VCU's Cunningham Resigns as Head Women's Basketball Coach
RICHMOND,
Va. (April 30, 2012) - Virginia Commonwealth University Head Women's Basketball
Coach Beth Cunningham
has resigned her post to become an assistant at her alma mater and 2011-12
national runner-up Notre Dame. She will officially hold the title of
"associate coach" with the Irish.
Cunningham,
the Rams' all-time winningest coach with 167 career victories, steps down after
11 seasons at VCU, the final nine of which were spent as the program's head
coach.
A national
search for Cunningham's replacement begins immediately.
Cunningham
has guided VCU to a school record five-straight postseason appearances,
including the program's first-ever trip to the NCAA Tournament with an at-large
selection in 2009, as well as a pair of third round WNIT showings. Under
her guidance, the Rams have averaged better than 22 wins per year since 2007
with three-straight 20-win campaigns from 2007-10. She also led VCU to
back-to-back 26-win seasons (both school records) including an undefeated home
ledger in 2008-09.
Under
Cunningham's tutelage, eight players have gone on to play professionally,
including a WNBA Draft selection in three of the previous five seasons.
She has also coached three All-Americans, most recently senior forward Courtney
Hurt, who earned her second consecutive Associated Press
Honorable Mention All-America citation in late March. Hurt finished her
four-year career as the program's all-time leader in scoring (2,092),
rebounding (1,243), double-doubles (58), games played (131), field goals (770),
free throws (503) and minutes played (3,694). Her career scoring,
rebounding and double-double totals are also the most by any VCU men's or
women's player in school history.
It took
just over five seasons for Cunningham to top the school's wins chart as she
picked up her record-setting 95th victory against Delaware on Jan. 19,
2009. She concludes her nine-year tenure with an overall mark of 167-115,
the third-most victories among active Colonial Athletic Association coaches.
Since
joining VCU as an assistant coach in 2001-02, Cunningham coached two CAA
Players of the Year, two CAA Defensive Players of the Year, one CAA Rookie of
the Year, three All-Americans, 22 All-CAA performers, 17 CAA All-Academic honorees,
six CAA All-Defensive Team members and five CAA All-Rookie selections.
The
Bloomington, Ind. native, who enjoyed a stellar four-year career at Notre Dame
from 1993-97 under current Head Coach Muffet McGraw, was instrumental in the
Irish's rise to their current status as one of the nation's elite teams. The
all-time leading scorer in Notre Dame's women's basketball history, she
compiled an astounding 2,322 career points and earned All-America honors twice
during her career.
A
four-year starter for the Irish and a member of three NCAA Tournament squads,
Cunningham was named an AP
and Kodak Honorable Mention All-American in 1995-96 after averaging more than
20 points per game during her junior season. The following year she led
Notre Dame to a 31-win campaign and the program's first-ever NCAA Final Four
appearance, highlighted by a 36-point performance in the Irish's "Sweet
16" victory over Alabama that still stands as an NCAA East Regional
single-game record. She was rewarded following her senior season with a
second consecutive appearance on the Kodak and AP All-America honorable mention teams.
Last
month, Notre Dame became just the sixth women's program ever to make
back-to-back NCAA national championship game appearances.