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Billy Taylor named new assistant basketball coach

Apr 8, 2003
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IOWA CITY, Iowa -- University of Iowa Head Basketball Coach Fran McCaffery has named Billy Taylor as an assistant coach on his basketball staff, replacing the position previously occupied by Andrew Francis.

Taylor joins the Hawkeye staff as an assistant coach after 18 years of collegiate coaching experience, including head coaching stints at Ball State, Lehigh, and Belmont Abbey. McCaffery coached Taylor as an assistant coach at Notre Dame (1992-95) and has been on the same staff as McCaffery on three different occasions.

Most recently, Taylor was Iowa's director of basketball operations for three seasons (2014-16), coordinating travel and carrying out the day-to-day activities of the basketball program. Iowa competed in the NCAA Tournament and had a first-team All-Big Ten honoree (Devyn Marble, Aaron White, Jarrod Uthoff) all three seasons of Taylor's tenure at Iowa.

"We are excited that Billy Taylor is rejoining the Hawkeye basketball family," said McCaffery. "Billy is the perfect fit for our team. He knows our program well, and has a wealth of coaching and recruiting experience. Billy is one of the most genuine and respected coaches in our profession. He will have an immediate impact with his passion for the game, and commitment to mentoring our student-athletes on and off the court."

"I am humbled and honored to rejoin Coach McCaffery's staff at the University of Iowa," said Taylor. "My relationship with Coach McCaffery spans 30 years and continues to evolve with each step. I look forward to serving and mentoring the student-athletes in our program. I'm eager to tell prospective student-athletes about the amazing opportunities at the University of Iowa."

Taylor was the top assistant for three seasons at UNC-Greensboro under McCaffery from 1999-02. The Spartans won the Southern Conference Championship and advanced to the NCAA Tournament with a 19-11 record in 2000-01, before posting a 20-10 mark and an NIT appearance in 2001-02.

Taylor served as an assistant coach at Notre Dame during the 1998-99 campaign alongside McCaffery and under head coach John MacLeod. He coordinated opponent scouting reports, game preparations, preseason and postseason skill development sessions.

Taylor returns to Iowa City after serving as head coach at Division II Belmont Abbey the last three seasons (2017-19). He guided the Crusaders to a 23-8 record last season, a 13-win improvement from his first year on the Crusaders sidelines. This past season, Taylor mentored DeQuan Abrom to the Conference Carolinas Player of the Year Award. Abrom, a junior, led the league in scoring, averaging 24.2 points per game and became just the second player in school history to top 700 points in a season. Taylor guided three players to all-conference recognition over the past three years.

Taylor was head coach for six seasons (2007-13) at Ball State. During his tenure, the Cardinals finished either first or second in the Mid-American Conference (MAC) West Division three times and advanced to the MAC Tournament semifinals twice. Taylor coached nine all-conference selections and also mentored a MAC All-Freshman Team member five straight seasons.

Prior to Ball State, Taylor spent five seasons as head coach at Lehigh (2002-07), where he was a two-time Patriot League Coach of the Year honoree. In his first season, Taylor was named Patriot League Coach of the Year after guiding the Mountain Hawks to the second-largest turnaround in the nation, improving on the previous year's record by 11 wins.

In 2003-04, Taylor led Lehigh to its first Patriot League regular season and tournament championships, as well as a trip to the NCAA tournament. For his efforts, Taylor earned the league's Coach of the Year honor for the second time in as many seasons, becoming the first coach since Gonzaga's Mark Few to win conference coach of the year honors in each of his first two seasons as a head coach.

In 2005-06, Lehigh posted the third-most wins in school history with its 19-12 overall mark and a school-record 11 Patriot League wins.

Taylor, who was recruited to Notre Dame by Digger Phelps, was a four-year letterwinner for the Irish. He started 79-of-112 games during his career and was the team captain as a senior. He scored 577 points and grabbed 300 rebounds, before graduating with a degree in accounting and computer applications in 1995. He also earned his CPA in 1998.

Taylor joins one of the most experienced collegiate basketball staffs in the country. Kirk Speraw, Sherman Dillard, Al Seibert, McCaffery, and Taylor have over 140 years of combined collegiate coaching experience.

Taylor and his wife, Avlon, have two daughters, Gavielle and Tamia, and a son, Savion.
 
Bad hire. No actually search for the best candidate to make the team better. All he did was hire his buddy. Could have gone out and got someone who is an ace recruiter at D1 level and could have gotten someone who is known for coaching defense. Didn't really expect anything different out of him though.
Rinse and repeat. Fran needs fresh ideas that can only be achieved by going outside of the "system."
 
This seems like a good hire. This guy has been successful, even impressive, at every stop. He has coached in Pennsylvania, Indiana, and North Carolina, all pretty competitive recruiting areas, and he has had success with the players he brought in. And he knows the staff and HC.
 
Bad hire. No actually search for the best candidate to make the team better. All he did was hire his buddy. Could have gone out and got someone who is an ace recruiter at D1 level and could have gotten someone who is known for coaching defense. Didn't really expect anything different out of him though.
Which “ace recruiters at the D1 level” do you think are looking to come be an assistant coach at Iowa?
 
So, maybe he brings his star guard (DeQuan Abrom) with him as a grad transfer? Abrom averaged 24.7 points per game last year.

Do players typically follow a coach to a new program if he was hired as an assistant, instead of the HC?
 
Solid resume...out of West Auroral if I recall...great program in Chicago burbs.
 
So, maybe he brings his star guard (DeQuan Abrom) with him as a grad transfer? Abrom averaged 24.7 points per game last year.
I wouldn't be against it. How does that work though? can a D-II player transfer and have immediate eligibility?
 
