Aaron Roussell

Aaron Roussell is an American college basketball coach, currently the women's head coach at the University of Richmond. Roussell is a 2001 graduate of the University of Iowa and he began his college coaching career as a graduate assistant at Minnesota State. After two seasons there, Roussell spent eight years as head women's basketball coach at the University of Chicago.[1] Roussell then spent seven seasons as head coach at Bucknell University before being named head coach at Richmond on April 2, 2019.[2][3][4]

Aaron Roussell
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamRichmond
ConferenceAtlantic 10
Record15–17
Biographical details
Alma materUniversity of Iowa
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2002–2004Minnesota State (grad. assistant)
2004–2012Chicago
2012–2019Bucknell
2019–presentRichmond
Head coaching record
Overall327–139 (.702)

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Chicago Maroons (University Athletic Association) (2004–2012)
2004–05 Chicago 16–99–54th
2005–06 Chicago 17–86–85th
2006–07 Chicago 18–77–75th
2007–08 Chicago 22–611–31stNCAA Third Round
2008–09 Chicago 17–88–64th
2009–10 Chicago 19–711–32ndNCAA First Round
2010–11 Chicago 25–414–01stNCAA Quarterfinals
2011–12 Chicago 27–114–01stNCAA Third Round
Chicago: 161–50 (.763)80–32 (.714)
Bucknell Bison (Patriot League) (2012–2019)
2012–13 Bucknell 15–165–96th
2013–14 Bucknell 16–1411–74thWBI First Round
2014–15 Bucknell 18–1210–8T–4th
2015–16 Bucknell 25–817–1T–1stWNIT Second Round
2016–17 Bucknell 27–616–21stNCAA First Round
2017–18 Bucknell 22–1015–32ndWNIT First Round
2018–19 Bucknell 28–616–2T–1stNCAA First Round
Bucknell: 151–72 (.677)90–32 (.738)
Richmond Spiders (Atlantic 10 Conference) (2019–present)
2019–20 Richmond 15–177–9T–9th
Richmond: 15–17 (.469)7–9 (.438)
Total:327–139 (.702)

      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

Sources:[5][6]

gollark: Oh, ubqvian metaspace information extraction?
gollark: It gets JITed. Did you not know?
gollark: Compilers did that, not people, probably.
gollark: I'm actually always correct so yes.
gollark: Premature optimisation is bad, so avoid spending ages for dubiously useful speed gains. But really inefficient code in some contexts is also bad, so optimise tight loops, frequently called stuff and real time stuff.

References

  1. Hersh, Philip (April 17, 2012). "Roussell leaves Chicago for Bucknell". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  2. "Aaron Roussell Named Head Women's Basketball Coach". University of Richmond Athletics. April 2, 2019. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  3. O'Connor, John (April 2, 2019). "Spiders name Aaron Roussell, from Bucknell, women's basketball coach". Richmond Times-Dispatch. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  4. "Roussell leaving Bucknell, to be new coach at Richmond". The Daily Item. April 3, 2019. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  5. "UChicago Women's Basketball Record Book" (PDF). University of Chicago Athletics. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  6. "2018–19 Bucknell Women's Basketball Media Guide" (PDF). Bucknell University Athletics. Retrieved July 30, 2019.


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