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Debbie Brown is one of only a handful of
coaches in the volleyball ranks that has been able
to parlay a dominating playing career with an
equally impressive coaching resume.
A two-time winner of the Mikasa Award as
college volleyball's best all-around player, Brown
notched her 500th career win as a head coach
during the 2006 campaign, and her 524 win total
ranks her 27th in that category among active
coaches. In fact, only two active coaches have
more wins in as many seasons than the co-captain
of the 1980 United States Olympic team.
While her credentials are virtually unmatched
among collegiate coaches and players across the
country, Brown - who signed a multi-year contract
extension in the summer of 2006 - has
turned into one of the nation's elite mentors,
leading her teams to 21 consecutive winning
records, 13 finishes in the top 25 of the AVCA
national rankings, and 20 invitations to the
NCAA Championship (including a streak of 15
(.917) record in regular season action against
conference teams (27-0 vs. Midwestern
Collegiate Conference, 139-15 vs. BIG EAST
Conference).That includes an 88-3 (.967) record
at home and, at one point, a 79-match winning
streak against conference foes (regular season and
postseason) which ranks as the third-longest conference
winning streak in Division I volleyball
history (AIAW or NCAA). The longest losing
streak suffered by any Irish squad stands at four
matches, which happened only once over the past
17 seasons.
Overall, the Irish are 198-37 (.843) in the
Joyce Center under Brown, including winning
streaks of 36 and 27 matches. Against unranked
teams at home, Notre Dame holds a 187-13
(.935) record in the Brown era.
Since becoming a member of the BIG EAST
Conference in 1995, Notre Dame has opened
league play with an 11-0 run in all but three seasons
(with 11+ matches on the league schedule),
going on to win 10 regular-season titles to go
along with the nine tournament championships.
The Irish have won 45 team BIG EAST statistical
crowns, as well as 27 individual statistical
championships.The league's player of the year has
been from Notre Dame six times,while Irish student-
athletes have garnered 46 all-conference
accolades, including 26 first-team honors.
Brown has seen her Irish players gain All-
America accolades on 12 occasions, with
Brewster becoming the first Notre Dame player
to be selected as an AVCA All-American (third
consecutive bids from 1192-2006).
Now in her 18th season at Notre
Dame and 24th overall as a collegiate
head coach, Brown has compiled
a 524-232 (.693) career record,
including a 407-149 (.732) mark at
Notre Dame. Her squads have
reached the round of 16 in the
NCAA Championship six times,
highlighted by a trip to the 1993
quarterfinals. Fourteen regular-season
conference championships and
13 league tournament titles are
among the accomplishments of
Brown-led teams, which have won
20 or more matches 17 times in the
last 21 seasons.
When taking over the reigns at
Notre Dame, Brown inherited a program
that had just five winning seasons
in its first 11 years of varsity
volleyball action but has since turned
it into a perennial BIG EAST powerhouse.
Nine of her teams have been
ranked in the AVCA's final poll.
During regular season play, the Irish
have cracked the top 10 in consecutive
campaigns under Brown, while
peaking at an all-time best fifth in
1995 and sixth in 1996 in the
Volleyball Magazine rankings. In
2005, her squad achieved its highest ever
listing in the AVCA poll, moving
up to fifth after entering the
season unranked (it was the first time
any school had ever cracked the
AVCA top five after being unranked
in the preseason).
That same 2005 version of the Irish put
together one of the best campaigns in program
history, posting the school's first 30-win season
since 1994. All four of the team's defeats came
in five-game matches. Notre Dame went 5-1
against top-15 teams and earned an all-time Irish
high No. 6 seed in the NCAA Championship.
Notre Dame played host to the first two rounds
and advanced to the round of 16 for the first time
since 1997 before falling in five games to
Wisconsin. The Irish - which rattled off a 15-
match winning streak and spent a programrecord
11 weeks in the AVCA's top 10 - went
13-1 while winning their 10th regular season
BIG EAST Conference championship in 11 years
of league membership. In a clash between two
top-10 teams, Notre Dame handed Louisville a
five-game defeat in the conference tournament
final to give Brown her ninth BIG EAST
Tournament title.
