Carol Ross

Carol Ross
Personal information
Born (1959-06-11) June 11, 1959
Oakland, Mississippi
Nationality American
Career information
College Ole MIss (1977–1981)
Coaching career 1982–2014
Career history
As coach:
1982–1983 Belhaven (assistant)
1983–1990 Auburn (assistant)
1990–2002 Florida
2003–2007 Ole Miss
20092011 Atlanta Dream (assistant)
20122014 Los Angeles Sparks
Career highlights and awards

Carol Ross (born June 11, 1959) is an American college and professional basketball coach. Ross has served as the head women's basketball coach for the University of Florida and the University of Mississippi, and also as the head coach of the Los Angeles Sparks of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA).

College playing career

Ross accepted an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Mississippi, where she was a four-year starter at guard for coach Van Chancellor's Ole Miss Lady Rebels basketball team from 1978 to 1981. She developed a reputation as a "pesky" and "tenacious" player who still holds the Ole Miss season record for steals (135), and ranks ninth on the Southeastern Conference (SEC) career steals list. She is one of only two Ole Miss players to record more than 1,000 points, 500 assists and 250 steals in a career. She served as team captain during her senior 198081 seasons, and was a key contributor to the overall 9350 record compiled by the Lady Rebels during her four seasons. Ross graduated from Ole Miss with a bachelor's degree in education 1982, and was inducted into the University of Mississippi Athletic Hall of Fame in 2001.[1]

College coaching career

Ross began her college coaching career in 198283 as a volunteer assistant for the Belhaven Blazers women's basketball team at Belhaven College in Jackson, Mississippi. The following year she accepted a graduate assistant position with the Auburn Tigers women's basketball team of Auburn University in Auburn, Alabama. She stayed at Auburn for seven seasons, gradually being promoted to associate head coach and chief recruiter.

Presented with an offer to lead another SEC program in 1990, Ross became the head coach of the Florida Gators women's basketball team of the University of Florida. Before Ross, the Gators were a perennial cellar dweller; with Ross, the Gators became the SEC's fourth team of ten. Arguably the Gators' best season under Ross was 199697, when the Gators posted a 249 record, advanced to the NCAA Tournament Elite Eight, and earned their first-ever top-10 poll ranking, and DeLisha Milton was recognized as the best women's player in college basketball when she won the Wade Trophy. Her 200001 squad produced her best SEC finish 113 and second place while compiling an overall record of 246.[2]

During her twelve seasons as the Gators' head coach, she coached multiple future WNBA players, including Vanessa Hayden, Merlakia Jones, DeLisha Milton-Jones, Murriel Page, Bridget Pettis, Tiffany Travis and Sophia Witherspoon, as well as future Gators head coach Amanda Butler. The Gators finished among the top-25 in seven of her final nine seasons. At the time of her resignation in 2002, her Gators had compiled an overall win-loss record of 247121 (.6712), averaging more than twenty wins per year, earning nine NCAA Tournament invitations.[3] Ross remains the winningest coach in the history of the Florida Gators women's basketball program.[2]

She returned to her alma mater, the University of Mississippi, to become the head coach of the Ole Miss Rebels women's basketball team in 2003.[1] During her four seasons at Ole Miss, Ross coached the Lady Rebels to an overall 7750 record (.6063), and led the Rebels to two NCAA Tournaments and a pair of Women's National Invitation Tournament appearances.[1] In her first season, 200304, she led Ole Miss back to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 199596 and was recognized as the SEC Coach of the Year.[1] In her fourth and final season, 200607, Ole Miss won twenty regular season games for the first time in more than a decade, advanced to the NCAA Tournament Elite Eight, and produced first-round WNBA Draft pick Armintie Price.[4] Ross resigned as the Ole Miss head coach following the 200607 season.[4]

USA Basketball

Ross served as an assistant coach of the USA Women's Under-19 team representing the United States at the 2005 FIBA U19 World Championship in Tunis, Tunisia. Team USA won all eight of their games, including the championship game against Serbia & Montenegro. Team USA was dominant, winning every game by more than 20 points.[5]

WNBA coaching career

Ross joined the Atlanta Dream as an assistant coach in 2009. The Dream enjoyed a 14-game turnaround from its inaugural WNBA season in 2008, and tied for second place in the WNBA Eastern Conference. The Dream posted 2113 records in 2010 and 2011, and tying for first place in the Eastern Conference in 2011 on the way to a second consecutive appearance in the WNBA Finals.[6] Following the 2011 season, the Los Angeles Sparks hired Ross to be their new head coach.[7]

In 2012, her first season as a WNBA head coach, Ross pushed the Sparks to a 2410 record and a second-place finish in the WNBA Western Conference. In the 2012 WNBA playoffs, Ross's Sparks swept the San Antonio Silver Stars in two games in the Western Conference semifinals, before losing to the Minnesota Lynx in two games in the conference finals. After the 2012 season, Ross was honored as the WNBA Coach of the Year Award. In her follow-up season in 2013, the Sparks posted an identical record of 2410 and again finished second in the Western Conference. The Sparks lost to the Phoenix Mercury, two games to one, in the Western Conference semifinals of the 2013 WNBA playoffs.

Despite having compiled an overall winning record of 2410 in each of her first two seasons as head coach, Ross was fired by the Sparks management in the midst of the 2014 season when the team had posted a 1012 record (37 at home), with twelve games remaining. Sparks general manager and executive vice president Penny Toler was named as the team's interim head coach.[8] In 2012 and 2013, the Sparks had the third-best and second-best regular season records, respectively, in the twelve-team WNBA.[9][10]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 OleMissSports.com, Women's Basketball, Carol Ross. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  2. 1 2 Florida Women's Basketball 201314 Media Guide, University Athletic Association, Gainesville, Florida, pp. 10607 (2013). Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  3. Mike DiRocco, "Ross came, went on her terms," Florida Times-Union (April 5, 2002). Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  4. 1 2 Associated Press, "Assistant Ladner to succeed Ross at Ole Miss," ESPN (April 26, 2007). Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  5. "Paris-Led USA Squad Honored," SoonerSports.com (December 6, 2005). Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  6. Ellen J. Horrow, "Los Angeles Sparks hire Dream assistant Carol Ross as coach," USA Today (January 5, 2012). Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  7. Melissa Rohlin, "Sparks hire Carol Ross as head coach," Los Angeles Times (January 5, 2012). Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  8. Mechelle Voepel, "Sparks fire head coach Carol Ross," ESPN (July 20, 2014). Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  9. ESPN.com, WNBA, WNBA Regular Season Standings - 2012. Retrieved July 22, 2014
  10. ESPN.com, WNBA, WNBA Regular Season Standings - 2013. Retrieved July 22, 2014
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