Kim Mulkey

Kimberly Duane Mulkey (born May 17, 1962)[2] is the head women's basketball coach at Baylor University. She is the first person in NCAA women's basketball history to win a national championship as a player, assistant coach, and head coach.[3] She is also only the third NCAA women's basketball coach ever to win three national championships. Mulkey was inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000.

Kim Mulkey
Mulkey in a postgame interview in 2006
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamBaylor
ConferenceBig 12
Record600–100 (.857)
Annual salary$ 2.27 million[1]
Biographical details
Born (1962-05-17) May 17, 1962
Santa Ana, California
Playing career
1980–1984Louisiana Tech
Position(s)Point guard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1985–1996Louisiana Tech (assistant)
1996–2000Louisiana Tech (assoc. HC)
2000–presentBaylor
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
As player:
NCAA Division I Tournament (1982)
AIAW Division I Tournament (1981)
As assistant coach:
NCAA Division I Tournament (1988)
As head coach:
3× NCAA Division I Tournament (2005, 2012, 2019)
11× Big 12 regular season (2005, 2011–2020)
10× Big 12 Tournament (2005, 2009, 2011–2016, 2018, 2019)
Awards
Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted in 2020 (profile)
Women's Basketball Hall of Fame

Youth

Kim Mulkey was one of the first girls in the US to play organized baseball with boys. After playing basketball at Nesom Junior High School[4] in Tickfaw, Louisiana, she led her Hammond High School basketball team to four consecutive state championships. As high school valedictorian, she posted a perfect 4.0 GPA. She later achieved high academic honors as an inductee into the College Sports Information Directors of America Academic Hall of Fame for her classroom achievements at Louisiana Tech.

Louisiana Tech

The 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m) Mulkey was an All-American point guard at Louisiana Tech University, winning two national championships as a player—the AIAW title in 1981 and the inaugural NCAA title in 1982—and in 1984 was the inaugural winner of the women's version of the Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award, given to the nation's top college senior under 5'6"/1.68 m (the height limit was later raised to 5'8"/1.73 m).[5] She became an assistant at Tech in 1985 and was promoted to associate head coach in 1996. During her 15-year tenure as assistant and associate head coach under Leon Barmore, Louisiana Tech posted a 430–68 record and advanced to seven Final Fours. Mulkey and the Lady Techsters won the 1988 NCAA Championship.

USA Basketball

Mulkey was selected to be a member of the team representing the US at the 1983 Pan American Games held in Caracas, Venezuela. The team won all five games to earn the gold medal for the event. Mulkey averaged 12.4 points per game.[6]

Mulkey played for the USA National team in the 1983 World Championships, held in Sao Paulo, Brazil. The team won six games, but lost two against the Soviet Union. In an opening round game, the USA team had a nine-point lead at halftime, but the Soviets came back to take the lead, and a final shot by the USA failed to drop, leaving the USSR team with a one-point victory 85–84. The USA team won their next four games, setting up the gold medal game against USSR. This game was also close, and was tied at 82 points each with six seconds to go in the game. The Soviets Elena Chausova received the inbounds pass and hit the game winning shot in the final seconds, giving the USSR team the gold medal with a score of 84–82. The USA team earned the silver medal. Mulkey averaged 3.1 points per game.[7]

In 1984, the USA sent its National team to the 1984 William Jones Cup competition in Taipei, Taiwan, for pre-Olympic practice. The team easily beat each of the eight teams they played, winning by an average of just under 50 points per game. Mulkey averaged 6.8 points per game.[8]

She continued with the national team to represent the US at the 1984 Olympics. The team won all six games to claim the gold medal. Mulkey averaged 5.3 points per game.[9]

Baylor head coach

In 2000, Mulkey took over a Baylor program that had finished the 1999–2000 season 7–20 and last in the Big 12 Conference, and had never received an invite to the NCAA tournament. In her first season at Baylor, she led the Lady Bears program to its first NCAA tournament bid; the Lady Bears have gone to postseason play every year since Mulkey's arrival. They have won 20 games every year, and only once has the team lost more than 10 games in a season. The rise of the Baylor program under Mulkey was capped off in 2005 with a national title when the Bears defeated Michigan State in the championship game at Indianapolis. This made her the first woman to have won NCAA Division I basketball titles as a player and a head coach, and only the fourth person (after Joe B. Hall, Bob Knight and Dean Smith).

Since the inception of the NCAA women's tournament in 1982, Mulkey has been involved in that tournament as a player or coach every year except 1985 and 2003. She was enshrined in the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000 for her accomplishments as a player.[10]

Mulkey in 2007 signed a 10-year extension to remain Baylor's coach. Her autobiography is called Won't Back Down: Teams, Dreams and Family.

In 2012, Mulkey made NCAA history by leading the Lady Bears to a perfect 40–0 season, the most wins in college basketball history, men or women. The season culminated at the NCAA Championship game in Denver, where the Lady Bears defeated Notre Dame.

