commodore club
commodore club
tickets
    Women's Basketball

      Melanie Balcomb

    Melanie Balcomb

    Player Profile

    Hometown:
    Cranbury, N.J.

    Position:
    Head Coach

    Experience:
    11th Season

    Alma Mater:
    Trenton State '84

    05/08/2013

    Lister to USA University Games Camp

    Rising senior point guard one of 31 athletes competing for right to represent USA in July's World University Games.

    05/07/2013

    Dahlman, Webb to USA U19 camp

    Incoming Commodores head to Colorado Springs, May 16-19, looking to earn spot on USA roster for U19 World Championships.

    04/17/2013

    Behind the Dores - Episode Five

    "Strength"

    03/25/2013

    Second round postgame quotes

    Connecticut 77, Vanderbilt 44.

    03/19/2013

    Clarke named All-Region

    Senior forward led Vanderbilt in scoring and rebounding.

    03/25/2013

    Women's Basketball vs. Connecticut (NCAA Tournament)

    Vanderbilt fell to Connecticut 77-44 in the NCAA tournament second round.

    03/23/2013

    NCAA Tournament First Round vs. Saint Joseph's (Bob Stowell)

    Action from Vanderbilt's 60-54 NCAA Tournament win over Saint Joseph's (Bob Stowell).

    02/24/2013

    Vanderbilt vs. Texas A&M (AP)

    Vanderbilt vs. Texas A&M (AP)

    02/24/2013

    Vanderbilt vs. Texas A&M - 2/24/13 (Howell)

    Vanderbilt defeated No. 10/13 Texas A&M, 61-51, on Sunday, February 24 at Memorial Gym (Joe Howell).

    02/10/2013

    Vanderbilt vs. Kentucky (AP)

    Vanderbilt vs. Kentucky (AP)

    The numbers say it all - 11 seasons, 11 NCAA Tournaments, 11 campaigns of at least 20 wins. Vanderbilt women's basketball has been a model of consistency under Head Coach Melanie Balcomb. That's not to mention three SEC Tournament Championships, four Sweet 16 trips and eight top-25 finishes in over a decade on West End. That record has enabled Balcomb to become the all-time winningest coach in Vanderbilt women's basketball history.

    Since arriving in 2002, Balcomb has posted a 259-106 (.710) record at Vanderbilt, averaging 23.5 wins per season. On February 28, 2013, against Auburn, Balcomb secured her 257th victory, passing Jim Foster for the program's wins record in exactly as many seasons as the former Commodore coach.

    Balcomb's name is also showing up on some of the most exclusive lists in women's basketball. She is one of just five coaches, joining Connecticut's Geno Auriemma, Stanford's Tara VanDerveer, Notre Dame's Muffet McGraw and Georgia's Andy Landers, to lead the same program to each of the last 11 NCAA Tournaments. Balcomb is also the second longest-tenured coach in the Southeastern Conference (behind Landers) and currently serves on the USA Basketball Girls National Junior Team committee alongside Foster, California coach Lindsay Gottlieb, Central Florida coach Joi Williams and 2008 Olympic gold medalist Kara Lawson.

    Over her 11 seasons at Vanderbilt, Balcomb has coached eight WNBA draft picks, a WBCA National Defensive Player of the Year (Jennifer Risper), a WBCA National Scholar-Athlete of the Year (Christina Wirth) and an SEC scoring champion (Christina Foggie), while graduating 100% of her four-year players.

    With 20 years of collegiate head coaching experience, Balcomb is a renowned offensive strategist. Her 11 seasons at Vanderbilt have only enhanced that reputation. Every Commodore squad has finished in the top-50 nationally in field goal percentage, averaging a finish of 11.1 in the country (including four teams that have finished nation's top four). Balcomb's inaugural Commodore team in 2002-03 led the nation in field goal percentage, shooting 51.3%.

    The Commodores have shot just as well from three-point range, averaging a top-20 finish in three-point percentage among Division I teams with top-50 finishes every season. Balcomb's 2006-07 squad led the nation in three-point shooting at 43.7%. The Commodores have finished in the top-10 nationally in field-goal percentage seven times and in the top-10 in three-point field-goal percentage six times under Balcomb. Her teams have also finished in the top five in assists per game, free-throw percentage and scoring offense.

    Balcomb's teams have been especially successful at home, where Vanderbilt has posted a 143-27 (.841) record at Memorial Gym. The Commodores have been almost as successful during the stretch-run, as over the last 10 years, Vanderbilt's record over the final nine regular season games is 67-28, good for a .705 winning percentage.

