| Title: | Head Coach |
| Organization: | W Basketball |
| Phone: | (617) 495-2214 |
| Email: | delaneys@fas.harvard.edu |
| College: | Bridgewater State 1971 |
| Experience: | 32nd Season |
The women's basketball coaches office is located in the Lavietes Pavilion (follow the driving directions to Harvard Stadium.)
Delaney-Smith By the Numbers:
Head Coaching Tenure: 31 Seasons
Overall Record (entering
2013-14): 495-340 (.592)
Ivy League Record (entering
2012-13): 295-127 (.699)
Ivy League Titles: 11 (1986, 1988, 1991, 1996,
1997, 1998, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2008)
NCAA Tournament Appearances: Six (1996, 1997,
1998, 2002, 2003, 2007)
Women's NIT Appearances: Four (2009, 2010,
2012, 2013)
Head coach Kathy Delaney-Smith, who completed her 31st season at
the helm of the Crimson in 2012-13, has put Harvard basketball on
the map and expanded its reach both nationally and internationally.
One of the longest tenured coaches in collegiate women’s
basketball, Delaney-Smith’s career success cannot be measured
by the numbers alone - while, on their own, the numbers are
impressive enough. Delaney-Smith, the winningest Ivy League
women’s basketball coach of all-time, owns a 31-year coaching
record at Harvard of 495-340 with a 295-127 record in Ivy
League play. Those marks include ten 20-win seasons, 11 Ivy
titles, a .500 record or better in 24 of the last 25 campaigns,
and ten postseason appearances. Her 295 Ivy League
victories stand only behind Princeton legend Pete Carril, who won
315 in his 29 years at the helm of the Tigers’ men’s
program. In addition, she also stands second to Carril (514) in
overall victories, unmatched by any other women’s coach in
the history of the League.
With Delaney-Smith leading the way, Harvard has finished lower
than fourth in the Ancient Eight only three times and has finished
in the top three in the league standings in each of the past 11
years, including shares of the Ivy title in 2005 and 2008 and
outright titles in 2002, 2003 and 2007.
She has coached eight Ivy League Players of the Year, including
three-time winner Allison Feaster ’98 and two-time recipient
Hana Pelijto ’04, six Ivy League Rookies of the Year and
36 first-team All-Ivy League selections. Additionally, all 18
members of Harvard’s 1,000 point club have been coached by
Delaney-Smith.
Delaney-Smith’s involvement in the game on the national
level has afforded her the opportunity to coach for USA Basketball
three times in her career, including the honor of serving as the
head coach of the contingent that won gold at the World University
Games in Izmir, Turkey in the summer of 2005. Coaching with
Louisiana State’s head coach Pokey Chatman and Boston College
mentor Cathy Ingelese, a dozen of women’s college
basketball’s brightest stars accomplished their mission of
bringing home gold for the United States. Delaney-Smith was an
assistant coach on the USA Basketball staff at the 2003 FIBA World
Championship for Young Women, helping lead the U.S. to a gold medal
in that tournament, as well. In 2007, she teamed up with
Temple’s Dawn Staley and Holy Cross’ Bill Gibbons Jr.
and coached the USA team to gold at the Pan American Games in Rio
de Janerio.
Delaney-Smith has consistently fielded teams that have competed
for Ivy titles and taken on formidable opponents on the national
basketball scene. Under her tutelage, Harvard has evolved into one
of the Northeast’s most successful programs. She has directed
Harvard to all 11 of its Ivy titles, including the first in school
history during the 1985-86 season. In 1996, Delaney-Smith guided
the Crimson to its inaugural trip to the NCAA tournament and has
brought the Crimson to the NCAAs in five seasons since.
Delaney-Smith and her Crimson team of 1997-98 will forever be the
darlings of NCAA lore. The Crimson turned in one of its finest
seasons with a record-setting 23-5 overall mark and the first-ever
NCAA tournament victory for an Ivy League women’s basketball
team with a 71-67 win over Stanford. The win halted the
Cardinal’s 59-game home win streak, and the Crimson became
the first No. 16-seed to knock off a No. 1 seed in the history of
the men’s or women’s NCAA basketball tournaments.
Delaney-Smith’s squad also captured its third straight
outright Ivy League title - the first Ivy team to accomplish such a
feat.
Last season, the Crimson returned to the WNIT for the second and moved onto the second round for the second consecutive season and fourth time in five years. The Crimson also posted an undefeated record under the roof of Lavietes Pavillion, 11-0, for the second time in program history, first since 1997-98, and added onto a 14-0 unbeaten streak at home, the eighth longest in the NCAA, that dates back to the 2011-12 campaign.
In 2011-12, Harvard also became the first Ivy League school to
pick up a win in the WNIT when it upset Hofstra, 73-71. The
Crimson’s appearance in the WNIT was its third in four years
and the program’s ninth trip to the postseason in 17 years.
Harvard also picked up a very impressive victory over the BIG
EAST’s St. John’s during the campaign, topping a Red
Storm team which advanced to the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 and
finished the year ranked 14th by the Associated Press.
