Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Geno Auriemma

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Title
  
Head coach

Name
  
Geno Auriemma

1978–1979
  
St. Joseph's (asst.)

Role
  
Basketball Coach


1981–1985
  
Virginia (asst.)

Height
  
1.85 m

1985–current
  
Connecticut

Spouse
  
Kathy Auriemma

Geno Auriemma iusatodaynetcommunitymanagerphotosgameon20

Sport(s)
  
Women's college basketball

Born
  
March 23, 1954 (age 70) Montella, Italy (
1954-03-23
)

1979–1981
  
Bishop Kenrick HS (asst.)

Team
  
Connecticut Huskies women's basketball

Education
  
West Chester University of Pennsylvania

Children
  
Jenna Auriemma, Michael Auriemma, Alyssa Auriemma

Similar People
  
Breanna Stewart, Kaleena Mosqueda‑Lewis, Maya Moore, Stefanie Dolson, Diana Taurasi

Change the rules geno auriemma entspresso


Luigi "Geno" Auriemma (born March 23, 1954) is an Italian-born American college basketball coach and the head coach of the University of Connecticut Huskies women's basketball team. He has led UConn to eleven NCAA Division I national championships (a feat matched by no one else in women's college basketball) and has won seven national Naismith College Coach of the Year awards. Auriemma has been the head coach of the United States women's national basketball team since 2009, during which time his teams won the 2010 and 2014 World Championships, and gold medals at the 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics.

Contents

Geno Auriemma Geno Talks About Freshmen Class NBC Connecticut

Defensive drills from 2014 ncaa championship coach geno auriemma


Early life

Geno Auriemma Geno Auriemma discusses Griner39s decision not to play for

Auriemma emigrated with his family from Montella in Southern Italy to Norristown, Pennsylvania when he was seven years old, and he spent the rest of his childhood there. After graduating from West Chester University of Pennsylvania in 1977, Auriemma was hired as an assistant coach at Saint Joseph's University, where he worked in 1978 and 1979. He then took a two-year absence from college basketball, serving as an assistant coach at his former high school, Bishop Kenrick, before assuming an assistant coaching position with the University of Virginia Cavaliers women's team in 1981. Auriemma became a naturalized United States citizen in 1994 at the age of 40, noting in his autobiography that he finally decided to naturalize when his University of Connecticut team was slated to tour Italy that summer and he was concerned about potential problems, as he had never done any required national service in his birth country.

Geno Auriemma Dirty Water Sports A Message To Geno Auriemma

For many years, Auriemma and his wife, Kathy, maintained a home in Avalon, New Jersey, to be near their parents in the Philadelphia area.

University of Connecticut career

Geno Auriemma UConn39s Women39s Basketball Coach Geno Auriemma Thinks

Prior to Auriemma's arrival at Storrs in 1985, the Huskies Women's Basketball team had posted only one winning season in its history. The decision to hire Auriemma as their new coach was part of the university's commitment to better fund women's sports. Auriemma's was the final interview scheduled by the search staff. Most of the other candidates were highly qualified coaches, and most were female. One of those included in the interview process was Chris Dailey, who would become Auriemma's assistant and is currently the associate head coach at UConn. Dailey was identified as the candidate most likely to receive an offer if Auriemma turned down the position.

Geno Auriemma Last Waltz for Big East Odds Favor UConn for NCAA Women39s

Connecticut quickly rose to prominence after Auriemma was hired in August 1985. After finishing 12–15 in Auriemma's first season (his only losing season), Connecticut has finished above .500 for 30 consecutive seasons, including six undefeated seasons (1994–95, 2001–02, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2013–14, and 2015–16) and three NCAA record streaks of 111, 90 and 70 consecutive wins. On December 21, 2010, Auriemma led UConn to its 89th consecutive victory, one more than the all-time NCAA men's wins record of 88 held by UCLA; the streak ended at 90 wins.

At the end of the 2014–15 season, Auriemma's record as a head coach was 917–134, for an 87.3 winning percentage. That winning percentage is the highest among Division I active coaches. His career in Storrs also includes 20 seasons with 30 or more wins. UConn has won eleven national championships under Auriemma (1995, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2016) and made the Final Four 18 times (1991, 1995, 1996, 2000–2004, 2008–2017). Auriemma has also guided UConn to 21 Conference regular season titles and 20 Conference Tournament titles.

With the win in 2016, Auriemma passed UCLA men's coach John Wooden for most college basketball championships, and the UConn Huskies became the first Division 1 women's basketball team to win four straight national championships.

The team has been especially successful on its home court in the Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on the UConn campus in Storrs, Connecticut, and in the larger XL Center in Hartford; they tied an NCAA women's basketball record with 69 consecutive home wins between 2000 and 2003. That record was broken in 2011. The last home loss was to Villanova in the game that ended their 70-game winning streak. Moreover, between Auriemma's arrival and the close of the 2005 season, UConn won 295 games versus just 31 losses. The team set Big East Conference records for both single-game and season-long attendance.

