It was three years ago that Alex Gary, 甜瓜视频app鈥檚 director of athletics, scheduled a four-year, home-and-home series to play Gardner-Webb in men鈥檚 basketball. It seemed innocent enough at the time, until the Bulldogs won the first meeting. Then the second. And then the third. Gary couldn鈥檛 help but take notice. How was this small school in Boiling Springs repeatedly serving up L鈥檚 to the Catamounts? 鈥淚 reached out to their leadership there and I just wanted to understand how they were able to sort of punch above their weight, how they were able to exceed expectations relative to some of those in their league, with similar resources relative to their conference peers,鈥 Gary said.
So, when WCU lost head coach Justin Gray, who led the Catamounts to a 22-10 record last year, to Coastal Carolina following the season, Gary wasted no time identifying Gardner-Webb coach Tim Craft as a replacement. 鈥淧laying coach Craft鈥檚 teams over the past three years allowed me to become very familiar with the identity of a Tim Craft-coached basketball team,鈥 Gary said. 鈥淲hen you go 0-3 over the past three years, it kind of makes you pay attention to what鈥檚 happening on the other side.鈥 Craft, who was named WCU鈥檚 20th men鈥檚 basketball coach, comes to the Catamounts after an 11-year career at Gardner-Webb, where his team鈥檚 averaged 17 wins per season. His 2019-19 team won the Big South tournament championship, posting 23 wins including a pair against Atlantic Coast Conference teams Georgia Tech and Wake Forest.
Craft is the only Big South coach to post 10 seasons of 10 or more league wins in conference history. The Bulldogs never finished lower than sixth in the Big South during his tenure. With that success, Craft said it was time for a new challenge. 鈥淭his wasn鈥檛 something we were necessarily thinking about,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut when Justin left, Alex called and it was like, 鈥榃ow, this sounds great. It sounds like it鈥檚 a good fit for me and my family.鈥 It鈥檚 a conference that we want to coach in and it just seemed like the right time.鈥 Now he looks forward to not only bringing that success to Cullowhee, but to continuing building on the winning foundation that was laid by his predecessor Gray. 鈥淲hat a great time to be a part of Catamount basketball,鈥 Craft said. 鈥淭he opportunity for me to walk in here after what those guys did last year, 22 wins, two Power-5 road wins beating Vanderbilt and Notre Dame, finished fourth in the SoCon. What a great culture that has been left here by those coaches and those players. We are fired up to build on this foundation and we鈥檙e going to do that.鈥 And hopefully that includes finally beating Gardner-Webb.
With 18.9 million viewers watching the University of South Carolina鈥檚 women鈥檚 basketball team topple Iowa and phenom Caitlin Clark in last April鈥檚 national championship game, it proved just how popular the sport has become. Not only was it the most watched NCAA women鈥檚 basketball game ever, but it topped the men鈥檚 national championship game between defending champion Connecticut and Purdue, which drew in 14.82 million viewers. Wanting to join in on that wave of excitement, Alex Gary, 甜瓜视频app鈥檚 director of athletics, decided it was time for the Catamounts women鈥檚 team to head in a different direction. So, he made Jonathan Tsipis the program鈥檚 14th head coach. Tsipis takes over a WCU program that is coming off a 6-24 campaign, which includes a 1-13 Southern Conference record. In fact, WCU has not had a double-digit winning season since going 11-19 during the 2014-15 season. Since then, the Catamounts have had two winless SoCon records and has not won more than three conference games in a season. Needless to say, Tsipis has his work cut out for him in changing the culture.
That鈥檚 starts with bringing in talent. 鈥淚 think the first thing we all understand in women鈥檚 basketball, and if you don鈥檛, you鈥檙e probably not going to be in it very long, is that recruiting is your blood line,鈥 Tsipis said. 鈥淭he geographic setting of Cullowhee and the university, you鈥檙e able to get to some really great basketball hotbeds rather quickly. If you draw a three-hour radius around, you鈥檙e able to get to Atlanta, Knoxville, obviously Charlotte, and even past that.鈥 Tsipis comes to WCU from Marquette, where he spent the last two seasons as the adviser for scouting and analytics. Prior to that, he spent five seasons as the head coach at the University of Wisconsin where he led the Badgers to their best finish in nearly a decade with 15 wins in 2018-19. He also was the head coach at George Washington for four seasons, leading the Colonels to a 92-38 record. His final two seasons saw George Washington go 55-11 with two NCAA tournament appearances.
鈥淚 cannot be more thrilled for the person and the coach we have leading our women鈥檚 basketball program,鈥 Gary said. Tsipis sees changing the current culture as his biggest challenge. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not all of a sudden come Nov. 4 that鈥檚 when we see the winning and losing start,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 already started with conversations. I鈥檓 a big believer that losing doesn鈥檛 hurt if winning doesn鈥檛 matter. We have to change that. Culture is always evolving. You have to work on it. It鈥檚 going to have ebbs and flows.鈥 The move to Cullowhee is a homecoming of sorts for Tsipis. His family moved to Durham when he was a junior in high school. He is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.