In the 1999-2000 campaign, Delaney-Smith picked up her 250th
victory when she guided the Crimson to a win over Sacred Heart in
the Harvard Invitational. She then became the first Ivy League
women’s coach to record 150 Ancient Eight victories with a
win over Dartmouth.
Under the direction of Delaney-Smith, the 2002-03 Harvard squad
(22-5, 14-0 Ivy) won its second consecutive Ivy League title and
the eighth in school history. While the year concluded with a
hard-fought 79-69 loss to Kansas State in the first round of the
NCAA tournament, it was highlighted by a school-record 16 straight
wins, 26 consecutive Ivy League victories and the second undefeated
Ivy season in school history.
The Crimson finished the 2001-02 season with a 22-6 overall record
and a 13-1 Ivy mark. It was Harvard’s sixth 20-win season
under Delaney-Smith, and its second-highest win total in school
history. Delaney-Smith’s squads have finished .500 or better
in 16 of the last 17 seasons.
In 2006-07, Delaney-Smith’s squad turned a frustrating 2-11
start to the season into an Ivy League championship and a NCAA
tournament berth. The Crimson won 12 straight games during Ivy play
en route to Delaney-Smith’s 10th conference title.
Delaney-Smith was named the 1996-97 Ivy League Coach of the Year
after her squad recorded a perfect 14-0 conference mark and landed
its second straight NCAA appearance. It was the first time in
league history that a team had gone undefeated since the
institution of double round-robin play in 1982-83.
Delaney-Smith came to Harvard in 1982 after compiling an
incredible 204-31 record at Westwood (Mass.) High School, with an
unparalleled six undefeated regular seasons and one Massachusetts
state title, in addition to 96 straight wins in the regular season.
While at Westwood, she coached seven Boston Globe
All-Scholastic selections, as well as numerous other players who
went on to play in college. She was inducted into the Westwood Hall
of Fame in 1996. Prior to her arrival at Harvard, she also served
as the New England Junior Olympic Basketball coach from 1980 to
1982.
Delaney Smith has received her fair share of accolades throughout
her coaching career, including being named the Boston
Herald-American Coach of the Year in 1978-79, and the
Boston Globe Coach of the Year in 1979-80. The National
High School Coaches Association selected her as Coach of the Year
in 1981, and she was the first woman named to the Massachusetts
Basketball Coaches Hall of Fame in 1986. The Crimson mentor was
also named to the New Agenda Northeast Hall of Fame in 1998.
A 1971 graduate of Bridgewater State, Delaney-Smith was inducted
into its Athletic Hall of Fame in October 1999. In addition,
Delaney-Smith holds the distinction of being the first
Massachusetts high school girl’s basketball player to score
1,000 points all while playing for her mother, the late Peg
Delaney, at Sacred Heart of Newton.
In recognition of her contribution to the game, Delaney-Smith,
along with Feaster, was part of the inaugural class to be inducted
into the New England Basketball Hall of Fame in October 2003.
In 1997, she was chosen as a “Leading Woman” by the
Patriots’ Trail Girl Scout Council, which recognizes women
who have succeeded in their professional and public lives. She
currently serves on the Board of Directors of the organization. She
was also named a 1997 Newton Tab Person of the Year.
In March of 2000, Delaney-Smith received the New England
Women’s Leadership Award for Sports - another testament to
the lives that she has touched through her courage, talents, and
accomplishments. The awards were presented by young girls of the
Colonel Daniel Marr Boys and Girls Club of Dorchester, who benefit
from the leadership of the award winners.
Delaney-Smith was also bestowed with the prestigious Carol Eckman
Award at the 2000 Women’s Basketball Coaches Association
(WBCA) convention, held at the Final Four in Philadelphia. The
award is presented annually to an active WBCA coach who exemplifies
Eckman’s spirit, integrity and through sportsmanship,
commitment to the student-athlete, honesty, ethical behavior,
courage and dedication to purpose. The award is named in honor of
the late Carol Eckman, the former West Chester State College coach
who is considered the “Mother of the Women’s Collegiate
Basketball Championship.”
Delaney-Smith also served as the chairperson for the Converse
Coach of the Year Selection Committee and was honored by Converse
as the 1998 Coach of the Year in District I.
Delaney-Smith has been recognized by the Women’s Educational
and Industrial Union as a “woman who has inspired other
women, and has contributed to the quality of life for women and
their families.” Among her civic involvements is her
association with the American Cancer Society, particularly its
annual “Relay for Life.” Herself a cancer survivor,
Delaney-Smith has dedicated much of her spare time to spreading the
word of early detection and treatment and has been the featured
speaker at several fund-raisers in the Boston area for cancer
research. In 2007, she received the Gildna Radnar Award, which
recognizes individuals who have demonstrated determination and hope
in the face of cancer.
During the summer Delaney-Smith runs a basketball clinic at
Harvard, and is the owner of the Net Results Basketball Summer
Camp.
Delaney-Smith resides in Newton, Mass., with her husband, Francis.
Her son, Jared, is a recent graduate of the University of
Wisconsin.