Auriemma is also known for cultivating individual players, and the 13 multiple-All-America players—Rebecca Lobo, Jennifer Rizzotti, Kara Wolters, Nykesha Sales, Svetlana Abrosimova, Sue Bird, Swin Cash, Diana Taurasi, Tina Charles, Maya Moore, Stefanie Dolson, Bria Hartley and Breanna Stewart—whom Auriemma has coached have combined to win eight Naismith College Player of the Year awards, seven Wade Trophies, and nine NCAA Basketball Tournament Most Outstanding Player awards. (The UConn athletics website also notes that, through 2006–07, every recruited freshman who has finished her eligibility at Storrs has graduated with a degree.)

Since achieving its first #1 ranking in the 1994–95 season, UConn under Auriemma is 186–10 when playing as the nation's #1 team. At the end of the 2009–10 season, he had a record of 127–52 against top 25 opponents and a 57–35 record against top 10 opponents. He won his 600th game on New Year's Eve 2006, accomplishing the feat in 716 games, tying him with Phillip Kahler for the fastest women's basketball coach to reach that milestone. Auriemma won his 700th game on November 27, 2009 in 822 total games, becoming the fastest head coach to that milestone in the history of college basketball at any level, men or women. He is now one of eight active women's college basketball coaches to have 700 or more wins. Auriemma became the sixth coach in women's basketball history to reach 800 career victories on March 6, 2012, also reaching 800 career wins faster than any coach in the history of college basketball men or women at any division level in just 928 career games. On February 3, 2015, Coach Auriemma notched his 900th victory in only 1,034 games, reaching this milestone also faster than any college coach in history. Auriemma was a member of the inaugural class (2006) of inductees to the University of Connecticut women's basketball Huskies of Honor recognition program. Auriemma's 2013–2018 salary is $10.9 million.

Rivalries

The rivalry between the Huskies and the University of Tennessee Lady Vols extended to Auriemma's relationship with Volunteers counterpart Pat Summitt, who retired in 2012 and died in 2016. The two, through print and broadcast media, were often at odds. At the end of the 2009–10 season, Auriemma had slightly surpassed Summitt among active Division I coaches for career winning percentage, with Auriemma at 85.8 and Summitt at 84.1. In 2007, Summitt, who believed Auriemma had used less-than-honorable tactics in his successful recruitment of Maya Moore, canceled the yearly game between the two programs.

Former UConn men's basketball coach Jim Calhoun has been called Auriemma's "unfriendly rival", and he once mocked the women’s team’s fan base as the "world’s largest nursing home." When asked about their relationship in 2001, Auriemma said, "Jim has a problem with anyone else's success, not just ours. Do we get along? No, but we don't have to."

USA Basketball

Auriemma was named head coach of the USA women's team that competed in the Junior World Championship in Brno, Czech Republic during July 2001. The team won its first five games, including a record-setting win against Mali. The 97–27 final score represented the largest margin of victory by a USA team in Junior World Championship history. The preliminary round results qualified the team for the medal rounds, where they faced the host team, the Czech Republic. With a home crowd cheering them on, the Czech team won 92–88 and went on to beat Russia 82–80 to win the gold medal. The USA team beat Australia 77–72 to win the bronze medal. Diana Taurasi was the leading scorer for the USA with 19.3 points per game, while Alana Beard was close behind with 18.0 points per game. Nicole Powell was the leading rebounder for the USA, with seven rebounds per game.

Auriemma was named head coach of the USA Women's National team in preparation for competition in the 2010 World Championships and 2012 Olympics. Because many team members were still playing in the WNBA until just prior to the World Championship, the team had only one day of practice with the entire team before leaving for Ostrava and Karlovy Vary, Czech Republic. Even with limited practice, the team managed to win its first games against Greece by 26 points. The team continued to dominate with victory margins exceeding 20 points in the first five games. Several players shared scoring honors, with Swin Cash, Angel McCoughtry, Maya Moore, Diana Taurasi, Lindsay Whalen, and Sylvia Fowles all ending as high scorer in the first few games. The sixth game was against undefeated Australia — the USA jumped out to a 24-point lead and won 83–75. Team USA won its next two games by over 30 points, then faced the host team, the Czech Republic, in the championship game. The USA team had only a five-point lead at halftime, which was cut to three points, but the Czechs never got closer. Team USA went on to win the championship and gold medal. At the 2012 Olympics, Auriemma's team went 8–0 and won the Gold Medal game over France 86–50. Their closest match of the Olympics – and the only game in which their margin of victory was less than 25 points – was an 86–73 win in the semi-finals over eventual Bronze Medal winner Australia.