    Balcomb's success as a head coach is not limited to Vanderbilt. Before arriving at Vanderbilt, Balcomb had successful coaching tenures at Ashland (Ohio) and Xavier. She picked-up her 400th career win in the opening round of the 2011 SEC Tournament and has a career mark of 422-210 (.668).

    Her 2012-13 squad dealt with serious injury problems, but still won over 20 games and reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament. The team returned over 97% of its scoring, but played stretches without half of that firepower. Three starters - Stephanie Holzer, Christina Foggie and Kady Schrann - combined to miss 60 games, but a combination of seniors Tiffany Clarke and Elan Brown, junior Jasmine Lister and five freshmen. The Commodores scored a pair of huge wins at Florida and over No. 10 Texas A&M late in the year to solidify their 14th straight NCAA Tournament bid.

    Clarke led the team in scoring (16.6) and rebounding (8.4) to earn First Team All-SEC honors from the league's coaches, the 11th time a Balcomb coached player has done so. Clarke also earned first team all-conference honors from the Associated Press and All-Region recognition from the Women's Basketball Coaches Association.

    Vanderbilt won its first round game over ninth-seeded Saint Joseph's, giving Balcomb a 10-1 record in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. The Commodores fell in the second round to top-seeded Connecticut, capping the season at 21-12.

    Balcomb started at Vanderbilt in 2002 and wasted no time in implementing her own style of winning. Working to transition veteran players into a new system while building new team chemistry, Balcomb's first year saw the Commodores win six of their last seven regular season games, earn an NCAA Tournament berth, and lead the nation in field goal percentage (51.3) against the fourth toughest schedule in the country. She was named a finalist for the Naismith Coach of the Year award.

    In 2003-04, Balcomb led the Commodores to their fourth Southeastern Conference Tournament title. She masterfully balanced strong upper-class leadership with exciting freshmen talent, winning 10 consecutive games and advancing to the program's 11th Sweet 16 appearance. One year later, her team made its second consecutive trip to the NCAA Sweet 16. The Commodores posted the most wins (10) in the program's history in Southeastern Conference play finishing with a 10-4 record.

    The Commodores were ranked seventh in the final AP poll of the 2006-07 season, and earned a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament after winning another SEC Tournament title. That Vanderbilt squad was the nation's best three-point shooting team, and ranked among the top 10 in points scored. The team's 28-6 mark was the best record for a VU squad in 14 years.

    The 2008 season was also one of Balcomb's most impressive coaching jobs. Despite graduating three All-SEC seniors, she led the Commodores to a 25-9 record and the school's 13th appearance in the NCAA sweet 16, all with two freshmen and no seniors in the starting lineup.

    In 2009, Vanderbilt won its sixth SEC Tournament title, the third for Balcomb in the last six years. The team also advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16 for the 14th time in school history -- Balcomb's fourth trip with the Commodores. Vanderbilt finished the year ranked No. 8 in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll after narrowly missing an upset of No. 1 seed Maryland in the Raleigh Regional Semifinal.

    National accolades came flooding in for Vanderbilt, including senior Jennifer Risper being named the Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) National Defensive Player of the Year. Risper and classmate Christina Wirth, who herself was named an All- American and the SEC Scholar-Athlete of the Year, were both selected in the 2009 WNBA Draft. In 2010 Balcomb was faced with one of her most challenging tasks. Faced with replacing National Defensive Player of the Year Jennifer Risper and All-American Christina Wirth, Balcomb guided an undersized team back to the NCAA Tournament, where they narrowly missed advancing to their third consecutive sweet 16.

    Despite having to overcome numerous injuries throughout out the season and a size disadvantage in almost every game, Vanderbilt finished the season 23-11 overall. Individually, Balcomb helped junior point guard Jence Rhoads earn first team All-SEC honors, while senior shooting guard Merideth Marsh earned second team All-SEC accolades. Elan Brown and Tiffany Clarke were also named to the SEC All-Freshman Team.

    The 2010-11 season featured many obstacles that Balcomb successfully maneuvered through to reach another NCAA Tournament and finish third in the SEC. Injuries took an unfortunate toll on the team throughout the year with at least one of Vanderbilt's five leading scorers unavailable for 14 out of the team's 32 games. Injuries coupled with matching Georgia for the fewest upperclassmen in the SEC challenged Balcomb to use different personnel groupings regularly.

