Indiana Fever coach Lin Dunn named to Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame

From the Indiana Fever and Purdue Athletics

Indiana Fever coach Lin Dunn, the wins leader at Purdue, has been named to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2014.

Dunn heads a class of six inductees who will be formally inducted into the WBHOF on June 14, 2014 in Knoxville, Tenn.

Lin Dunn
Lin Dunn

Dunn’s career spans 43 years since she assumed head coaching duties at Austin Peay State University in 1970. Dunn had politicked for a women’s basketball program during her undergraduate years at Tennessee-Martin, from where she graduated in 1969. She earned a master’s degree from UT-Knoxville a year later and by the following fall, she was coaching at Austin Peay.

Since that time, Dunn has been a trailblazer in the sport – winning games, earning championships and growing the sport from its infancy even before the national passing of Title IX legislation in 1972. Her induction into the WBHOF follows her championship season with the Fever in 2012, and a slew of related hall of fame inductions. She has earned induction into athletics halls of fame at her alma mater (2010) and three universities at which she has coached – Purdue (2012), Miami (2003) and Austin Peay (1982). She was an inductee into the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame and the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame, both in 2010.

“I’m thrilled and honored,” said Dunn, who also has twice been the runner-up for WNBA Coach of the Year accolades. -I am looking forward to sharing this moment with my current and former players, assistants, family and friends.”

“It’s overwhelming, it’s humbling, it’s a tremendous honor,” she added. “Some of my colleagues and peers are already in the basketball Hall of Fame and to be able to join them is a wonderful moment for me.”

Dunn, 66, is currently in her sixth year with the Fever and her ninth year as a WNBA head coach, counting three years as head coach and GM with an expansion Seattle franchise in its first seasons from 2000-02. She is the winningest coach in Fever history (111-76) and ranks seventh in all-time WNBA coaching wins (144).

Among women, Dunn’s sixth straight season as head coach in the league makes her the longest-tenured female coach in the WNBA. Her 144 regular season coaching wins are second among women to Anne Donovan and her 18 playoff victories are more than any female coach. Dunn, Donovan and Cheryl Reeve are the only female head coaches ever to win a WNBA title.

In her past six seasons as a WNBA head coach, Dunn boasts the WNBA’s longest active streak without a losing record, just one year shy of coaching streaks by Van Chancellor (1997-03) and Donovan (1991-97).

With Indiana, she has guided the Fever to three trips to the conference finals and a pair of appearances in the WNBA Finals, reaching the playoffs in each of five seasons at the helm.

Overall, her coaching resume includes 37 years as a head coach, nearly 1,100 games coached and currently 654 total college and pro victories through five different decades. She spent 25 seasons on the college sidelines before embarking on a pro career during the 1996-97 season with the now-defunct American Basketball League (ABL). She has spent the past 18 years as a scout, assistant coach or head coach in the pros.

Prior to her six-year stint with the Fever, she was perhaps best known as the architect of the Purdue women’s basketball program. From 1988 to 1996, she led the Boilermakers to three Big Ten titles, two NCAA Sweet 16s, the 1995 Elite Eight and the 1994 Final Four. She is the winningest women’s basketball coach in school history with 206 victories, ranks second with a .752 winning percentage and is the only Purdue coach to never lose to intrastate rival Indiana (going 18-0). She coached 27 All-Big Ten players and nine All-Americans, including Joy Holmes, MaChelle Joseph and Stacy Lovelace, who received first team national honors. Dunn was chosen as Big Ten Coach of the Year in 1989 and 1991. She served as chairperson of the Kodak All-American Committee and as President of the WBCA, was an assistant coach on the 1990 World Championships Goodwill Team and the 1992 USA Olympic Team and head coach of the 1995 Jones Cup Team.

She boasts a .635 winning percentage (447-257) at four different schools. She left three of those – Austin Peay, Miami and Purdue – as the winningest coach in program history. She also led Mississippi to a 25-15 mark in 1977-78 while being named the Mississippi Coach of the Year.

Within the quarter of a century that she coached at the college level, she was a longtime chair of the Kodak All-America Selection Committee (1982-89) and the president of the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association in 1984-85. She was an assistant coach with USA Basketball teams from 1990 to 1995, including a gold-medal USA team in the 1990 World Championships in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; and a bronze-medal USA team in the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, Spain.

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