Curt Miller – Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

American basketball coach

Curt Miller

Miller in 2019

Position Head coach
League WNBA
Born (1968-10-05) October 5, 1968 (age 54)[1]
Girard, Pennsylvania, U.S.
College Baldwin Wallace
1991–1994 Cleveland State (assistant)
1994–1998 Syracuse (assistant)
1998–2001 Colorado State (assistant)
2001–2012 Bowling Green
2012–2014 Indiana
2015 Los Angeles Sparks (assistant)
2016–2022 Connecticut Sun
2023–present Los Angeles Sparks
  • WNBA Basketball Executive of the Year (2017)
  • 2× WNBA Coach of the Year (2017, 2021)
  • 5× MAC regular season championships (2005, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2012)
  • 5× MAC tournament championships (2005, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2012)
miller Stats at WNBA.com

Curt Miller (born October 6, 1968)[2] is an American basketball coach, currently the head coach of the Los Angeles Sparks of the WNBA. He previously served as the head coach of the Connecticut Sun from 2016-2022 and Bowling Green State University from 2001–2012 and Indiana University from 2012–2014, and spent one season as an assistant to Brian Agler with the Los Angeles Sparks.

Assistant coaching career[edit]

Miller served as an assistant coach at Colorado State, helping the school to an 81-20 (.802) overall record during his three seasons there. He also served as an assistant at Cleveland State and Syracuse.

On March 31, 2015, the Los Angeles Sparks hired Miller as an assistant coach.[3]

Head coaching career[edit]

Bowling Green[edit]

During his tenure at Bowling Green he compiled a 258–92 record including 135–41 in the Mid-American Conference. He was named MAC Coach of the Year 6 times, and won the conference regular season title 8 straight times between 2005–2012. His best season came in 2006 when he led the Falcons to a 31–4 mark, including a sweet sixteen appearance in the NCAA tournament.

Indiana University[edit]

When Miller was negotiating a contract extension with Bowling Green in 2005, he included a “dream clause” in which Miller could list a few of his personal destination jobs.[4] The Indiana Hoosiers were on that list and, when an opening for head women’s basketball coach occurred at the school in 2012, he applied for and got the position. Miller signed a six-year deal worth $275,000 a year. Miller resigned on July 25, 2014 citing health and family reasons.[5]

Connecticut Sun[edit]

After one season as an assistant with the Los Angeles Sparks, Miller returned to the head coaching ranks. He was announced as the new head coach of the Connecticut Sun on December 17, 2015.[6] In his second season with the Sun in 2017 he was named WNBA coach of the year.[7] While working with the Sun, Miller was “the first openly gay, male coach in college or professional basketball”.[8] His 2019 team made the WNBA finals but lost to the Washington Mystics in the five games.[9] The Sun were knocked out in the Semifinals in 2020. His 2021 team finished the regular season in first place with a 26–6 record.[10] but were upset in the Semifinals by the Chicago Sky.[11] He was named WNBA coach of the year for the second time in 2021.[12]

Head Coaching Record[edit]

NCAA[edit]

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Bowling Green Falcons (Mid-American Conference) (2001–2012)
2001–02 Bowling Green 9–19 6–10 4th (East)
2002–03 Bowling Green 12–16 5–11 T-6th (West)
2003–04 Bowling Green 21–10 11–5 T-2nd (West)
2004–05 Bowling Green 23–8 11–5 1st (West) NCAA 1st Round
2005–06 Bowling Green 28–3 16–0 1st (East) NCAA 1st Round
2006–07 Bowling Green 31–4 16–1 1st (East) NCAA Sweet Sixteen
2007–08 Bowling Green 26–8 13–3 1st (East) WNIT Second Round
2008–09 Bowling Green 29–5 15–1 1st (East) WNIT Third Round
2009–10 Bowling Green 27–7 14–2 1st (East) NCAA 1st Round
2010–11 Bowling Green 28–5 13–3 1st (East) NCAA 1st Round
2011–12 Bowling Green 24–7 14–2 1st (East) WNIT First Round
Bowling Green: 258–92 (.737) 135–41 (.767)
Indiana Hoosiers (Big Ten Conference) (2012–2014)
2012–13 Indiana 11–19 2–14 12th
2013–14 Indiana 21–13 5–11 T-8th WNIT Quarterfinals
Indiana: 32–32 (.500) 7–25 (.219)
Total: 290–124 (.700)

      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

WNBA[edit]

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 %

References[edit]

External links[edit]