    Despite the challenges, Balcomb again reached 20 wins, finishing 20-12 and 10-6 in the SEC. Individually, Balcomb helped Jence Rhoads earn honorable mention All-America honors from the Associated Press in addition to first team All-SEC recognition. Rhoads was also a WBCA Region 3 All-American. Freshman center Stephanie Holzer was named honorable mention All-SEC, SEC Sixth Woman of the Year and to the SEC All-Freshmen team. Freshman point guard Jasmine Lister was also named to the SEC All-Freshman Team. In 10 seasons at Vanderbilt, Balcomb has won 13 games in the NCAA Tournament, including a 9-1 mark in the opening round. She holds a winning percentage of 65.7 against SEC opponents. In all, Balcomb owns series advantages over 10 of the 11 other schools in the SEC before 2012.

    The 2011-12 season saw one of Balcomb's youngest teams, as the squad of 11 featured just one senior, yet she still successfully steered the Commodores to a 23-10 mark and a 13th-straight NCAA Tournament. Leading the way was break-out star Christina Foggie, who became the first Balcomb player to lead the SEC in scoring (17.7 ppg).

    Foggie was a First Team All-SEC selection and was joined by four other Commodores earning All-SEC honors - Jasmine Lister (second team), Tiffany Clarke (second team), Stephanie Holzer (honorable mention) and Kady Schrann (All-Freshman).

    Vanderbilt defeated three ranked opponents on the season (No. 12 Oklahoma, No. 17 Georgia and No. 11 Tennessee), earning a seven seed in the NCAA Tournament. The Commodores hosted at Memorial Gym, defeating 10th-seeded Middle Tennessee in the first round before falling to second-seeded Duke.

    Before arriving at Vanderbilt, the Cranbury, N.J., native spent seven seasons at Xavier University. Beginning in 1995, her up-tempo style wreaked havoc on the Atlantic 10 while building the Musketeers into a national contender. In 1998, Xavier recorded its second post- season appearance in school history with a selection to the Women's National Invitational Tournament. Each of the next three seasons, Xavier competed in the NCAA Tournament, capped in 2001 by a victory over perennial power Tennessee and a run to the Elite Eight. En route to earning three invitations to the NCAA Tournament and compiling a 136-78 record during her tenure, Balcomb's offensive schemes helped push Xavier onto the national stage. Musketeer field-goal percentages ranked among the top three in the nation during three different seasons while the 1999 squad led the country in 3-point accuracy at 40.1 percent. Her 2000-01 squad averaged 79.4 points per game, the highest total in program history. Individual records were rewritten as well. Of the 15 Musketeers who have scored at least 1,000 points in a career, six of them played on Balcomb-coached teams.

    Before her accomplishments at Xavier, Balcomb took her first head coaching position at Ashland University. Prosperity was immediate as Balcomb's first unit matched the best record in school history at 18-9 while registering its first winning season in the Great Lakes Valley Conference with an 11-7 mark.

    Prior to becoming a head coach, Balcomb served three years as an assistant at Providence College (1990-93), during which the Friars went 62-30, made two NCAA Tournament appearances and once (1990-91) led the nation in scoring while they amassed a 26-6 record. In 1989-90, Balcomb was an assistant at Ohio University and she began her coaching career with a four-year stint (1985-89) on the staff at Niagara University. In all, Balcomb has coached 19 players who have received All-SEC accolades. Nine of her players have been drafted by the WNBA, including VU's Chantelle Anderson, Ashley McElhiney, Jenni Benningfield, Ashley Earley, Carla Thomas, Dee Davis and Christina Wirth. Her Xavier teams won two league tournament titles (2000 and 2001) and one regular-season championship in the Atlantic 10 Conference (2001).

    Xavier's successes during the Balcomb era helped push for construction of the Cintas Center, a state of the art facility which became home to Xavier basketball at the start of the 2000-01 season and - ironically - was dedicated with a victory over Vanderbilt. That season the program posted a school record for attendance with a total of 40,098 fans, who thrilled in the Musketeers' style of play and their results. Commodore followers have enjoyed the entertainment as well.

    Her basketball education began at an early age among some of the most well respected coaches in the game. Balcomb's father, Alan, was a varsity boy's coach for 30 years at South Brunswick (N.J.) High School, and then served as an assistant for four years at Princeton University under Pete Carril, the master of the half-court game. For Balcomb, however, a complete education goes far beyond the hardwood. Every eligible, four-year player during Balcomb's coaching tenure has earned her degree. In May of 2011, Balcomb's team earned a Public Recognition Award for finishing among the nation's top 10 percent in multi-year Academic Progress Rates (APR). Six of seven squads at Xavier earned team grade point averages that ranked in the Top 25. In 2004-05, 40 percent of the Commodore basketball team was named to the Southeastern Conference Academic Honor Roll. Vanderbilt led the SEC with eight players being named to the honor roll in 2003-04.

