MINNEAPOLIS/ST. PAUL –
The WNBA announced today that Minnesota Lynx head coach Cheryl Reeve is
the recipient of the 2016 WNBA Coach of the Year Award. Reeve received
17 votes from a national panel of 39 sportswriters and broadcasters.
This is Reeve’s second Coach of the Year honor, having received the
award in 2011, and the third time a Lynx head coach has been named WNBA
Coach of the Year (Suzie McConnell Serio 2004).
Under
Reeve’s seven-year tutelage, the Lynx have complied 155 wins over the
last six seasons, the most prolific six-year run in WNBA history, and
won three WNBA Championships (2011, 2013 and 2015) in a five-year span.
Finishing the 2016 season at 28-6, Minnesota registered its fifth 25-win
campaign in the last six years and became the first WNBA franchise to
win 27+ games in a season three separate times. Since taking over in
2010, Reeve’s .706 winning percentage (168-70) ranks first in league
history. She is one of three coaches to win more than 60% of their games
(Van Chancellor, .655; Michael Cooper, .616).
Minnesota
began its best regular season in the franchise’s 18-year history by
winning its first 13 contests, the longest season-opening winning streak
in league history. The Lynx finished the season with a team record for
total victories wins (28) and matched team bests in home and road wins
(15 and 13, respectively). Minnesota’s 13-4 mark away from Target Center
marked its league-record sixth consecutive winning road record and the
team’s 15-2 home record was the WNBA’s best home record this season.
Additionally, Minnesota went 15-1 against Western Conference opponents,
including winning all eight road games, becoming the first team in WNBA
history to go through a season unbeaten on the road vs. the Western
Conference.
Reeve’s
other WNBA Coach of the Year honor came in 2011, her second season
guiding the Lynx, when Minnesota finished with the league’s best record
(27-7). Minnesota’s 14-game improvement over the prior season (2010,
13-21) is tied for the second-largest turnaround in WNBA history.
Prior
to reaching the WNBA, the former Rhodes Scholar nominee and basketball
star at Philadelphia’s La Salle University spent 12 years at the
collegiate level, including head coaching roles at Indiana State and
George Washington. She then moved to the WNBA where stints as an
assistant under Anne Donovan in Charlotte (2001-02, 2004-05) and Dan
Hughes in Cleveland (2003) laid the foundation for an extremely
successful tenure as an assistant with the Detroit Shock.
It
was in Detroit, alongside head coach Bill Laimbeer and fellow assistant
Rick Mahorn, that Reeve helped guide the Shock to the WNBA Finals in
three consecutive seasons, winning championships in 2006 and 2008.
Groomed by Laimbeer, who in 2008 expanded her duties to include the
director of player personnel role, the Washington Township, N.J., native
was hired by Minnesota as Head Coach on Dec. 8, 2009.
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