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The
Illinois basketball program has enjoyed
unprecedented success both in the Big Ten
and nationally under Head Coach Bruce
Weber during his three-year tenure.
Despite losing three starters and 63
percent of its scoring from the 2004-05
NCAA runner-up squad, Weber directed the
2005-06 Illini to a third consecutive
25-win season, a runner-up finish in the
Big Ten, the second round of the NCAA
Tournament, and a ranking among that
nation's top 17 teams throughout the
entire season. The Illini spent the
majority of 2005-06 ranked in the Top 10
and recorded 26 wins on the year to tie
the fourth-winningest season in school
history.
Weber has won 89 games during his first
three years at Illinois, which are the
most wins ever by a Big Ten coach in his
first three seasons, and are the
second-most wins ever by a Big Ten coach
over any period of three-straight seasons.
He owns the best winning percentage in the
101-year history of Big Ten basketball,
having won 84.8 percent of his games while
at Illinois (89-16). Weber also ranks as
the second-winningest coach in the nation
over the last five seasons, totaling 141
victories.
Weber has won 73.3 percent of his games
during his eight-year tenure as a head
coach (192-70), which is the eighth best
winning percentage in the nation among
active Div. I coaches. Weber's 192
victories rank as the third-most wins by a
head coach in NCAA Div. I history through
eight seasons.
Weber has earned a solid reputation in the
college ranks and with NBA personnel as a
coach who stresses player development and
fosters an unselfish brand of basketball
where the most important facet is team
chemistry. Weber strives for an up-tempo
motion offense coupled with hard-nosed
man-to-man defense, traits that translate
well to the NBA game.
Weber has had four players selected in the
NBA Draft over the past two years, as
Deron Williams (No. 3, Utah Jazz) and
Luther Head (No. 24, Houston Rockets) were
taken in the first round of the 2005 Draft
and James Augustine (No. 41, Orlando
Magic) and Dee Brown (No. 46, Utah Jazz)
were chosen in the second round of the
2006 Draft. Utah's selection of Williams
at No. 3 overall in the 2005 lottery made
him the highest drafted player in Illinois
history.
Weber's second year at Illinois, the
2004-05 season, will be remembered as the
greatest in Fighting Illini history, in a
remarkable year where Illinois celebrated
its centennial season of basketball. The
Illini reeled off 29 straight wins to
start the year, tying the 12th-best start
in NCAA Div. I history and the third-best
start in Big Ten history. Illinois also
secured its second-straight outright Big
Ten championship with a 15-1 league
record, as Weber became the first coach in
Big Ten history to win consecutive
outright titles in his first two seasons.
Illinois then added a Big Ten Tournament
championship in addition to its regular
season title.
Illinois won 37 games on the year to tie
the NCAA record for victories in a season.
The UI made its first Final Four
appearance in 16 years and advanced to the
NCAA Championship game for the first time
in school history, finishing as the
national runner-up. The Illini were ranked
No. 1 in the nation for 15 straight weeks,
including a first-ever No. 1 ranking in
the final Associated Press poll.
With all that Illinois accomplished during
the season, it is no surprise that Weber
swept the 2005 National Coach of the Year
awards, claiming the following: the
Naismith Award, the most prestigious
coaching award in college basketball; the
Henry Iba Award, presented by the U.S.
Basketball Writers Association; and, the
Adolph F. Rupp Cup. Weber was also named
National Coach of the Year by the NABC,
Associated Press, The Sporting News,
Basketball Times, CBS/Chevrolet, Victor
Awards and Nike Championship Basketball
Clinic.
It took just one season for Weber to etch
his name in the Big Ten and Illinois
record books after leading the Fighting
Illini to its first outright Big Ten title
in 52 years during the 2003-04 season. In
leading his young team that featured just
one senior on the roster, Weber became
just the third coach in the history of the
Big Ten to win an outright title in his
first season. Illinois had to win 10
straight to end the regular season to
claim the championship, including
six-straight wins on the road.
Illinois' 26 wins in 2003-04 tied the
fourth-winningest season in school
history. Weber also led the Illini to the
Sweet Sixteen with NCAA Tournament
victories over Murray State and
Cincinnati.
Weber took charge as the 16th Fighting
Illini men's basketball coach on April 30,
2003, after spending the previous five
seasons as head coach at Southern Illinois
University. He led the Salukis to the top
of the Missouri Valley Conference with
championships in 2002 and 2003 before
continuing the trend at Illinois where the
Illini have won outright Big Ten titles in
two of his first three seasons.
Energetic and personable, Weber has
appeared on numerous national radio and
television programs. Fame and success have
not changed him, as he remains generous
and humble. On road trips, no job is
beneath him as he often helps team
managers load the bus or passes out drinks
and sandwiches to his players and staff.
Weber's warm personality has made him a
popular figure in the state of Illinois,
as he is a frequent guest at civic clubs,
booster club meetings, golf outings and
many other speaking engagements.
In his five seasons at SIU, Weber took the
Saluki program to the top of the Missouri
Valley Conference, winning league titles
in 2002 and 2003. He posted records of
28-8 and 24-7 in his last two seasons,
leading the Salukis to back-to-back NCAA
Tournament appearances, including a run to
the Sweet Sixteen in 2002 with wins over
Texas Tech and Georgia at the United
Center in Chicago. His .689 (62-28)
winning percentage in MVC play ranked 12th
in the long history of the league. Weber
earned Missouri Valley Conference
Coach-of-the-Year honors following the
2003 season.
The trademark of Bruce Weber-led teams has
been fundamentally sound defense, holding
opponents to 40 percent shooting from the
field in 2002 and 2003, 42 percent in
2004, 41 percent in 2005, and 40 percent
in 2006. Illinois led the Big Ten and
ranked 11th in the nation in scoring
defense in 2006, giving up an average of
only 58.7 points. On the offensive end,
the Salukis averaged 75.5 points in 2002
and 74.5 points in 2003, while Illinois
led the Big Ten in scoring in 2004,
averaging 72.8 points, and ranked second
in 2005, averaging 77 points.
At the age of 50, Weber has 27 years of
coaching experience at the collegiate
level with one season at Western Kentucky
under Keady before moving with the
long-time Boilermaker coach to West
Lafayette the following year. He was named
the Southern Illinois head coach prior to
the 1998-99 season. In his one season at
Western Kentucky, the Hilltoppers won the
Ohio Valley Conference and advanced to the
NCAA Tournament. In Weber's 18 years at
Purdue, the Boilermakers won six Big Ten
titles, played in 14 NCAA Tournaments and
had three NIT appearances. His association
with Keady also allowed Weber to gain
experience on the international level. He
was an assistant coach for the USA Team at
the World University Games in 1989 and
head court coach for the Pan American team
trials in 1991. Weber assisted Gene Keady
in preparation for the Jones Cup, World
University Games and Pan American Games.
Born Oct. 19, 1956, the Milwaukee-native
began his career as a volunteer assistant
coach at Madison High School in Milwaukee
and a varsity assistant at Marquette
University High School.
Weber earned a bachelor's degree in
education from Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 1978
and a master's degree in education
administration and physical education from
Western Kentucky in 1981.
Bruce and his wife, Megan, have three
daughters, Hannah, Christy and Emily.
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