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For
the past two decades, Bo Ryan has been
doing one thing better than anyone else in
the college basketball coaching ranks:
winning games. His .765 winning percentage
(495-152) over his 22-year career is by
far the best among active Division I
coaches with at least 20 years under their
belt. His 495 career victories place him
17th among active Division I head coaches
and his 112 wins at UW are the fourth-most
in school history.
In his five seasons at Wisconsin, Ryan has
led the Badgers to heights not reached in
Madison in many years. Each season further
establishes UW as a major player on the
national scene and Ryan as one of the top
coaches in the country.
The accomplishments during Ryan's first
five seasons are varied and impressive.
The Badgers won a school-record 25 games
in back-to-back seasons (2003-04 and
2004-05). They have five NCAA tournament
appearances, advancing to two Sweet 16s
and the Elite Eight in 2005. In 2002,
Ryan's first season, Wisconsin earned a
share of the Big Ten title for the first
time since 1947. The next year, UW won the
title outright, securing back-to-back
championships for the first time since
1923 and 1924. Not to be outdone, Ryan led
the Badgers to their first Big Ten
tournament title in 2004.
Prior to Ryan's arrival in Madison,
Wisconsin had never won more than 22 games
in a season. Ryan's teams have averaged
22.4 wins in his five seasons.
Wisconsin's success in Big Ten play under
Ryan is unparalleled in school history. He
is the first coach in conference history
to lead a team to at least 11 Big Ten wins
in each of his first four seasons. Prior
to his arrival in 2001, UW had won at
least 11 conference games just seven
times, and only once since 1941. Ryan's
.688 (55-25) winning percentage in
conference games is the third-best of any
Big Ten coach in history with more than 50
games coached.
Ryan has also made his mark in the
postseason. He is the only coach in school
history to have led UW to five NCAA
tournament appearances. Ryan's seven NCAA
tournament wins are a school record and he
is the first coach in UW history to lead a
team to two Sweet 16 appearances.
In Ryan''s five seasons, the Kohl Center
has become one of the toughest places to
play in America. The Badgers have compiled
a 72-5 home record under Ryan, including a
38-2 mark in Big Ten games. Over the last
five seasons, that is the fifth-best home
record in the country. From Dec. 7, 2002
to Jan. 24, 2005 Wisconsin did not lose a
home game, setting a school record with 38
consecutive wins, a streak that was the
longest in the country.
Individual success has followed team
success as a number of Ryan's players have
earned honors. UW and Illinois are the
only two teams to have had a first-team
All-Big Ten selection in each of the last
five seasons (Kirk Penney - 2002-03, Devin
Harris - 2004, Mike Wilkinson - 2005 and
Alando Tucker - 2006). Harris, the fifth
pick in the 2004 NBA Draft, was also named
the 2004 Big Ten Player of the Year and
was a consensus second-team All-American.
He was a finalist for every major national
player of the year award and finished
second for the Bob Cousy Award.
Last year, Ryan guided the Badgers to a
fifth consecutive NCAA tournament
appearance and a share of fourth place in
the Big Ten, the No. 1 RPI conference in
the country. UW won at least 19 games for
the fifth straight season and finished 9-7
in the Big Ten. Wisconsin also won the
season-opening Paradise Jam.
In 2004-05, Ryan was named one of 20
finalists for the Naismith Coach of the
Year Award. Despite returning just one
starter from the previous year's team, he
led the Badgers to an appearance in the
2005 NCAA Tournament Elite Eight and a
school record-tying 25 wins. UW finished
third in the Big Ten with an 11-5 mark and
advanced to the Big Ten tournament title
game for the second consecutive season.
Wisconsin finished the season ranked 10th
in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll, its
highest final ranking in history.
In 2003-04, Ryan led Wisconsin to a 25-7
record, setting a school record for wins
in a season and posting the school's
highest winning percentage since the 1941
team won the NCAA title with a 20-3 mark.
The Badgers' 12-4 mark in the Big Ten was
good enough to earn the second seed in the
conference tournament. UW went on to win
the Big Ten tournament for the first time
in school history, defeating No. 1 seed
Illinois, 70-53, in the final. For the
second time in school history, UW was
ranked in the Associated Press poll every
week during the season. Those
accomplishments came in spite of UW losing
its second-leading scorer, Alando Tucker,
for all but four games and having just
four players see action in all 32 games.