Auriemma was again named head coach of the US Women's Basketball team for the 2014 FIBA World Championship for Women and the 2016 Summer Olympics. In the 2014 World Championship, his team went 6–0 and won the gold medal, outscoring their opponents 553–380 over the six games – an average margin of victory of almost 30 points per game.

Other activities

During the college basketball offseason, Auriemma serves as an analyst for games of the Women's National Basketball Association broadcast on the American cable television networks ESPN and ESPN2, in which he often critiques his former players.

Auriemma is close friends with Saint Joseph's University basketball head coach Phil Martelli and his son, Mike Auriemma, attended and played basketball at Saint Joseph's.

Auriemma served as an assistant coach to the gold medalist 2000 U.S. Olympic Team. On April 15, 2009 he was selected to lead USA Basketball Women's National Team in the 2010 FIBA World Championship in the Czech Republic and the 2012 Summer Olympic Games in London, England.

Auriemma is a member of the Board of Directors of the Kay Yow/WBCA Cancer Fund.

Parlaying his heritage and his love of Italian cuisine, Geno Auriemma has several ventures including an exclusive line of Italian wines, Italian sauces and several restaurants in Connecticut.

Awards and honors

1989

  • Big East Conference Coach of the Year
  • 1995

  • USBWA National Coach of the Year
  • Naismith College Coach of the Year
  • Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year
  • Big East Conference Coach of the Year (2)
  • 1997

  • WBCA National Coach of the Year
  • Naismith College Coach of the Year (2)
  • Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year (2)
  • Big East Conference Coach of the Year (3)
  • 2000

  • WBCA National Coach of the Year (2)
  • Naismith College Coach of the Year (3)
  • Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year (3)
  • Big East Conference Coach of the Year (4)
  • 2002

  • WBCA National Coach of the Year (3)
  • Naismith College Coach of the Year (4)
  • Big East Conference Coach of the Year (5)
  • 2003

  • USBWA National Coach of the Year (2)
  • Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year (4)
  • Big East Conference Coach of the Year (6)
  • 2006

  • Induction into the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts
  • Induction into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in Knoxville, Tennessee
  • 2007

  • Induction into the National Italian American Sports Hall of Fame
  • 2008

  • USBWA National Coach of the Year (3)
  • WBCA National Coach of the Year (4)
  • Naismith College Coach of the Year (5)
  • Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year (5)
  • Big East Conference Coach of the Year (7)
  • 2009

  • USBWA National Coach of the Year (4)
  • WBCA National Coach of the Year (5)
  • Naismith College Coach of the Year (6)
  • Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year (6)
  • Big East Conference Coach of the Year (8)
  • 2010

  • Big East Conference Coach of the Year (9)
  • 2011

  • Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year (7)
  • Big East Conference Coach of the Year (10)
  • 2012

  • John R. Wooden Legends of Coaching Award
  • 2014

  • American Athletic Conference Coach of the Year
  • Named one of ESPNW's Impact 25
  • 2015

  • American Athletic Conference Coach of the Year (2)
  • 2016

  • USBWA National Coach of the Year (5)
  • WBCA National Coach of the Year (6)
  • Naismith College Coach of the Year (7)
  • Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year (8)
  • American Athletic Conference Coach of the Year (3)
  • 2017

  • USBWA National Coach of the Year (6)
  • WBCA National Coach of the Year (7)
  • Naismith College Coach of the Year (8)
  • Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year (9)
  • American Athletic Conference Coach of the Year (4)
  • Records and achievements

  • Highest winning percentage among NCAA basketball coaches (minimum 10 seasons), any level, men's or women's (.881)
  • Most NCAA Division I Championships, men's or women's (11)
  • Most NCAA Division I Tournament wins, men's or women's (113)
  • Most NCAA Division I Final Fours, men's or women's (18)
  • Most NCAA Division I wins in a season, men's or women's (40)
  • Most 30-win seasons in NCAA/AIAW play, women's (22)
  • Most undefeated seasons, men's or women's (6: 1994–95, 2001–02, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2013–14, 2015–2016)
  • Most consecutive Elite Eights, men's or women's (12, 2006–2017)
  • Most consecutive Final Fours, men's or women's (10, 2008–2017)
  • Most consecutive Championships, women's (4, 2013–2016)
  • Most consecutive wins, men's or women's (111, 2014–17)
  • Most consecutive away wins, men's or women's (38, 2014–17)
  • Most consecutive home court wins, women's (99)
  • Most consecutive NCAA tournament wins, women's (28, 2013–2017)
  • Fastest women's coach to 700, 800 and 900 wins
  • Fastest coach to 800 and 900 wins, any level, men's or women's
  • With men's coaches Jim Calhoun (2004) and Kevin Ollie (2014), the only coaches at the same Division I school to win the men's and women's NCAA Tournaments in the same season
  • References

    Geno Auriemma Wikipedia