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NCAA Division II

  
  
 

 

 

MIKE NEWELL
Head Basketball Coach




Unlike most of his brethren in the coaching ranks, Mike Newell is an optimist. While many of his contemporaries have taken the art of poor-mouthing their teams to new heights, Newell isn’t bashful about giving an honest assessment of his team’s chances. It’s not cocky . . . it’s confidence built on years of winning. He dreams big, but he’s been there before. From the NIT to a stunning upset in the NCAA’s, Mike Newell knows about winning. Now in his fifth season at UAM, the Indiana native has been slowly building toward a run at the Gulf South Conference title and his ultimate goal . . . an NCAA Division II national championship. If you know your history, then don’t bet against him.

“This is the year we’ve been building for since I came to UAM,” says Newell. “We have the talent, the depth, and the experience to be a contender in the Gulf South Conference, and if we can get to the NCAA’s and the ball bounces just right, who knows.”

When Newell was hired in 2001, he began to recruit the young athletes that power the Boll Weevil offense as upperclassmen today.

Newell’s recruiting efforts brought in Billy McDaniel, who became a first team All-American in 2003, the first in school history. He then added another freshman, his son, Nate Newell, who earned first team All-GSC honors last season.

Newell’s first three UAM squads won nine games each before last year’s break-through season produced an 18-10 mark and earned Newell GSC West Division Coach of the Year accolades.

“One of the important things in building a program is being able to recruit, but an even more important thing is being able to develop the recruits once you’ve got them in-house. There’s no other way to develop young players but through hard work, discipline, and mental toughness. Our talent level and our experience level are as high as it has ever been since I’ve been here, and probably higher than any team in recent memory at UAM. This is not by accident, it is a part of our five-year plan. Because of the type of kids we’ve recruited, we’ve been able to keep them at UAM. We haven’t lost many players since I have been here. The way our players have developed over the last couple of years, I am confident that the UAM program will change for the better this year. We’ve developed the intensity, the mental toughness, and the intelligence as a team that it takes to compete at this level, and win.”

Still, Newell is quick to say he is not satisfied with simply competing. “I wanted to go someplace where I thought we could win a national championship. I think we can do that at UAM.”

Newell knows something about winning. He won 113 games his first five seasons as a head coach, one more than the legendary John Wooden won in his first five years at Indiana State. He also guided UALR to a historic upset of Notre Dame in the NCAA Tournament.

Newell earned a reputation as a builder even as a player, prepping at North Vermillion High School and setting the school’s all-time scoring record - he also set the single-game scoring record at Purdue Arena, scoring 54 points in a single game. While prepping at North Vermillion High School, Newell earned Sunkist All-American honors along the way. In 1987, Newell had his jersey retired and was inducted into the North Vermillion High School Hall of Fame.

After graduation, Newell signed to play for Press Maravich at Louisiana State. A year later, he transferred to Sam Houston State in Huntsville, Tex., and in 1973, he captained the Bearkats to a 28-0 record and an NAIA National Championship. In Newell’s three years as a starter, the Bearkats were 76-13. Newell was inducted into the Bearcat Hall of Honor in 1990.

After earning both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in education from Sam Houston State, Newell coached in the high school and college ranks before being hired by Billy Tubbs to be an assistant at the University of Oklahoma.

While serving a brief stint as Interim Head Coach at Oklahoma, Newell guided the Sooners to a historic win over Alabama-Birmingham in the NCAA Tournament.

Newell made a name for himself as one of the top college coaches in the nation during his tenure at Oklahoma, helping guide a team that previously had only made one appearance in the NIT. In Newell’s last season as an assistant at OU, the Sooners posted a 29-5 record, and a #5 national ranking with a #2 seed in the West Region, along with a Big 8 Conference Championship.

In 1984, Newell became the head coach at the University of Arkansas-Little Rock, and immediately lit a fire under a struggling program.

The Trojans instantly became winners, posting a 17-13 record in his first season. Newell’s UALR teams qualified for five consecutive postseason bids, including three bids to the NCAA Tournament.

In Newell’s second season, the Trojans posted a 23-11 record, ending their season in the second round of the NCAA Midwest Regional with a double overtime loss to Jim Valvano’s North Carolina State Wolfpack. Two days earlier, Newell’s Trojans had made national headlines with a 90­-83 victory over 10th-ranked Notre Dame and Digger Phelps.

“People always remember that game and ask me about it,” says Newell. “At the time, it was probably the biggest upset in NCAA Tournament history. It gave us instant national respect and made it a lot easier to sell our program.”

His 1986-87 team won 26 games and reached the NIT Final Four at Madison Square Garden in New York. Newell won three Trans-America Athletic Conference Championships and was named TAAC Coach of the Year twice before leaving UALR for Lamar following the 1990 season.

In 1990, Newell moved on to Lamar, and instantly turned a seven-win team into a 16-game winner, resulting in the NCAA’s second-biggest attendance jump. Off the court, Newell was hindered by political struggles with a new administration that soured him on college athletics.

“When I left Lamar, I had some misgivings about college athletics,” says Newell.

Newell spent one season as head coach of the Shreveport Storm of the Continental Basketball Association, but the lure of a college campus was too great for Newell to resist.

Newell returned to the college ranks as head coach at Southern University Shreveport. Once again, Newell inherited a program that hadn’t ever had a winning season. That all changed in Newell’s first year, when he led the Port City Jags to a 14-11 record, the first winning record in school history.

Southern-Shreveport posted at least a .500 record in all four of Newell’s seasons there, with winning records in three of the four - including winning a conference co-championship on the strength of a 19-7 record in Newell’s last year.

However, Newell still missed the action and intensity of NCAA post-season play.

“What really killed me was March,” Newell says with a laugh. “When all the conference tournaments would start on ESPN, I’d get a knot in my stomach. I really missed the teaching aspect and I knew I had to get another college job. I didn’t care if it was Division I or Division II. I wanted to get to a place where I thought we could win a national championship. After I talked with (UAM Athletics Director) Alvy Early, this seemed like the perfect fit.”

Unlike most coaches, Newell also missed recruiting, which he relishes almost as much as the games themselves. “I’m probably one of the few coaches who loves to recruit,” he says. “I love finding a player, going after a player who’s being recruited by other schools. If you’re going to beat top teams on the court, you have to beat them in recruiting. There’s nothing lower than losing a player you worked like crazy to get. It’s about as bad as losing an NCAA tournament game.”

Newell isn’t shy about his goals for the Boll Weevils. He wants a packed house, a big-time atmosphere, support from the students, faculty, alumni, and fans throughout southeast Arkansas. And he wants to win. “I think a national championship is a realistic goal,” he says. “We play in one of the top three Division II conferences in the country. If we can win the conference tournament, then win three games in the regional, we can get to the Elite Eight. From there, with a litle luck and some breaks, we can win it all. If our intelligence and intensity match our experience and talent, this will be a special year. ”