The resignations of Ray Giacoletti (Utah) and Steve Merfeld (Evansville) have made me think about how the coaching candidates for the Bradley job back in 2002 have done in the past 5 years since Bradley hired Jim Les. So here is what I could find about those candidates. Please feel free to point out any inaccuracies.
58 men applied for the job in March of 2002 after Jim Molinari was relieved of his coaching duties and his contract was bought out. 10 were selected for an initial round of interviews at the Final 4 in Atlanta in 2002, by the 6 person search committe headed by Athletic Director Ken Kavanagh. Only 9 candidates interviewed, as Jimmy Collins did not show up for his scheduled interview. He later blamed it on confusion from the Bradley people, then said he got lost trying to find his way to the interview, then said he wasn't really interested in leaving UIC. He was eliminated from further consideration. Here is a followup on 8 of the candidates, plus 1 other coach (Rob Judson).
Note- I am unable to recall who the other 2 candidates were. If anyone remembers, please let me know.
Jim Les--
Jim Les' record
2002-03...12-18....400...8-10....444
2003-04...15-16....484...7-11....389
2004-05...13-15....464...6-12....333
2005-06...22-11....667...11- 7...611 NCAA
2006-07...21-12....636...10-8....556 NCAA or NIT?
Totals.....93-72.....584..42-48...467
Rob Judson--
Rob was not one of the 10 candidates. Though there was support for Rob Judson to be included, Rob had just taken over the head coaching job at Northern Illinois the year before the Bradley coaching search, and he was not interested in interviewing. Rob has had a tough time in his 6 seasons at Northern Illinois. Though Judson made a name for himself as a recruiter at Bradley under Jim Molinari and as an assistant at Illinois fro 1996-2001, he has not had much recruiting success at Northern Illinois in his 6 years. His overall record is 74-100, and he is just 7-22 this year. He has yet to make it to postseason play. And this season they are one of the worst teams in Division I with an RPI of 298. Here is a recent article about some of the struggles Rob has had. I haven't seen anything about his being in jeopardy of losing his job, but it may not be far off. And you won't find his name on anyone's list of candidates for Division I jobs anywhere.
Wayne McClain--
Wayne McClain was the other finalist for the coaching job, along with Jim Les, in 2002. He had a lot of strong support from a few Bradley boosters, and a lot of support from some in the community. Since 2002, Wayne has remained an assistant on the staff at Illinois. Initially hired by Bill Self, he stayed on as an assistant under Bruce Weber. He has not surfaced as a candidate for any head coaching jobs since 2002, and to my knowledge has not been contacted or interviewed for any other coaching positions, except he was briefly considered as a candidate to take over the head coaching job at Manual high school a couple years ago. He has not coached or won a Division I game in the 5 years since the BU coaching change.
James Jones--
James Jones was an up-and-coming coaching prospect in 2002. He had a successful 2001-2002 season as the head coach at Yale, and lead them to Yale's first Ivy League title since 1962-63. They also won 1 game in the NIT that year, the first post-season win in the 107 year history of Yale at that time. After the first round of interviews conducted in Atlanta in March of 2002, he was invited back to the Bradley campus for a second interview. He seemed to have a lot of support for the job among some Bradley supporters. However, after he was interviewed, he withdrew his name from consideration.
He decided to accept a contract extension and stay at Yale. He is still the head coach at Yale, but he has not had much success the past 5 seasons. Since that very good 2001-2002 season, he is 14-13, 12-15, 11-16, 15-14, and 14-13 this year. In the last 5 seasons Yale's RPI has been 148, 224, 190, 197, and 138 this year. They have not made the postseason again since 2002. Jones is 104-119 in his 8 seasons, but just 66-71 since 2002 with no postseason appearances.
