Taylor will work closely with the basketball
staff, helping coordinate travel and carry out the day-to-day activities
of the UI basketball program. Taylor replaces longtime staff member
Jerry Strom, who retired after last season.
"We are extremely excited to have Billy Taylor
join the Hawkeye family,†said McCaffery. ™ve known Billy
since he was a teenager, having recruited and coached him, as well as
being on the same coaching staff at Notre Dame and UNC-Greensboro.
Billy is someone with tremendous character and will be a great asset to
our program.â€
Taylor joins the Hawkeye staff after 15 years of
collegiate coaching experience. He served the last 11 years as a head
coach, most recently the last six seasons at Ball State (2007-13).
During his tenure, the Cardinals
finished either first or second in the
Mid-American Conference 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-ever 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.
In 2003-04, Taylor led Lehigh to its first-ever 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.
Before taking over at
Lehigh, Taylor was the top assistant for three seasons at UNC-Greensboro
under McCaffrey 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, 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 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, 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.
[This story was written for Ron Maly by Matt Weitzel of Iowa's sports information staff].