Jim Crews

American basketball player and coach
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican basketball player and coach
PlacesUnited States of America
isSports coach Basketball coach
Work fieldSports
Gender
Male
Birth14 February 1954
Age70 years
The details

Biography

James S. "Jim" Crews (born February 14, 1954) is the former head men's basketball coach for Saint Louis University. He was promoted to head coach after serving on an interim basis following the health concerns and eventual death of former Billikens head coach Rick Majerus. He was on Majerus' staff since 2011. After leading the Billikens to a school-record 28 wins, Crews was formally named SLU's 25th head coach on April 12, 2013. He was fired after the 2016 Atlantic 10 Tournament resulted in the elimination of the Billikens and marked the end of two 11–21 Billikens seasons.
Crews spent the first 13 years of his adult life at Indiana University under Bob Knight. He played on the 1976 NCAA Championship-winning team, the last undefeated champion in the men's division. After graduating, he served as an assistant on Knight's staff for eight years before moving to the University of Evansville in 1985. In 17 years, he led the Purple Aces to five NCAA Tournaments. His best team was the 1988-89 unit, which tallied the school's only NCAA Tournament win to date. He then coached at the United States Military Academy for seven years.

Head coaching record

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Evansville Purple Aces (Midwestern Collegiate Conference/Missouri Valley Conference) (1985–2002)
1985–86Evansville8–193–96th
1986–87Evansville16–128–4T-1st
1987–88Evansville21–86–42ndNIT 2nd Round
1988–89Evansville25–610–21stNCAA 2nd Round
1989–90Evansville17–158–65th
1990–91Evansville14–147–7T-5th
1991–92Evansville24–68–21stNCAA 1st Round
1992–93Evansville23–712–2T-1stNCAA 1st Round
1993–94Evansville21–116–4T-2ndNIT 1st Round
1994–95Evansville18–911–75th
1995–96Evansville13–149–9T-5th
1996–97Evansville17–1411–7T-4th
1997–98Evansville15–159–9T-6th
1998–99Evansville23–1013–51stNCAA 1st Round
1999–00Evansville18–129–96th
2000–01Evansville14–169–96th
2001–02Evansville7–214–14T-9th
Evansville:294–209 (.584)143–109 (.567)
Army Black Knights (Patriot League) (2002–2009)
2002–03Army5–220–148th
2003–04Army6–213–117th
2004–05Army3–241–138th
2005–06Army5–221–138th
2006–07Army15–164–10T-6th
2007–08Army14–166–8T-5th
2008–09Army11–196–84th
Army:59–140 (.296)21–77 (.214)
Saint Louis Billikens (Atlantic 10 Conference) (2012–present)
2012–13Saint Louis28–713–31stNCAA Third Round
2013–14Saint Louis27–713–31stNCAA Third Round
2014–15Saint Louis11–213–1514th
2015–16Saint Louis11–215–13T–12th
Saint Louis:77–56 (.579)34–34 (.500)
Total:431–404 (.516)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

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