Brian Gregory--
Brian Gregory was another candidate that after his interview in Atlanta, was invited back and was interviewed on the Bradley campus in 2002. But after the interview by the coaching search committee, he also withdrew from consideration. At the time, he was the top assistant coach on Tom Izzo's staff at Michigan State. His name was mentioned for several other possible coaching spots, in addition to Bradley that year, but he decided to stay on at Michigan State as an assistant. He later became the head coach at Dayton in 2003. He took over a pretty good team (ranked in the Top 25, 24 wins, and NCAA bid) from Oliver Purnell (who moved on to Clemson), and took his first team to the NCAA with a 24-9 record. But he has not had as much success the past 3 years. He was 18-11 his 2nd year with mostly the players he inherited from Purnell, and did not make the NCAA. He was 14-17 his 3rd season. And Dayton is currently 18-11 with an RPI of 74 in Gregory's 4th season. He is 74-48 overall in 4 seasons at Dayton with just 1 NCAA appearance in his 1st season. They are not likely to make the NCAA this season for the 3rd straight year, and there have been talks by fans on their message boards that he should not have been extended. Gregory signed a contract extension through 2012-2013.
Fran McCaffery--
Fran McCaffery was the head coach at the University of North Carolina-Greenboro and was another "hot" name for consideration of coaching vacancies in 2002. He was one of the original 10 candidates schedulked for interviews in Atlanta, but was not included in the group that was invited back to a second interview at Bradley.
He stayed at North Carolina-Greensboro through the 2004-2005 season and then was hired as the head coach at Siena where he remain. At UNC-G he lead them to a 19-12 record in 2001 and an NCAA appearance as the SoCon tournament winner in just his 2nd year there. In 2002 UNC-G went 20-11 and finished in a tie for the SoCon's North Division title before losing in the conference tournament. They went to the NIT that year. In 2002-2003 they finished a woeful 7-22 and an RPI of 287. In 2003-2004 he finished 11-17 with an RPI of 255. In 2004-2005 he finished 18-12 with an RPI of 140. His only 2 post-season appearances were the NCAA in 2001 and the NIT in 2002.
He was hired by Siena in 2005, and in his first season with Siena he went 15-13 and an RPI of 125, not bad for a team that had finished 6-24 with an RPI of 297 in 2005 (the season before he got there). So far this season, Siena is 20-11 and an RPI of 128. McCaffery's overall coaching record since 2002 is 71-75 with no postseason appearances.
Jimmy Collins--
Jimmy Collins is still the head coach at Illinois-Chicago, though he has missed the last half of the season because of health related issues. UIC's record since 2002--
2002-2003 21-5, RPI 74
2003-2004 24-8, RPI 87
2004-2005 15-14, RPI 155
2005-2006 16-14, RPI 133
2006-2007 14-18, RPI 160
He made it to the NCAA tournament in 2004.
Ray Giacoletti--
Ray Giacoletti stayed at Eastern Washington for a couple more years, then became the head coach at Utah in 2004.
His record since 2002--
2002-2003 at Eastern Washington- 18-12, RPI 113
2003-2004 at Eastern Washington- 17-13, RPI 127
2004-2005 at Utah- 29-6, RPI 24
2005-2006 at Utah- 14-15, RPI 162
2006-2007 at Utah- 11-18, RPI 134
He was 69-50 at EWU in 4 seasons, and is 54-39 in 3 seasons at Utah. He made the NCAA in 2004 with EWU (0-1 record), and in 2005 with Utah (with Andrew Bogut) he was MWC Coach of the Year and made the Sweet 16 in the NCAA. He has resigned efective when Utha's season ends.