    Two Commodores have been named SEC Scholar Athletes of the Year under Balcomb. Hillary Hager received the honor in 2004 and Christina Wirth won it in 2009. Wirth was also named a 2009 Lowe's Senior CLASS All-American, while receiving WBCA and NCAA post- graduate scholarships. Hager recently returned to Vanderbilt and received her doctorate in 2010.

    Balcomb also stresses the importance of community service to her teams. VU logged more than 95 hours of community service last season, including numerous opportunities to visit with young patients at the Vanderbilt Children's Hospital. After the devastating Nashville flood in 2010, Balcomb and her coaching staff volunteered in helping to clean up flood-damaged areas. Balcomb herself has been active in outreach to the surrounding area, participating in numerous fundraising events for local and national organizations, including Coaches vs. Cancer, the Race for the Cure, Mercy Ministries, Vanderbilt Children's Hospital and the Girl Scouts of America. She joined colleagues to represent the SEC in the 2008 4Kay Golf Classic to benefit the Kay Yow Cancer Fund. An avid golfer, Balcomb finds time to make it to beach on her rare weeks off, and also enjoys reading.

    BALCOMB'S ACCOLADES
    ★ All-time winningest coach in Vanderbilt women's basketball history (259 wins)
    ★ 14 NCAA Appearances, including 11 straight at VU
    ★ Five NCAA Regional Semifinal appearances
    ★ Three SEC Tournament championships
    ★ Fastest Vanderbilt coach to 200 wins
    ★ 2003 Naismith Coach of the Year Top 25 finalist
    ★ Two Atlantic 10 Tournament championships (2000, `01)
    ★ 2001 NCAA Regional Finals appearance
    ★ 2001 Atlantic 10 regular season championship
    ★ 2001 Atlantic 10 Coach of the Year
    ★ 2001 March of Dimes Greater Cincinnati Coach of the Year
    ★ 2001 Naismith, ESPN Coach of the Year finalist
    ★ Inducted into Greater Cincinnati Basketball Hall of Fame, 2001

    BALCOMB BALL AT VU
    ★ Three SEC Tournament titles
    ★ VU-record 11 SEC wins in 2008
    ★ 10-1 record in NCAA First Round
    ★ 23.5 wins/year -- most by VU coach
    ★ Four Sweet 16 appearances
    ★ Eight WNBA Draft picks since 2003
    ★ 100% graduation rate
    ★ 84.1% winning percentage at home (143-27)
    ★ 11.1 - average national rank in field-goal percentage
    ★ 16.3 - average national rank in 3-pt FG percentage

    BALCOMB'S YEAR-BY-YEAR RECORD

    Year University Wins Losses Postseason
    2012-13 Vanderbilt 21 12 NCAA 2nd Round
    2011-12 Vanderbilt 23 10 NCAA 2nd Round
    2010-11 Vanderbilt 20 12 NCAA 1st Round
    2009-10 Vanderbilt 23 11 NCAA 2nd Round
    2008-09 Vanderbilt 26 9 NCAA Sweet 16
    2007-08 Vanderbilt 25 9 NCAA Sweet 16
    2006-07 Vanderbilt 28 6 NCAA 2nd Round
    2005-06 Vanderbilt 21 11 NCAA 2nd Round
    2004-05 Vanderbilt 24 8 NCAA Sweet 16
    2003-04 Vanderbilt 26 8 NCAA Sweet 16
    2002-03 Vanderbilt 22 10 NCAA 2nd Round
    2001-02 Xavier 12 19
    2000-01 Xavier 31 3 NCAA Elite 8
    1999-00 Xavier 26 5 NCAA 1st Round
    1998-99 Xavier 24 9 NCAA 2nd Round
    1997-98 Xavier 17 12 WNIT
    1996-97 Xavier 10 17
    1995-96 Xavier 15 13
    1994-95 Ashland 10 17
    1993-94 Ashland 18 9
    Career (18 years) Combined 422 210 .668
    Vanderbilt (11 years) Combined 259 106 .710
    Xavier (7 years) Combined 135 78 .633
    Ashland (2 years) Combined 28 26 .538

    Social Media

    Store

      Auctions
      Photo Store
      The New Vandervilt Photo Store
      DVD Store
      Vandy over UT - Now on Sale!