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Steve McClain

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American basketball coach (born 1962)

Steve McClain
Current position
TitleAssistant Coach
TeamTennessee
ConferenceSEC
Biographical details
Born (1962-08-15)August 15, 1962 (age 63)
Orient, Iowa, U.S.
Alma materChadron State
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1982–1984Chadron State (asst.)
1984Sioux Empire JC (asst.)
1985Independence CC (asst.)
1986–1991Hutchinson CC (asst.)
1991–1994Hutchinson CC
1994–1998TCU (asst.)
1998–2007Wyoming
2007–2010Colorado (asst.)
2010–2015Indiana (asst.)
2015–2020UIC
2020–2022Georgia (asst.)
2022–2025Texas (asst.)
2025–presentTennessee (asst.)
Head coaching record
Overall324–224 (.591)
Tournaments1–1 (NCAA Division I)
2–3 (NIT)
2–1 (CBI)
3–1 (CIT)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
NJCAA Division I tournament (1994)
2KJCCC regular season (1993, 1994)
2MWC regular season (2001, 2002)
Awards
MWC Coach of the Year (2002)

Steven James McClain (born August 15, 1962) is an assistant basketball coach atTennessee. Previously, he was an assistant basketball coach atTexas for three seasons. McClain was also the head coach at the University of Wyoming from 1998-2007, where he saw his greatest headcoaching successes, and at theUniversity of Illinois Chicago[1] for five seasons. Prior to UIC, he had spent five seasons on the staff ofTom Crean atIndiana Hoosiers men's basketball team.

Coaching career

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Hutchinson Community College

[edit]

McClain was the head basketball coach at Hutchinson CC from 1991 to 1994. While there, they won a NJCAA national championship during the 1993–94 season. His overall record at Hutchinson was 91–16.

Wyoming

[edit]

McClain was the head basketball coach atWyoming from 1998 to 2007. In four out of his 9 seasons, Wyoming had made it to either the NCAA tournament, or the NIT tournament. His overall record at Wyoming was 157–115. However, after a disappointing 2006 campaign where he went 17–15, with no postseason berth, he was fired. His Wyoming team made the NCAA tournament in 2002, which was UW's first NCAA bid in twenty0five years, and Wyoming made it to the second round, which was their best finish since 1987. He was named the MWC coach of the year that season.

Steve McClain was known for his very animated and intense coaching style during games.[citation needed]

His teams have won two regular season conference championships. In six out of the 8 seasons he has coached in theMWC, at least one of his players has received First team All MWC honors. From 2000 to 2002, the Cowboys won at least 20 games in all three of their seasons, marking the first time that happened in two decades.

UIC

[edit]

McClain parted ways with UIC after five seasons on March 13, 2020 after a 18–17 season that fell 1 win short of an NCAA tournament bid.[2][3]

Assistant coach

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As an assistant at Colorado, McClain served as acting head coach during the absence of head coach Jeff Bzdelik for a portion of the 2009–10 season. He helped lead the Buffaloes to a 15–16 record, with seven of those losses coming by six points or less. While at Texas, McClain was a part of the Longhorns Big-12 Tournament Championship as well as an Elite-8 finish in the 2023 NCAA Tournament.

On April 22, 2020, Georgia announced the hiring of McClain as an assistant coach, reuniting him with Tom Crean who was the head coach at Indiana where McClain was the assistant for the 2010–15 seasons.[4]

In 2022, McClain was hired by Texas as an assistant coach. After the departure ofRodney Terry at the end of the 2024-25 season, McClain left Texas and was hired at Tennessee.

Head coaching record

[edit]
Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Hutchinson Blue Dragons(Kansas Jayhawk Community College Conference)(1991–1994)
1991–92Hutchinson CC27–76–64thNJCAA Division I Regional
1992–93Hutchinson CC29–511–1T–1stNJCAA Division I Regional
1993–94Hutchinson CC35–410–2T–1stNJCAA Division I Champion
Hutchinson CC:91–16 (.850)27–9 (.750)
Wyoming Cowboys(Western Athletic Conference)(1998–1999)
1998–99Wyoming18–107–7T–4th(Mountain)NIT Second Round
Wyoming Cowboys(Mountain West Conference)(1999–2007)
1999–00Wyoming19–128–6T–4th
2000–01Wyoming20–1010–4T–1stNIT First Round
2001–02Wyoming22–911–31stNCAA Division I Round of 32
2002–03Wyoming21–118–6T–4thNIT Second Round
2003–04Wyoming11–174–108th
2004–05Wyoming15–137–7T–4th
2005–06Wyoming14–185–117th
2006–07Wyoming17–157–95th
Wyoming:157–115 (.577)73–71 (.507)
UIC Flames(Horizon League)(2015–2020)
2015–16UIC5–253–1510th
2016–17UIC17–197–116thCBI Semifinals
2017–18UIC20–1612–63rdCIT Runner-Up
2018–19UIC16–1610–85th
2019–20UIC18–1710–8T-4th
UIC:76–93 (.450)42–48 (.467)
Total:324–224 (.591)

      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

[edit]
  1. ^"UIC Flames hire Indiana Hoosiers assistant Steve McClain as head coach".
  2. ^Greenstein, Teddy."UIC dismisses coach Steve McClain after Flames fall 1 win short of an NCAA Tournament bid. 'I'm proud of what we did here,' McClain says".chicagotribune.com. RetrievedApril 23, 2020.
  3. ^"UIC fires basketball coach Steve McClain after 5 seasons".USA TODAY. RetrievedApril 23, 2020.
  4. ^"Tom Crean hires Steve McClain to fill out Georgia hoops staff".Dawgs247. RetrievedApril 23, 2020.
Links to related articles

# denotes interim head coach

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