Friday, March 6, 2009

UNI’S BEN JACOBSON NAMED MVC MEN’S BASKETBALL COACH OF THE YEAR

For the first time since 1997 and only the second time in school history, a University of Northern Iowa coach has earned the Rawlings Missouri Valley Conference Coach of the Year honor, as Ben Jacobson is this year's winner. Jacobson led the Panthers to a share of the Missouri Valley Conference regular-season title - the first in UNI's 18th season in the league.

Jacobson received 34 of a possible 40 first-place tallies and 112 total points to outdistance Creighton's Dana Altman in the voting. Evansville's Marty Simmons was third in the balloting, conducted by league coaches, media and sports information directors.

In his third year as head coach at UNI, Jacobson engineered a surprise regular-season championship for the Panthers, who were picked sixth in the league's preseason poll. Jacobson has guided the Panthers to a 20-10 overall record, 14-4 in the Missouri Valley Conference, and a share of their first-ever MVC regular-season title. UNI received the top seed in this week's State Farm Missouri Valley Conference Tournament.

While this is Jacobson's first head-coaching job, he had 12 years of prior assistant coaching experience, including as an assistant at UNI for former Panther coach Greg McDermott since 2001-02. In Jacobson's three seasons as head coach at UNI, the Panthers have won 18, 18, and 20 games. His 18 wins in his rookie campaign in 2006-07 marked the most for a first-year Panther coach since the team joined the Division I ranks for the 1980-81 season. UNI’s 14 Valley wins this season was the most conference victories in school history.

Jacobson has been named one of 10 finalists for the 2009 Hugh Durham National Coach of the Year Award, which is given annually to the nation's top mid-major coach, as voted on by a 20-member panel. The winner will be presented with the award at the 2009 Final Four in Detroit.

Jacobson joins Eldon Miller (1997) as the only UNI coaches to have won the league's top coaching honor. The Valley began recognizing a Coach of the Year in 1949.

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