In 2019, in a repeat of the 2012 NCAA Championship game, the Baylor Lady Bears defeated the Notre Dame Fighting Irish by a score of 82–81 in Tampa. This made Mulkey the third coach to win three or more NCAA Division I women's basketball championships, joining Connecticut's Geno Auriemma (11) and Tennessee's Pat Summitt (8).[11]

Mulkey is well known for her "bold" sense of fashion. She once wore a snakeskin print to a game against Connecticut; her wardrobe choices have triggered pages of discussion on fan message boards.[12]

Personal life

In 1987, Mulkey married Randy Robertson, who she had met at Louisiana Tech and had been the starting quarterback for the Bulldogs for the 1974 and 1975 seasons. The couple had two children together: son Kramer, a professional baseball player and collegiate All-American at Louisiana State University, and daughter Makenzie, who played both basketball and softball for Baylor and is now an assistant coach on her mother's staff. During her marriage to Robertson, she was known as Kim Mulkey-Robertson. Mulkey and Robertson divorced in 2006.[13]

She spent her childhood in Tickfaw, Louisiana.

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Baylor Lady Bears (Big 12 Conference) (2000–present)
2000–01 Baylor 21–99–96thNCAA First Round
2001–02 Baylor 27–612–42ndNCAA Second Round
2002–03 Baylor 24–118–87thWNIT Runner-up
2003–04 Baylor 26–910–6T–4thNCAA Sweet Sixteen
2004–05 Baylor 33–314–21stNCAA Champions
2005–06 Baylor 26–712–42ndNCAA Sweet Sixteen
2006–07 Baylor 26–811–53rdNCAA Second Round
2007–08 Baylor 25–712–42ndNCAA Second Round
2008–09 Baylor 29–612–42ndNCAA Sweet Sixteen
2009–10 Baylor 27–109–76thNCAA Final Four
2010–11 Baylor 34–315–11stNCAA Elite Eight
2011–12 Baylor 40–018–01stNCAA Champions
2012–13 Baylor 34–218–01stNCAA Sweet Sixteen
2013–14 Baylor 32–516–2T-1stNCAA Elite Eight
2014–15 Baylor 33–416–21stNCAA Elite Eight
2015–16 Baylor 36–217–11stNCAA Elite Eight
2016–17 Baylor 33–417–11stNCAA Elite Eight
2017–18 Baylor 33–218–01stNCAA Sweet Sixteen
2018–19 Baylor 37–118–01stNCAA Champions
2019–20 Baylor 28–217–11stPostseason not held due to COVID-19
Baylor: 604–100 (.858)275–60 (.821)
Total:604–100 (.858)

      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

Source:[14][15]

Awards and honors

References

  1. Rexrode, Joe (February 1, 2019). "UT Lady Vols dilemma: Invest in Holly Warlick or move on". www.tennessean.com. Nashville Tennessean. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
  2. "Women's Basketball Coaches Career". NCAA. Retrieved 24 Sep 2015.
  3. "Lady Bears Take on N.C. State in NCAA Action".
  4. The Village of Tickfaw later named the street along the east side of the schoolground Kim Mulkey Drive in her honor.
  5. "Frances Pomeroy Naismith". Women's Basketball Coaches Association. Archived from the original on 2014-07-15. Retrieved 30 Jun 2014.
  6. "Ninth Pan American Games – 1983". USA Basketball. June 10, 2010. Archived from the original on 7 September 2015. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
  7. "Ninth World Championship For Women – 1983". USA Basketball. June 10, 2010. Archived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  8. "1984 WOMEN'S R. WILLIAM JONES CUP". USA Basketball. Archived from the original on 8 August 2014. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  9. "Games of the XXIIIrd Olympiad – 1984". USA Basketball. Archived from the original on 13 October 2013. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  10. "WBHOF Inductees". WBHOF. Retrieved 2009-08-01.
  11. "NCAA women's basketball championship: Baylor holds off Notre Dame, wins 3rd title". cnn.com. April 7, 2019.
  12. LONGMAN, JERÉ (March 31, 2012). "The Fire and the Glow". New York Times. Retrieved 20 Apr 2013.
  13. "Baylor's Kim Mulkey is fierce, loving and loyal, but don't get on her bad side".
  14. "Player Bio: Kim Mulkey :: Women's Basketball". Archived from the original on 2009-03-28. Retrieved 2007-03-19.
  15. "Big 12 Record Book" (PDF) (Press release). Big 12 Sports. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-02-16. Retrieved 2008-02-10.
  16. "Past Russell Athletic/WBCA National Coaches of the Year". Women's Basketball Coaches Association. Retrieved 30 Jun 2014.
  17. "Kim Mulkey Bio – Baylor Official Athletic Site". www.baylorbears.com. Retrieved 2016-04-20.
  18. "Kim Mulkey Bio – Baylor Official Athletic Site". www.baylorbears.com. Retrieved 2016-04-20.
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