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Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Coach of the Year

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jim Phelan NEC Men's Basketball Coach of the Year
Awarded forthe most outstanding men's basketball head coach in theNortheast Conference
CountryUnited States
History
First award1982–83
Most recentChris Kraus,Stonehill

TheNortheast Conference Men's Basketball Coach of the Year is abasketball award given to head coaches in theNortheast Conference (NEC). The award is presented to the head coach voted to be the most successful that season by the league's coaches. The award was first given following the 1982–83 season, the second year of the conference's existence, toMatt Furjanic ofRobert Morris.[1]

Howie Dickenman ofCentral Connecticut has won the most awards with four.Bashir Mason ofWagner has won three, and seven other coaches have won the award twice. One former NEC Coach of the Year has been inducted into theNational Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame as a coach:Jim Phelan (inducted 2001). Due to Phelan's success, in 2003 the NEC men's basketball coach of the year award was named in his honor.[2] Also of note, the only year when the award was shared was in 1993 with Jim Phelan and Kevin Bannon as winners. The program with the most winners, both by total awards and distinct recipients, is former member Robert Morris, with six awards won by four coaches. Among current members, Wagner has the most by both criteria, with three coaches combining to win five awards. Two current members have not had a winner, but one of them is the league's newest member — Le Moyne, which joined in 2024. The other is Sacred Heart, a member since 1999. New Haven will play its first NEC season in 2025–26.

Winners

[edit]
SeasonCoachSchoolConference
Record
Conference
Standing
Overall
Record
PostseasonSource(s)
1982–83Matt FurjanicRobert Morris12–21st (South Division)23–8NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
1983–84Mark AmatucciLoyola10–6T-3rd16–12[1]
1984–85Tom GreenFairleigh Dickinson10–42nd21–10NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
1985–86Tom Green (2)Fairleigh Dickinson13–31st22–8[1]
1986–87Dave MagarityMarist15–11st20–10NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
1987–88Wayne SzokeMonmouth11–5T-3rd16–13[1]
1988–89Jarrett DurhamRobert Morris12–41st21–9NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
1989–90Jarrett Durham (2)Robert Morris12–41st22–8NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
1990–91Rich ZvosecSt. Francis (NY)8–8T-5th15–14[1]
1991–92Tim CapstrawWagner9–74th16–12[1]
1992–93Kevin BannonRider14–41st19–11NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
Jim PhelanMount St. Mary's10–8T-3rd14–16[1]
1993–94Kevin Bannon (2)Rider14–41st21–9NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
1994–95Dave Magarity (2)Marist12–6T-2nd17–11[1]
1995–96Jim Phelan (2)Mount St. Mary's16–21st21–8NIT first round[1]
1996–97Ray HaskinsLong Island15–31st21–9NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
1997–98Ron GanulinSt. Francis (NY)10–6T-3rd15–12[1]
1998–99Tom SullivanUMBC17–31st19–9[1]
1999–2000Howie DickenmanCentral Connecticut15–31st25–6NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
2000–01Dave CallowayMonmouth15–52nd21–10NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
2001–02Howie Dickenman (2)Central Connecticut19–11st26–5NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
2002–03Dereck WhittenburgWagner14–41st21–11NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
2003–04Ron Ganulin (2)St. Francis (NY)12–61st15–3[1]
2004–05Jim FerryLong Island10–84th14–15[1]
2005–06Howie Dickenman (3)Central Connecticut13–52nd18–11[1]
2006–07Howie Dickenman (4)Central Connecticut16–21st22–12NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
2007–08Mike Rice Jr.Robert Morris15–31st24–11NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
2008–09Mike Rice Jr. (2)Robert Morris15–31st23–12NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[1]
2009–10Tom MooreQuinnipiac15–31st23–10NIT first round[1]
2010–11Jim Ferry (2)Long Island16–21st27–6NEC Champions
NCAA second round
[1]
2011–12Glenn BraicaSt. Francis Brooklyn12–64th15–15[1]
2012–13Tim O'SheaBryant12–6T-2nd19–11CBI first round[1]
2013–14Andrew TooleRobert Morris14–21st22–14NIT second round[1]
2014–15Glenn Braica (2)St. Francis Brooklyn15–31st23–12NIT first round[3]
2015–16Bashir MasonWagner13–51st23–11NIT second round[4]
2016–17Jamion ChristianMount St. Mary's14–41st20–16NEC Champions
NCAA first round
[5]
2017–18Bashir Mason (2)Wagner14–41st23–10NIT first round[6]
2018–19Rob KrimmelSaint Francis (PA)12–6T-1st18–15NIT first round[7]
2019–20Joe GalloMerrimack14–41st20–11NEC Regular-Season Champions[a][8]
2020–21Bashir Mason (3)Wagner13–51st13–7[9]
2021–22Jared GrassoBryant16–21st22–10NEC Champions
NCAA First Four
[10]
2022–23Chris KrausStonehill10–6T-2nd14–17[b][11]
2023–24Patrick SellersCentral Connecticut13–3T-1st20–11NEC semifinals[12]
2024–25Patrick Sellers (2)Central Connecticut14–21stTBDTBD[13]

Winners by school

[edit]

Years in this table reflect calendar years in which basketball seasons end. Since the basketball season spans two calendar years, each school's first year of membership in this table is the calendar year after its actual arrival in the conference.