Steve Merfeld--
Steve Merfeld was a success as head coach at Hampton with NCAA appearances in 2001 and 2002. He was one of the 10 initial candidates considered by Bradley, but was not invited back to Peoria for a 2nd interview back in 2002. But he did get the head coaching job at Evansville that year (2002). He has not had a winning season in 5 years at Evansville, and has not been to either the NIT or NCAA. Here is his record for the past 5 years at Evansville--
2002-2003 12-16
2003-2004 7-22
2004-2005 11-17
2005-2006 10-19
2006-2007 14-17
58 men applied for the job in March of 2002 after Jim Molinari was relieved of his coaching duties and his contract was bought out. 10 were selected for an initial round of interviews at the Final 4 in Atlanta in 2002, by the 6 person search committe headed by Athletic Director Ken Kavanagh. Only 9 candidates interviewed, as Jimmy Collins did not show up for his scheduled interview. He later blamed it on confusion from the Bradley people, then said he got lost trying to find his way to the interview, then said he wasn't really interested in leaving UIC. He was eliminated from further consideration. Here is a followup on 8 of the candidates, plus 1 other coach (Rob Judson).
Note- I am unable to recall who the other 2 candidates were. If anyone remembers, please let me know.
Jim Les--
Jim Les' record
2002-03...12-18....400...8-10....444
2003-04...15-16....484...7-11....389
2004-05...13-15....464...6-12....333
2005-06...22-11....667...11- 7...611 NCAA
2006-07...21-12....636...10-8....556 NCAA or NIT?
Totals.....93-72.....584..42-48...467
Rob Judson--
Rob was not one of the 10 candidates. Though there was support for Rob Judson to be included, Rob had just taken over the head coaching job at Northern Illinois the year before the Bradley coaching search, and he was not interested in interviewing. Rob has had a tough time in his 6 seasons at Northern Illinois. Though Judson made a name for himself as a recruiter at Bradley under Jim Molinari and as an assistant at Illinois fro 1996-2001, he has not had much recruiting success at Northern Illinois in his 6 years. His overall record is 74-100, and he is just 7-22 this year. He has yet to make it to postseason play. And this season they are one of the worst teams in Division I with an RPI of 298. Here is a recent article about some of the struggles Rob has had. I haven't seen anything about his being in jeopardy of losing his job, but it may not be far off. And you won't find his name on anyone's list of candidates for Division I jobs anywhere.
Wayne McClain--
Wayne McClain was the other finalist for the coaching job, along with Jim Les, in 2002. He had a lot of strong support from a few Bradley boosters, and a lot of support from some in the community. Since 2002, Wayne has remained an assistant on the staff at Illinois. Initially hired by Bill Self, he stayed on as an assistant under Bruce Weber. He has not surfaced as a candidate for any head coaching jobs since 2002, and to my knowledge has not been contacted or interviewed for any other coaching positions, except he was briefly considered as a candidate to take over the head coaching job at Manual high school a couple years ago. He has not coached or won a Division I game in the 5 years since the BU coaching change.
James Jones--
James Jones was an up-and-coming coaching prospect in 2002. He had a successful 2001-2002 season as the head coach at Yale, and lead them to Yale's first Ivy League title since 1962-63. They also won 1 game in the NIT that year, the first post-season win in the 107 year history of Yale at that time. After the first round of interviews conducted in Atlanta in March of 2002, he was invited back to the Bradley campus for a second interview. He seemed to have a lot of support for the job among some Bradley supporters. However, after he was interviewed, he withdrew his name from consideration.
He decided to accept a contract extension and stay at Yale. He is still the head coach at Yale, but he has not had much success the past 5 seasons. Since that very good 2001-2002 season, he is 14-13, 12-15, 11-16, 15-14, and 14-13 this year. In the last 5 seasons Yale's RPI has been 148, 224, 190, 197, and 138 this year. They have not made the postseason again since 2002. Jones is 104-119 in his 8 seasons, but just 66-71 since 2002 with no postseason appearances.