The year before, Ryan and the Badgers set
a school record with 24 wins and earned an
outright Big Ten title and a trip to the
NCAA tournament Sweet 16. The outright
conference championship was UW's first
since 1947 and the 12 league wins tied a
school record set in 1912 and tied in
1914. Ryan earned his second Big Ten Coach
of the Year award, becoming the first
coach in league history to be so honored
in each of his first two seasons.
In his first season, 2001-02, Ryan led an
undermanned UW team to an improbable share
of its first Big Ten championship in 55
years. Ryan had to juggle a lineup
consisting of only eight scholarship
players, including five players that had
seen very limited or no action at all on
the collegiate level. Though it took a
period of adjustment, by mid-December the
team had started to gel and would go on to
win 15 of its final 20 regular-season
games and earn a share of the Big Ten
title. One of those victories, a 64-56 win
over Iowa, was Ryan's 400th as a
collegiate coach.
Ryan has experience as a Division I head
and assistant coach, as well as a Division
III head coach and is well-respected
throughout the college basketball world.
At the 2004 Final Four, he was honored
with the NABC Guardians of the Game Award
for Service. The goal of the Gaurdians of
the Game program is to focus attention on
the positive aspects of basketball and the
role coaches play in the lives of
student-athletes, in addition to the
contributions coaches make to their
communities. Ryan is also one of four head
coaches on the NCAA Division I Men's
Basketball Issues Committee.
Ryan came to Wisconsin from UW-Milwaukee,
where he spent two seasons coaching the
Panthers to their first back-to-back
winning seasons in eight years. UWM, 8-19
overall the year before Ryan arrived, was
15-14 and 15-13, respectively, in Ryan's
two years at the controls. The program
also experienced a 161-percent home
attendance increase in his first season,
including the three largest crowds in the
history of the school's home facility.
It was during his 15-year tenure at
UW-Platteville (1984-99), however, that
Ryan firmly established himself as one of
the country's top coaches. He guided the
Division III school to a phenomenal 353-76
(.822) overall record and, in his final 12
seasons, the Pioneers:
* Won four national championships (1991,
1995, 1998 and 1999)
* Compiled a 314-37 (.895) record * Won
eight WIAC titles
* Were the winningest NCAA men's
basketball team of the 1990s (all
divisions) with a 266-26 (.908) record
* Compiled a 30-5 NCAA Division III
tournament mark
* Never won fewer than 23 games
* Compiled a 157-7 (.957) record on their
home floor
* Set the all-time single-season Division
III scoring defense mark (47.5 ppg) in
1996-97
Ryan was named the National Association of
Basketball Coaches Division III Coach of
the Year four times. In addition he was
tabbed the Wisconsin Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference's Coach of the Year on
six occasions.
Ryan took over at UW-Platteville following
eight seasons (1976-84) as an assistant
coach to Bill Cofield and Steve Yoder at
Wisconsin.
Held in high esteem by colleagues, Ryan
has won two gold medals as an assistant
coach, first with Virginia head coach Pete
Gillen and the gold medal-winning North
squad at the 1993 U.S. Olympic Festival,
and also with former Atlanta Hawks coach
Lon Kruger and the United States gold
medal winner at the 1995 World University
Games.
Ryan was born on Dec. 20, 1947, just
outside of Philadelphia in Chester, Pa. At
Chester High School, he was a football
teammate of current Minnesota Vikings
defensive coordinator Ted Cottrell. He
attended Wilkes (Pa.) University, where he
starred as a high-scoring guard and earned
a bachelor's degree in business
administration in 1969. Ryan was inducted
into the Wilkes Athletic Hall of Fame on
June 1, 2003.
Upon completion of his collegiate career,
Ryan did graduate work at Villanova before
accepting an assistant coaching position
at the College of Racine (Wis.). Ryan
accepted his first head coaching job at
Philadelphia's Sun Valley High School,
where he was named the Delaware County
Coach of the Year after directing his team
to a second-place finish in the
Philadelphia Suburban League. His 1976
club was the first Sun Valley High team to
qualify for the state tournament.
Ryan is the author of three books on
coaching basketball: Passing and Catching:
A Lost Art; How to Run the Swing Offense;
and Applying and Attacking Pressure. He
also has produced five basketball
instructional videos.
Ryan and his wife, Kelly, are the parents
of five children: Megan, Will, Matt,
Brenna and Mairin.
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