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Jim Molinari
Position: Head Coach
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Molinari Videos

30 Years as a Division I Coach

Jim Molinari took over the helm of the Western Illinois program at the start of the 2008-09 season. In the 2009-10 season, Molinari led Western Illinois to The Summit League Tournament with sophomore Ceola Clark earning both Summit League Defensive Player of the Year and First Team All-Conference honors. It was the first time in program history that a Western player earned the yearly accolade and the first time in 10 years that the Leathernecks had a first team member.

In his first season (2008-09) he began a rebuilding process of the Fighting Leatherneck program and coached the Fighting Leathernecks to the best conference start since the 1997-98 season. Molinari coached Western's highest leading scorer since the 1996-97 season in senior David DuBois, also a Summit League all-conference selection.

Off the court, Molinari's team excelled in the classroom as it earned a 3.231 team GPA for the Fall 2008 semester, the best GPA of the men’s basketball team for at least 11 years and a higher GPA then that of the Macomb campus (2.880). The Leathernecks had 10 players on the roster with a 3.0 GPA or better and two players with a perfect 4.0 GPA. DuBois became one of only two league players to earn 2008-09 CoSida/ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District First Team honors. In the following season, senior David Nurse became the only Summit League player to earn the 2009-10 CoSIDA/ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District First Team award as a first-year graduate student.

In 2007-08, he served as an assistant coach at Ball State, following a three-year stint at Minnesota in which he was the interim head coach for most of the 2006-07 season. Throughout his career he has appeared in 19 postseason tournaments, including seven as a head coach.

In his first season as an assistant at Minnesota, his defensive emphasis helped the Gophers rank third in Big Ten scoring defense (62.7 points per game), just a half-point behind Michigan State and two points behind Illinois. They led the league in field goal percentage defense (.424) and three-point field goal percentage defense (.274) in conference play, and allowed 62.9 points per league game, the fewest since the 1981-82 season. In 2005, Street & Smith’s named Molinari the “best assistant in the Big Ten Conference.”

For 11 seasons, from 1991-2002, Molinari was the head coach at Bradley University, where he amassed a 174-152 (.534) record and guided the Braves to the postseason six times - five National Invitation Tournament appearances and the 1996 NCAA Tournament.

From 1989-91, he was the head coach at Northern Illinois, where he posted a record of 42-17 (.712). The Huskies won the 1991 Mid-Continent Conference title, going 25-6 and setting a school record for wins.

At DePaul from 1979-89, Molinari helped both Ray and Joey Meyer return the Blue Demons to national prominence. Over 10 seasons at DePaul, Molinari helped recruit college and professional stars such as Mark Aguirre, Dallas Comegys, Tyrone Corbin, Terry Cummings and Rod Strickland -- players who led DePaul to nine NCAA Tournaments and a runner-up finish in the NIT.

A Defensive Mindset That Turns Programs Around
In only his second season at Western Illinois, the Leatherneck defense opened 2010 in the NCAA statistical rankings as it held opponents to 58.2 points per game for a No. 22 ranking out of 334 teams (1/4/10). By the week of February 22, Western had reached its highest ranking of the season as it sat at No. 10 for the first time. Western closed out its season with the No. 10 ranking as it held opponents to only 59.6 points per game, leading the Summit League. Clark was named Summit League Defensive Player of the Year at the close of the season, the first time in program history a Western Illinois player earned the yearly honor.

A two-time conference coach of the year -- 1991 Mid-Continent Conference and 1996 Missouri Valley Conference -- Molinari’s coaching success was built on defense. While averaging better than 17 wins per season, Molinari’s first 12 teams finished among the nation’s top 24 defensive squads 10 times.
In his two years at NIU, his teams finished fifth and second, respectively, in team defense on the national level. In his first nine years at Bradley, the Braves placed among the nation’s leaders in all but two seasons for either points allowed per game or field goal percentage allowed.

At Northern, Molinari inherited a program that had not won as many as 17 games in a season since 1981, but made a quick turnaround with a 17-win season followed by a 25-win campaign. At Bradley, he took over a program that managed just a 32-54 mark in the three previous years. He needed just two years to right the ship before beginning a three-year stretch of 20-win seasons, which included two trips to the NIT and one to the NCAA Tournament. He left Bradley with more league wins than any other active coach in the Missouri Valley.

Academic Focus
Molinari has graduated nearly 90 percent of his student-athletes during his head coaching career, and while at Bradley, 24 out of 26 senior student-athletes received their degrees.

Molinari earned his bachelor’s degree in English from Illinois Wesleyan University in 1977 and earned a Juris Doctor from DePaul in 1980.

As a Player
His college playing career began at Kansas State, where he teamed with current UNLV head coach Lon Kruger for two seasons. After transferring to Illinois Wesleyan, where he teamed with former NBA center Jack Sikma, Molinari helped the Titans win consecutive league titles, before entering the coaching ranks in 1978 as a part-time assistant with DePaul.

Additional Coaching Opportunities
In addition to his collegiate coaching experience, Molinari is a veteran of national selection committees for international competition. He led the 1997 USA Basketball men’s team to a gold medal at the World University Games played in Trapani, Italy.

For two years in-between collegiate coaching positions, Molinari was an NBA scout for the Toronto Raptors (2002-03) and Miami Heat (2003-04).

2009-10 Western Illinois Head Coach 13-17  
2008-09 Western Illinois Head Coach 9-20  
2007-08 Ball State
Assistant Coach
6-24

2006-07
Minnesota
Head Coach (interim)
7-17

2005-06
Minnesota
Assistant Coach
16-15
NCAA Tournament
2004-05
Minnesota
Assistant Coach
21-11
NIT
2001-02
Bradley
Head Coach
9-20

2000-01
Bradley
Head Coach
19-12
NIT
1999-00
Bradley
Head Coach
14-16

1998-99
Bradley
Head Coach
17-12
NIT
1997-98
Bradley
Head Coach
15-14

1996-97
Bradley
Head Coach
17-13
NIT
1995-96 Bradley
Head Coach
22-8 NCAA Tournament
1994-95
Bradley
Head Coach
20-10
NIT
1993-94
Bradley
Head Coach
23-8 NIT
1992-93
Bradley
Head Coach
11-16

1991-92
Bradley
Head Coach
7-23

1990-91
Northern Illinois
Head Coach
25-6
NCAA Tournament
1989-90
Northern Illinois
Head Coach
17-11

1988-89
DePaul
Assistant Coach
26-12
NCAA Tournament
1987-88
DePaul
Assistant Coach
22-8
NCAA Tournament
1986-87
DePaul
Assistant Coach
28-3
NCAA Tournament
1985-86
DePaul
Assistant Coach
18-13
NCAA Tournament
1984-85
DePaul
Assistant Coach
19-10
NCAA Tournament
1983-84
DePaul
Assistant Coach
27-3
NCAA Tournament
1982-83
DePaul
Assistant Coach
21-12
NIT runners-up
1981-82
DePaul
Assistant Coach
26-2
NCAA Tournament
1980-81
DePaul
Assistant Coach
27-2
NCAA Tournament
1979-80
DePaul
Assistant Coach
26-2
NCAA Tournament

Total as head coach
(16 seasons)
245-222
5 NCAA Tournaments
2 NITs

 

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