Kimberly Duane Mulkey (born May 17, 1962)
is an American
college basketball player and coach. She is the head coach for
Louisiana State University's
women's basketball team. A Pan-American gold medalist in 1983 and Olympic gold medalist in 1984, she became the first person in
NCAA women's basketball history to win a national championship as a player, assistant coach, and head coach. She won three NCAA championships as the coach of
Baylor in
2005
File:2005 Events Collage V2.png, From top left, clockwise: Hurricane Katrina in the Gulf of Mexico; the Funeral of Pope John Paul II is held in Vatican City; "Me at the zoo", the first video ever to be uploaded to YouTube; Eris was discovered in ...
,
2012
File:2012 Events Collage V3.png, From left, clockwise: The passenger cruise ship Costa Concordia lies capsized after the Costa Concordia disaster; Damage to Casino Pier in Seaside Heights, New Jersey as a result of Hurricane Sandy; People gather ...
, and
2019
File:2019 collage v1.png, From top left, clockwise: Hong Kong protests turn to widespread riots and civil disobedience; House of Representatives votes to adopt articles of impeachment against Donald Trump; CRISPR gene editing first used to experim ...
. Mulkey was inducted into the
Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2020 and was also inducted into the
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame is an American history museum and hall of fame, located at 1000 Hall of Fame Avenue in Springfield, Massachusetts. It serves as basketball's most complete library, in addition to promoting and pres ...
.
Youth
Kim Mulkey was one of the first girls in the US to play organized baseball with boys. After playing basketball at Nesom Junior High School in
Tickfaw, Louisiana
Tickfaw was founded in 1852 and is a village in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana, United States. The population was 694 at the 2010 census. Tickfaw is part of the Hammond Micropolitan Statistical Area. It was originally inhabited by Italian-Ameri ...
, she led her
Hammond High School basketball team to four consecutive state championships. As high school
valedictorian, she posted a perfect 4.0
GPA. She later achieved high academic honors as an inductee into the College Sports Information Directors of America Academic Hall of Fame for her classroom achievements at Louisiana Tech.
Louisiana Tech
The Mulkey was an
All-American
point guard
The point guard (PG), also called the one or the point, is one of the five Basketball positions, positions in a regulation basketball game. A point guard has perhaps the most specialized role of any position. Point guards are expected to run t ...
at
Louisiana Tech University, winning two national championships as a player—the
AIAW title in 1981 and the
inaugural NCAA title in 1982—and in 1984 was the inaugural winner of the women's version of the
Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award, given to the nation's top college senior under 5'6"/1.68 m (the height limit was later raised to 5'8"/1.73 m).
She became an assistant at Tech in 1985 and was promoted to associate head coach in 1996. During her 15-year tenure as assistant and associate head coach under
Leon Barmore, Louisiana Tech posted a 430–68 record and advanced to seven Final Fours. Mulkey and the
Lady Techsters
The Louisiana Tech Lady Techsters basketball team represents Louisiana Tech University in Ruston, Louisiana. The team currently competes in Conference USA. The current head coach of the Lady Techsters is Brooke Stoehr. Louisiana Tech has won th ...
won the
1988 NCAA Championship.
USA Basketball
Mulkey was selected to be a member of the team representing the US at the 1983 Pan American Games held in
Caracas, Venezuela. The team won all five games to earn the gold medal for the event. Mulkey averaged 12.4 points per game.
Mulkey played for the USA National team in the 1983 World Championships, held in
Sao Paulo, Brazil. The team won six games, but lost two against the Soviet Union. In an opening round game, the USA team had a nine-point lead at halftime, but the Soviets came back to take the lead, and a final shot by the USA failed to drop, leaving the USSR team with a one-point victory 85–84. The USA team won their next four games, setting up the gold medal game against USSR. This game was also close, and was tied at 82 points each with six seconds to go in the game. The Soviets Elena Chausova received the inbounds pass and hit the game winning shot in the final seconds, giving the USSR team the gold medal with a score of 84–82. The USA team earned the silver medal. Mulkey averaged 3.1 points per game.
In 1984, the USA sent its National team to the 1984
William Jones Cup
The R. William Jones Cup (), also known as the Jones Cup, is an international basketball tournament organized by the Chinese Taipei Basketball Association (CTBA) held annually since 1977 in Taiwan.
It was named in honor of basketball promoter ...
competition in
Taipei, Taiwan, for pre-Olympic practice. The team easily beat each of the eight teams they played, winning by an average of just under 50 points per game. Mulkey averaged 6.8 points per game.
She continued with the national team to represent the US at the 1984 Olympics. The team won all six games to claim the gold medal. Mulkey averaged 5.3 points per game.
Coaching career
Baylor
In 2000, Mulkey took over a Baylor program that had finished the 1999–2000 season 7–20 and last in the
Big 12 Conference, and had never received an invite to the NCAA tournament. In her first season at Baylor, she led the Lady Bears program to its first NCAA tournament bid; the Lady Bears have gone to postseason play every year since Mulkey's arrival. They have won at least 20 games every year, and only once has the team lost more than 10 games in a season. The rise of the Baylor program under Mulkey was capped off in 2005 with a
national title
A national championship(s) is the top achievement for any sport or contest within a league of a particular nation or nation state. The title is usually awarded by contests, ranking systems, stature, ability, etc. This determines the best team, indi ...
when the Bears defeated
Michigan State in the championship game at Indianapolis. This made her the first woman to have won NCAA Division I basketball titles as a player and a head coach, and only the fourth person (after
Joe B. Hall
Joe Beasman Hall (November 30, 1928 – January 15, 2022) was an American college basketball coach. He was the head coach at the University of Kentucky from 1972 to 1985, leading the Wildcats to a national championship in 1978.
