  19. ^ http://btn.com/2012/03/02/big-ten-race-is-sprint-to-the-finish/
  20. ^ a b http://www.collegeinsider.com/jpa/
  21. ^ a b Sporting News conference awards, retrieved 6 March 2012.
  22. ^ a b Ranking the Sweet 16 field, retrieved 20 March 2012.
  23. ^ Katz, Andy (3 April 2012). "Rebuilt Hoosiers will join the elite". ESPN.com. Retrieved 3 April 2012.
  24. ^ Garcia, Marlen (3 April 2012). "Early look at 2012-13 men's college basketball rankings". USA Today. Retrieved 3 April 2012.
  25. ^ Nickel, Lori (2000-03-08). "Masters of Mystery". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  26. ^ Nickel, Lori (1999-11-15). "Restoring Tradition: Crean Hopes Winning Feeling Returns". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  27. ^ Bauman, Michael (1999-04-04). "Crean's World Continues to Move Full Speed Ahead". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  28. ^ Nickel, Lori (1999-11-16). "Hard-working Crean has Marquette Men's Basketball Moving in Fast-forward". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  29. ^ Nickel, Lori (1999-11-17). "Golden Eagles Ring in a New Year". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  30. ^ Nickel, Lori (2000-03-30). "USA Basketball Tabs Crean". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  31. ^ Rosiak, Todd (2004-08-05). "Crean's Golden Summer". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 8 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  32. ^ Nickel, Lori (2002-04-11). "Marquette Finally Has Its Man". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  33. ^ Rosiak, Todd (2003-03-13). "Honor Guard". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports). {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)

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