I wouldn't be against it. How does that work though? can a D-II player transfer and have immediate eligibility?

I’ll try and post the link to the article this came from....

“According to the NCAA, only 11 of the 768 players who transferred this year moved from Division II to Division I; 189 went from D1 to D2. A player going from D2 to D1 must sit out one season before becoming eligible unless he's a graduate transfer; a D1 transfer is immediately eligible in D2.

One of the biggest D2-to-D1 success stories is Derrick White. He transferred from Colorado-Colorado Springs to Colorado, where he was the Buffaloes' leading scorer last season and was a first-round draft pick by the San Antonio Spurs.”
 
Bad hire. No actually search for the best candidate to make the team better. All he did was hire his buddy. Could have gone out and got someone who is an ace recruiter at D1 level and could have gotten someone who is known for coaching defense. Didn't really expect anything different out of him though.
Would really like to be positive here, but this does seem to be more of the same old/same old.....Why are all of our assistants older guys who are former head coaches, instead of hungry younger guys who want to prove their worth and move up? Is Fran afraid of being replaced? Generally I like Fran, but you cant just keep doing the same thing and expect to get better results, and this just seems to be status quo for Iowa the last decade.....:confused:
 
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Would really like to be positive here, but this does seem to be more of the same old/same old.....Why are all of our assistants older guys who are former head coaches, instead of hungry younger guys who want to prove their worth and move up? Is Fran afraid of being replaced? Generally I like Fran, but you cant just keep doing the same thing and expect to get better results, and this just seems to be status quo for Iowa the last decade.....:confused:
There are two sides to that coin. Young guys may be hungry but they would be largely unproven. Old guys might not have as much fire, but Taylor brings several years of head coaching experience. He has coached across the country, recruited across the country, and he has experience coaching a team to the NCAA tournament.

Potential vs. Experience. I dont think you should rip on Fran because he chose the latter.
 
In a vacuum this is a good hire. How many teams can hire the amount of successful coaching experience he has to be the 3rd or 4th most experienced person on a 4 person coaching staff?

But, there's going to be a lot of negative sentiment for the hire because of the situation we're in. It comes across as another case of Fran not breaking out of his comfort zone and not trying to stretch the envelope of his staff/team. Of course Fran is going to hire one of his buddies, who has already spent time at Iowa, for an open position rather than going out and finding someone with different perspectives.

But as someone else said, time will tell about how good of a hire this is. We'll see if he pays dividends on the recruiting trail which is where assistants matter most from a visibility standpoint.
 
There are two sides to that coin. Young guys may be hungry but they would be largely unproven. Old guys might not have as much fire, but Taylor brings several years of head coaching experience. He has coached across the country, recruited across the country, and he has experience coaching a team to the NCAA tournament.

Potential vs. Experience. I dont think you should rip on Fran because he chose the latter.
This is not just about the current hire. It would be nice to see some variation instead of hiring basically the same guy everytime. Fran is THE head coach. Do his assistants really want to shine and move up, or are they just collecting a paycheck somewhere where they pretty much know they have job security? Would it not be a breath of fresh air to have at least one hungry young tiger on the staff, who doesn't have all the same ideas as the head coach? Even stale old Kirk has overhauled his staff with a nice mix of experience and young blood. Just sayin......
 
This is not just about the current hire. It would be nice to see some variation instead of hiring basically the same guy everytime. Fran is THE head coach. Do his assistants really want to shine and move up, or are they just collecting a paycheck somewhere where they pretty much know they have job security? Would it not be a breath of fresh air to have at least one hungry young tiger on the staff, who doesn't have all the same ideas as the head coach? Even stale old Kirk has overhauled his staff with a nice mix of experience and young blood. Just sayin......
Billy Taylor is only 45. He's not some old hermit.

Old, young, I don't care. I just want an assistant who can evaluate talent and recruit. Taylor has spent about a decade coaching on the east coast. I hope the idea is that he has made connections in a recruiting hotbed and can use those connections to benefit us.
 
Because they're older or have coached with Fran before means they have no passion for the game or the game has passed them by?
I never said the game has passed him by. I said that Fran never seems to go outside his own tight circle, and look for any new or fresh ideas. Not so?
 
From an earlier thread for those that Have expressed concern about this hire and why he may hire someone he’s familiar with... I expect Billy Taylor best fits Fran’s qualifiers....
“McCaffery: “I look for somebody who’s good in every area. You’ve got to be able to coach as it relates to breaking teams down. Scouting. Relationships with players. Relationships in recruiting. To be able to speak to alumni groups. You’ve got to be able to do it all. The reason for that is, I’m not able to be in this office every day. Whatever comes through that door, any one of my guys has to be able to handle it.”
 
I never said the game has passed him by. I said that Fran never seems to go outside his own tight circle, and look for any new or fresh ideas. Not so?
What kind of "new ideas" are you looking for? Over promising? Payments under the table? Hiring their father as an assistant? "Taking Care" of the AAU coaches? Exactly what new ideas are you implying?
 
What kind of "new ideas" are you looking for? Over promising? Payments under the table? Hiring their father as an assistant? "Taking Care" of the AAU coaches? Exactly what new ideas are you implying?
Have I ever posted anything on here that said I thought we should start cheating? You know what, never mind. You guys are right. The best way to run any organization is just keep hiring people you have worked with before so you can stay inside your comfort zone. There couldn't possibly be anyone outside Fran's inner circle that might be able to bring some teaching, coaching or recruiting skills to this team, that Fran hasn't worked with before. :rolleyes:
 
If my memory is right, I think the other assistants had losing records as head coach. Might be wrong and too lazy to research. But if correct, then at least we got a coach that won (and won handily last year).
 
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