Brian Gregory--
Brian Gregory was another candidate that after his interview in Atlanta, was invited back and was interviewed on the Bradley campus in 2002. But after the interview by the coaching search committee, he also withdrew from consideration. At the time, he was the top assistant coach on Tom Izzo's staff at Michigan State. His name was mentioned for several other possible coaching spots, in addition to Bradley that year, but he decided to stay on at Michigan State as an assistant. He later became the head coach at Dayton in 2003. He took over a pretty good team (ranked in the Top 25, 24 wins, and NCAA bid) from Oliver Purnell (who moved on to Clemson), and took his first team to the NCAA with a 24-9 record. But he has not had as much success the past 3 years. He was 18-11 his 2nd year with mostly the players he inherited from Purnell, and did not make the NCAA. He was 14-17 his 3rd season. And Dayton is currently 18-11 with an RPI of 74 in Gregory's 4th season. He is 74-48 overall in 4 seasons at Dayton with just 1 NCAA appearance in his 1st season. They are not likely to make the NCAA this season for the 3rd straight year, and there have been talks by fans on their message boards that he should not have been extended. Gregory signed a contract extension through 2012-2013.
Fran McCaffery--
Fran McCaffery was the head coach at the University of North Carolina-Greenboro and was another "hot" name for consideration of coaching vacancies in 2002. He was one of the original 10 candidates schedulked for interviews in Atlanta, but was not included in the group that was invited back to a second interview at Bradley.
He stayed at North Carolina-Greensboro through the 2004-2005 season and then was hired as the head coach at Siena where he remain. At UNC-G he lead them to a 19-12 record in 2001 and an NCAA appearance as the SoCon tournament winner in just his 2nd year there. In 2002 UNC-G went 20-11 and finished in a tie for the SoCon's North Division title before losing in the conference tournament. They went to the NIT that year. In 2002-2003 they finished a woeful 7-22 and an RPI of 287. In 2003-2004 he finished 11-17 with an RPI of 255. In 2004-2005 he finished 18-12 with an RPI of 140. His only 2 post-season appearances were the NCAA in 2001 and the NIT in 2002.
He was hired by Siena in 2005, and in his first season with Siena he went 15-13 and an RPI of 125, not bad for a team that had finished 6-24 with an RPI of 297 in 2005 (the season before he got there). So far this season, Siena is 20-11 and an RPI of 128. McCaffery's overall coaching record since 2002 is 71-75 with no postseason appearances.
Jimmy Collins--
Jimmy Collins is still the head coach at Illinois-Chicago, though he has missed the last half of the season because of health related issues. UIC's record since 2002--
2002-2003 21-5, RPI 74
2003-2004 24-8, RPI 87
2004-2005 15-14, RPI 155
2005-2006 16-14, RPI 133
2006-2007 14-18, RPI 160
He made it to the NCAA tournament in 2004.
Ray Giacoletti--
Ray Giacoletti stayed at Eastern Washington for a couple more years, then became the head coach at Utah in 2004.
His record since 2002--
2002-2003 at Eastern Washington- 18-12, RPI 113
2003-2004 at Eastern Washington- 17-13, RPI 127
2004-2005 at Utah- 29-6, RPI 24
2005-2006 at Utah- 14-15, RPI 162
2006-2007 at Utah- 11-18, RPI 134
He was 69-50 at EWU in 4 seasons, and is 54-39 in 3 seasons at Utah. He made the NCAA in 2004 with EWU (0-1 record), and in 2005 with Utah (with Andrew Bogut) he was MWC Coach of the Year and made the Sweet 16 in the NCAA. He has resigned efective when Utha's season ends.
Steve Merfeld--
Steve Merfeld was a success as head coach at Hampton with NCAA appearances in 2001 and 2002. He was one of the 10 initial candidates considered by Bradley, but was not invited back to Peoria for a 2nd interview back in 2002. But he did get the head coaching job at Evansville that year (2002). He has not had a winning season in 5 years at Evansville, and has not been to either the NIT or NCAA. Here is his record for the past 5 years at Evansville--
2002-2003 12-16
2003-2004 7-22
2004-2005 11-17
2005-2006 10-19
2006-2007 14-17
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