School (NEC participation)WinnersYears
Robert Morris (1982–2020)61983, 1989, 1990, 2008, 2009, 2014
Central Connecticut (1997–present)62000, 2002, 2006, 2007, 2024, 2025
St. Francis Brooklyn (1982–2023)51991, 1998, 2004, 2012, 2015
Wagner (1982–present)51992, 2003, 2016, 2018, 2021
LIU (1982–present)[c]31997, 2005, 2011
Mount St. Mary's (1989–2022)31993, 1996, 2017
Fairleigh Dickinson (1982–present)21985, 1986
Marist (1981–1997)21987, 1995
Monmouth (1985–2013)21988, 2001
Rider (1992–1997)21993, 1994
Bryant (2008–2022)22013, 2022
Loyola (1981–1989)11984
Merrimack (2020–present)12020
Quinnipiac (1998–2013)12010
Saint Francis (1982–2026)[d]12019
Stonehill (2022–present)12023
Le Moyne (2024–present)0
Sacred Heart (1999–present)0
Notes
  1. ^Because Merrimack was in the first season of its four-year transition fromNCAA Division II to Division I, it was not eligible for NCAA-sponsored postseason play (either the NCAA Tournament or NIT), and under NEC rules was also ineligible for the conference tournament. The Warriors were eligible to compete in non-NCAA postseason events, but all postseason play was canceled due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.
  2. ^Because Stonehill was in the first season of its four-year transition fromNCAA Division II to Division I, it was not eligible for NCAA-sponsored postseason play (either the NCAA Tournament or NIT), and under NEC rules was also ineligible for the conference tournament.
  3. ^From 1981 to 2019,Long Island University was represented in the Northeast Conference by itsBrooklyn campus, known for athletic purposes as "Long Island" through the 2012–13 season and "LIU Brooklyn" from 2013–14 forward. After the 2018–19 season, LIU merged the athletic programs of its Brooklyn and Post campuses into a single program, now competing as the LIU Sharks, that inherited the NCAA Division I and Northeast Conference memberships of the Brooklyn campus.
  4. ^Saint Francis will leave after the 2025–26 season to start a transition toNCAA Division III as a new member of thePresidents' Athletic Conference.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagah"NEC men's basketball record book 1982-2014"(PDF). northeastconference.org. Retrieved29 October 2015.
  2. ^"NEC Hall of Fame- Jim Phelan". northeastconference.org. Retrieved29 October 2015.
  3. ^"St. Francis Brooklyn's Glenn Braica Named District 18 NABC Coach of the Year". NortheastConference.org. Retrieved31 March 2016.
  4. ^"Bashir Mason Named 2015-16 Jim Phelan Northeast Conference Coach Of The Year; Carey & Henson Named To Second Team". wagnerathletics.com. Retrieved31 March 2016.
  5. ^"Jamion Christian Named NEC Coach of the Year; Elijah Long Named First Team All-NEC; Junior Robinson Second Team All-NEC". mountathletics.com. Retrieved21 June 2017.
  6. ^"Mount St. Mary's Junior Robinson Named NEC Men's Basketball Player of the Year". northeastconference.org. Retrieved26 December 2018.
  7. ^"SFU'S Keith Braxton named NEC men's basketball player of the year" (Press release).Northeast Conference. March 5, 2019. RetrievedMarch 5, 2019.
  8. ^"Saint Francis U's Isaiah Blackmon Tabbed NEC Men's Basketball Player of the Year" (Press release). Northeast Conference. March 3, 2020. RetrievedMarch 3, 2020.
  9. ^"NEC Men's Basketball Player of the Year Alex Morales Highlights Wagner Awards Haul" (Press release).Northeast Conference. March 5, 2021. RetrievedMarch 5, 2021.
  10. ^"Two-For-2: Wagner's Alex Morales Repeats As #NECMBB Player of the Year".Northeast Conference. March 1, 2022. RetrievedApril 14, 2022.
  11. ^"Two of a Kind: SFU's Josh Cohen & Merrimack's Jordan Minor Share #NECMBB Player of the Year Honors".Northeast Conference. February 28, 2023. RetrievedMarch 2, 2023.
  12. ^"2023–24 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Award Winners"(PDF).Northeast Conference. March 5, 2024. RetrievedMarch 6, 2024.
  13. ^"Crowned in Blue: CCSU's Jordan Jones is the NEC Men's Basketball Player of the Year".Northeast Conference. March 5, 2025. RetrievedMarch 5, 2025.
Current teams
Championships & awards
Seasons
U.S. men's college basketball awards
Player awards
National
players of the year
Conference
players of the year
Head coach awards
National
coaches of the year
Conference
coaches of the year
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