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2003-2004 Profiles
 
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Head Coach Craig Carse

Coaching Record Following the 2003-04 Season:
MSU Billings (9 years): 166-81
Overall (13 years): 249-123

 

Craig Carse, whether he is in Appalachia, the Bayou or the Rocky Mountains, wins basketball games. The 2004-2005 season will mark his tenth with the Yellowjackets and 14th overall as a head coach.  Carse is one of the NCAA's winningest active coaches.  Carse has guided the Yellowjackets to the Pacific West Conference Championship and  berths into the NCAA Tournament, Carse was named as the 1996, 1998, and 2002 PacWest Conference Coach of the Year.  

After a seven year run as an assistant at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, in 1994 Carse went to work as Executive Vice-President of the United States Basketball Academy.  During that year, Carse developed an innovative style and system of play that features the strengths of individual players.  Incorporated in this was an up tempo attack, pressure defense, and three pointers.  While his teams may not look as athletic or opposing, the "system" has guided them to become one of the nation's top offensive programs.

In 1995, Carse re-entered the world of collegiate coaching and took over a Yellowjacket program that had gone 5-21 the year before and had only one winning season in the previous four.  On the court, he implemented the "system" that he had worked feverishly on the year before.  Off the court, discipline was the new rule.  His players had to accept a rigorous direction and maintain excellence and high academic standards if they wanted to play basketball.  Carse's eight MSU Billings seasons have seen over a 3.30 team grade point average.

This new philosophy changed the Yellowjackets' fortunes drastically.  MSUB advanced to the NCAA tournament for the first time in eight years and won 20 games for only the second time in the 1990s.  Despite a limited roster, that first team ('96) managed to lead the nation in three pointers and rank third in scoring.

The next six years produced more of the same.  Three more NCAA berths, three Pac West Conference Championships, a slew of national, conference, and school records and Coach of the Year awards.  In addition, the Yellowjackets have led the nation in three pointers made per game in 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, and 2004 finishing second in 2002 and 2003.  They were also the nation's leading scoring team in '97, '98, 2000, 2001, and 2002 with a second place ranking in 1999.  The Jackets under Carse have averaged 104 PPG and yielded only 82 on the campus of MSU Billings.

And while Carse is definitely proud of what his players and teams have accomplished over the years, he isn't in coaching for only wins and championships.  His peace of mind comes from his philosophy of an honest direction with a focused purpose towards consistent repetition that develops values that people can grow with for life.  Carse would rather talk of the off court success of his teams than the many basketball achievements they once accomplished.  The kind of person a student-athlete becomes, whether it's a dedicated husband, father, or citizen is Carse's main concern.

One area many of his former players have grown into is a professional basketball career.  While at LSU, Carse was the primary recruiter of Chris Jackson, Stanley Roberts, Shaquille O'Neal, Geert Hammink and Ronnie Henderson.  All were NBA draft picks with O'Neal being the #1 and Jackson a #3 selection.  At small West Virginia State, Carse managed to produce NBA selections.  Both Ron Moore and Ronnie Legette were drafted a few months after playing in the NAIA National Championship game under Carse.  At MSUB, Carse has had All-American Titus Warmsley in the camp of the Boston Celtics.

When Carse took the West Virginia State job in 1983-84, the Yellowjackets had not been a successful program.  After a tough first year, Carse's team went 18-11 in 84-85, a definite sign of things to come.  In going 57-8 in his final two seasons, Carse led the Yellowjackets to conference, tournament, and district championships and the aforementioned spot in the NAIA title game, broadcast nationally on ESPN in 1987.

After playing LSU in a Hawaii tournament, long time mentor Dale Brown offered Carse a spot on his staff.  Carse became LSU's primary recruiter and Brown's top aide.   During Carse's time as assistant coach, the Tigers were one of the most successful teams in the Southeastern Conference and NCAA.  The "Bayou Bengals" advanced to six straight NCAA Tournaments and were ranked as high as #1 nationally.

Carse has coached and participated in National Championship Tournaments at every level.   His first position as an assistant at Bethany College, West Virginia in 1977 saw a 3-18 team the year before, win the Presidents Conference Championship and advance to the NCAA Division III Tournament in 1978.  At Salem in West Virginia, from 1978 through 1983, he helped turn a losing program into a West Virginia Conference power with conference championships and an NAIA tournament berth.  His West Virginia State, Louisiana State and Montana State-Billings teams all participated in national tournaments.  Before Carse's arrival at West Virginia State and Montana State-Billings, both programs had suffered losing campaigns.

Carse is also a noted speaker and clinician.  He has lectured and taught the game of basketball nationally and internationally.  He represented the United States in Europe and Austraila at the Super Cup as well with Asian Basketball and Chinese National teams.

A native of Sistersville, West Virginia, Carse is working on his 30th year in college basketball and 14th as a head coach.  He and his wife of 27 years have two children, David (23) and Lindsey (20).  Carse and his wife, Leslie, both hold degrees from the West Virginia University in Morgantown, WV, and currently live outside Billings, Montana.

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