Mike Dunlap

Michael Gregory Dunlap (born May 27, 1957) is an American basketball coach. He was most recently the head coach of his alma mater Loyola Marymount University.[1]

Mike Dunlap
Personal information
Born (1957-05-27) May 27, 1957
Fairbanks, Alaska
NationalityAmerican
Career information
College
Coaching career1980–present
Career history
As coach:
1980–1985Loyola Marymount (assistant)
1985–1986Iowa (assistant)
1986–1989USC (assistant)
1989–1994Cal Lutheran
1994–1996Adelaide 36ers
1997–2006Metro State
20062008Denver Nuggets (assistant)
2008–2009Arizona (assistant)
2009–2010Oregon (assistant)
2010–2012St. John's (assistant)
2012–2013Charlotte Bobcats
2014–2020Loyola Marymount

Dunlap is the former head coach of the NBA's Charlotte Bobcats.[2]

Career

Dunlap served three seasons in Australia (1994–1996) as head coach of the Adelaide 36ers in the National Basketball League. Dunlap signed to coach Adelaide for 5 years at approximately AU$200,000 per year, making him the NBL's first million dollar coach. Dunlap was successful in taking the team to the NBL Grand Final in 1994 against the North Melbourne Giants and the semi-finals in 1995 and 1996. Over his three season in Adelaide Dunlap compiled a 59–36 record before returning to the USA just weeks before the 1997 season following the sudden death of his father. Dunlap is credited as the coach who kick-started the NBL career of the 36ers all-time leading home grown player Brett Maher.[3]

He served as head coach at Metro State in Denver (1997–2006) and was assistant coach for the Denver Nuggets (2006–2008). He served as associate head coach at the University of Arizona (2008–2009) and the University of Oregon (2009–2010), and was interim head coach and associate head coach at St. John's University (2010–2012).[4]

In the 2011–12 NBA season the Charlotte Bobcats record was an NBA worst ever 7–59. Dunlap joined the team on June 20, 2012. In the early part of the 2012–13 season, the Bobcats had a 7–5 record, with Charlotte matching its win total from the previous season. However, at that point, the Bobcats went on an 18-game losing streak from which they never recovered. They ultimately finished 21–61, the second-worst record in the NBA. On April 23, 2013, the Bobcats announced that Dunlap would not be returning as coach.[5]

Dunlap joined Loyola Marymount as head coach in 2014.[1] On March 8, 2020, LMU and Dunlap agreed to part ways after 6 seasons. In his time at LMU, Dunlap posted one winning season, one .500 season and four losing seasons. He guided the team to one postseason appearance, the 2019 College Basketball Invitational.[6]

Coaching record

NBA

Legend
Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W–L % Win–loss %
Playoffs PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW–L % Playoff win–loss %
Team Year G W L W–L% Finish PG PW PL PW–L% Result
Charlotte 2012–13 822161.2564th in Southeast Missed Playoffs
Career 822161.256

NBL

Legend
Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W–L % Win–loss %
Playoffs PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW–L % Playoff win–loss %
Team Year G W L W–L% Finish PG PW PL PW–L% Result
Adelaide 36ers 1994 26188.6924th743.571 Grand Finalist
Adelaide 36ers 1995 26179.6544th523.400 Semi-finals
Adelaide 36ers 1996 261610.6156th523.400 Semi-finals
Career 785127.6541789.471

College

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Cal Lutheran Kingsmen (NCAA Division II independent) (1989–1991)
1989–90 Cal Lutheran 5–21
1990–91 Cal Lutheran 14–12
Cal Lutheran Kingsmen (Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference) (1991–1994)
1991–92 Cal Lutheran 16–1211–31stNCAA D-III Sectional
1992–93 Cal Lutheran 20–712–2T–1stNCAA D-III Regional
1993–94 Cal Lutheran 25–312–21stNCAA D-III Sectional
Cal Lutheran: 80–55 (.593)35–7 (.833)
Metro State Roadrunners (Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference) (1997–2006)
1997–98 Metro State 25–516–31st (East)NCAA D-II Tournament
1998–99 Metro State 28–615–4T–1st (East)NCAA D-II Runner–Up
1999–00 Metro State 33–417–21st (East)NCAA D-II Champion
2000–01 Metro State 23–714–53rd (East)NCAA D-II First Round
2001–02 Metro State 29–616–32nd (East)NCAA D-II Champion
2002–03 Metro State 28–516–32nd (East)NCAA D-II Second Round
2003–04 Metro State 32–319–01st (East)NCAA D-II Final Four
2004–05 Metro State 29–416–3T–1st (East)NCAA D-II Elite Eight
2005–06 Metro State 21–1013–63rd (East)NCAA D-II First Round
Metro State: 248–50 (.832)142–29 (.830)
Loyola Marymount Lions (West Coast Conference) (2014–2020)
2014–15 Loyola Marymount 8–234–14T–9th
2015–16 Loyola Marymount 14–176–12T–7th
2016–17 Loyola Marymount 15–158–106th
2017–18 Loyola Marymount 11–205–138th
2018–19 Loyola Marymount 22–128–8T–5thCBI Semifinal
2019–20 Loyola Marymount 11–214–128thPostseason not held
Loyola Marymount: 81–108 (.429)35–69 (.337)
Total:409–213 (.658)

      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

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