Biography
Hall p ...
,
Bob Knight
Robert Montgomery Knight (born October 25, 1940) is an American former basketball coach. Nicknamed "the General", Knight won 902 NCAA Division I men's college basketball games, a record at the time of his retirement, and currently fourth all-ti ...
and
Dean Smith).
Since the inception of the NCAA women's tournament in 1982, Mulkey has been involved in that tournament as a player or coach every year except 1985 and 2003. She was enshrined in the
Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000 for her accomplishments as a player.
Mulkey in 2007 signed a 10-year extension to remain Baylor's coach. Her autobiography is called ''Won't Back Down: Teams, Dreams and Family.''
In 2012, Mulkey made NCAA history by leading the Lady Bears to a perfect 40–0 season, the most wins in college basketball history, men or women. The season culminated at the NCAA Championship game in Denver, where the Lady Bears defeated Notre Dame.
In 2019, in a repeat of the 2012 NCAA Championship game, the Baylor Lady Bears defeated the Notre Dame Fighting Irish by a score of 82–81 in Tampa. This made Mulkey the third coach to win three or more NCAA Division I women's basketball championships, joining
Connecticut's
Geno Auriemma (11) and
Tennessee's
Pat Summitt
Patricia Susan Summitt (; June 14, 1952 – June 28, 2016) was an American women's college basketball head coach who accrued 1,098 career wins, the most in college basketball history at the time of her retirement. She served as the head coac ...
(8).
Mulkey is well known for her "bold" sense of fashion. She once wore a snakeskin print to a game against Connecticut; her wardrobe choices have generated a multitude of strong responses online.
During the COVID-19 pandemic
While the 2020 NCAA tournament was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Baylor made it to the Elite Eight of the 2021 tournament, held in an event isolation "bubble". During the Elite Eight round, Mulkey advocated ending COVID-19 testing on the tournament players despite the ongoing pandemic. She stated that the organization tasked with running the student tournament should "dump the COVID testing", commenting freely during a press conference despite not being asked about it by reporters.
She then stated more fully that, "Wouldn’t it be a shame to keep COVID testing, and then you got kids
estingpositive or something, and they don't get to play in the Final Four? So you need to just forget the COVID tests and let the four teams that are playing in each Final Four go battle it out." Mulkey herself had tested positive for the virus earlier in the season,
and made the comments following her team's loss to
UConn; a team which Baylor was supposed to face earlier in the season but was cancelled due to Mulkey's COVID diagnosis. According to
CBS News
CBS News is the news division of the American television and radio service CBS. CBS News television programs include the ''CBS Evening News'', ''CBS Mornings'', news magazine programs '' CBS News Sunday Morning'', '' 60 Minutes'', and '' 48 H ...
, her comments were later described by "many basketball fans" as "misinformed, dangerous and irresponsible". Connecticut head coach
Geno Auriemma later defended Mulkey's comments, stating, "This past year has shown us that there's a lot of difficult topics to talk about".
Louisiana State University
After 21 seasons as the head coach at Baylor, Mulkey was announced as head coach at LSU on April 25, 2021.
Personal life
In 1987, Mulkey married Randy Robertson, whom she had met at Louisiana Tech and had been the starting quarterback for the
Bulldogs for the 1974 and 1975 seasons. The couple have two children together: son
Kramer, a professional baseball player and collegiate All-American at
Louisiana State University, and daughter Makenzie, who played both
basketball and
softball for Baylor and is now an assistant coach on her mother's staff. During her marriage to Robertson, she was known as Kim Mulkey-Robertson. Mulkey and Robertson divorced in 2006.
She spent her childhood in
Tickfaw, Louisiana
Tickfaw was founded in 1852 and is a village in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana, United States. The population was 694 at the 2010 census. Tickfaw is part of the Hammond Micropolitan Statistical Area. It was originally inhabited by Italian-Ameri ...
.
Head coaching record
Source:
Awards and honors
* 2012 — Russell Athletic/WBCA National Coach of the Year
* 2012 —
Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year
* 2019 —
Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year
* 2021 —
Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year
References
External links
Baylor profile
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mulkey, Kim
1962 births
Living people
American women's basketball coaches
American women's basketball players
Baptists from Louisiana
Basketball coaches from Louisiana
Basketball players at the 1983 Pan American Games
Basketball players at the 1984 Summer Olympics
Basketball players from Louisiana
Baylor Bears women's basketball coaches
Hammond High School (Louisiana) alumni
Louisiana Tech Lady Techsters basketball coaches
Louisiana Tech Lady Techsters basketball players
LSU Lady Tigers basketball coaches
Medalists at the 1984 Summer Olympics
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductees
Olympic gold medalists for the United States in basketball
Parade High School All-Americans (girls' basketball)
People from Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana
Point guards
Sportspeople from Santa Ana, California
Pan American Games competitors for the United States
United States women's national basketball team players