Mike Deane

For the Northern Irish chef, see Michael Deane. For the English cricketer, see Michael Deane (cricketer).
Mike Deane
Sport(s) Basketball
Current position
Title Assistant coach
Team James Madison
Biographical details
Born (1951-09-27) September 27, 1951
Stony Point, New York
Playing career
1971–1974 SUNY Potsdam
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1974–1975 SUNY Potsdam (asst.)
1975–1976 SUNY Plattsburgh (asst.)
1976–1980 SUNY Delhi (asst.)
1980–1982 SUNY Oswego
1982–1986 Michigan State (asst.)
1986–1994 Siena
1994–1999 Marquette
1999–2003 Lamar
2003–2010 Wagner
2012–present James Madison (asst.)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Southland Tournament Championship (2000)
C-USA Tournament Championship (1997)
MAAC Regular Season Championship (1991)

Mike Deane (born September 27, 1951) is an assistant coach at James Madison University and was most recently head basketball coach at Wagner College. He was relieved of his duties on March 1, 2010.[1] He previously held the same position at Siena College, Marquette University, and Lamar University. Michael Deane recorded his 400th career victory on December 15, 2007 against the University of Maryland Eastern-Shore. He has coached three different division 1 schools to the NCAA Tournament (Siena, Marquette, Lamar). His Siena team upset Stanford in the NCAA Tournament.

Mike has produced two NBA products in his career (both at Marquette: Chris Crawford and Amal McCaskill). Mike also recruited Dwyane Wade at Marquette, but left the program a year before Wade came to Marquette.

After a two year hiatus from the game, Deane was named an assistant at James Madison in 2012.[2]

Head coaching record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
SUNY Oswego (Eastern College Athletic Conference) (1980–1982)
1980–81 SUNY Oswego 8–16
1981–82 SUNY Oswego 16–10 ECAC Quarterfinals
SUNY Oswego: 24–26 (.480)
Siena (ECAC North/North Atlantic Conference/Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference) (1986–1994)
1986–87 Siena 17–12 12–6 T-3rd
1987–88 Siena 23–6 16–2 1st NIT First Round
1988–89 Siena 25–5 16–1 1st NCAA Second Round
1989–90 Siena 16–13 11–5 2nd
1990–91 Siena 25–10 12–4 NIT Quarterfinals
1991–92 Siena 19–10 11–5 3rd
1992–93 Siena 16–13 8–6 4th
1993–94 Siena 25–8 10–4 3rd NIT Final Four (3rd place)
Siena: 166–77 (.683) 96–33 (.744)
Marquette (Great Midwest Conference/Conference USA) (1994–1999)
1994–95 Marquette 21–12 7–5 T-3rd NIT Finals
1995–96 Marquette 23–8 10–4 2nd (Blue) NCAA Second Round
1996–97 Marquette 22–9 9–5 2nd (Blue) NCAA First Round
1997–98 Marquette 20–11 8–8 4th (American) NIT Quarterfinals
1998–99 Marquette 14–15 16–10 4th (American)
Marquette: 100–55 (.645) 50–32 (.610)
Lamar (Southland Conference) (1999–2003)
1999–00 Lamar 15–16 8–10 T-6th NCAA First Round
2000–01 Lamar 9–18 7–13 9th
2001–02 Lamar 15–14 11–9 4th
2002–03 Lamar 13–14 10–10 T-5th
Lamar: 53–63 (.457) 36–42 (.462)
Wagner (Northeast Conference) (2003–2010)
2003–04 Wagner 13–16 8–10 T-4th
2004–05 Wagner 14–16 8–10 T-4th
2005–06 Wagner 13–14 6–12 10th
2006–07 Wagner 11–19 8–10 7th
2007–08 Wagner 23–8 15–3 2nd
2008–09 Wagner 16–14 8–10 T-4th
2009–10 Wagner 5–26 3–15 11th
Wagner: 95–113 (.457) 56–72 (.438)
Total: 437–332 (.576)

      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

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 20, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.