The 2005 squad also featured the first player in
program history - 2006 graduate Lauren
Brewster - to earn both athletic and academic
All-American accolades.
Brown was recognized as the 2005 BIG EAST
volleyball coach of the year - the league's first
five-time winner of the award - and named the
top coach in the AVCA's Northeast Region
while becoming a finalist for the AVCA's national
award.
She has helped Notre Dame to a variety of
dominating performances, including a 166-15team in 2004 and second team in 2005).Three of
the last five seasons have seen multiple Irish players
earn All-America recognition from the
AVCA, a feat never previously accomplished in
program history.
Additionally, Brown's players have earned
ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America honors
three times, while they have won the conference
player-of-the-year award nine times and
been named the top player in the league tournament
on 12 occasions. In all, Brown-era Irish
players have combined for 60 all-conference honors,
including 35 first-team selections. Also, Notre
Dame student-athletes have garnered all-region
or all-district recognition from the AVCA 45
times since Brown's arrival.
Under her tutelage, Irish student-athletes have
earned three invitations to join the U.S. National
Team program and have made four trips to the
U.S. Olympic Festival.
Brown has turned Notre Dame into one of the
popular choices for top recruits in the country.
Since Volleyball Magazine began compiling its
"Fab 50" list in 1990, 25 honorees have join the
Irish program, which ranks 15th among national
programs. In the six years that Volleyball
Magazine has ranked incoming recruiting classes,
the Irish have been mentioned six times, including
the third-best squad in 2006, fifth in 2002,
and ninth in 2000. PrepVolleyball.com recognized
the 2006 incoming class fifth in the nation.
Since the NCAA began keeping official
national statistics in 1994, Brown's
Irish teams have been mentioned in the
final listings 20 times and individuals
have made 17 cameos. Among the 22
combined top-15 finishes were Notre
Dame's first two national statistical
crowns, which both came in 2003. The
Irish led Division I with a team blocking
average of 3.72 (Cornell was second
with 3.52), while Brewster was tops in
individual blocking with a 1.78 mark.
The Irish record books have steadily
been under construction since Brown
stepped on campus, as all-time best
marks in over 120 team and individual
categories have been eclipsed. A testament
to her recruiting and coaching
prowess is the fact that nearly all of the
top players in the Notre Dame career
record book have played for Brown.
That group includes 13 of the 16 players
to have registered 1,000 career kills,
all six who notched both 1,000 kills and
1,000 digs, the top six competitors on
the career hitting-percentage list, six of
the top seven on both the assists and
service aces lists, and each of the top 10
student-athletes in career digs.
Christy Peters, one of the top players
in Irish volleyball history, played atNotre Dame during Brown's first four seasons
and was tabbed a third-team All-American in
both 1993 and 1994. She still stands as the program's
career leader in kills (1,683) and her digs
mark stood 11 years before broken by 2006 graduate
Meg Henican, who ended her career with
22 of the 25 Irish dig records.
Among the other standouts coached by Brown
have been Jessica Fiebelkorn (1992), two-time
BIG EAST Player-of-the-Year Jaimie Lee (1997),
Denise Boylan (2000), Kristen Kinder (2003),
Emily Loomis (2003), Lauren Kelbley (2003-05),
and Adrianna Stasiuk (2005) - all of whom have
earned honorable mention All-America status.
Lee and Boylan were invited to train with the
United States national team program during the
summer of 1998, while the former earned a spot
on the 1997 World University Games team.
Kristy Kreher (1998-2001) also was one of just
20 players named to the USA Junior National
Team in 2000.
Seven of Brown's former Irish players have
gone on to play professionally. Angie (Harris)
Akers is currently active in the Association of
Volleyball Professionals (AVP), while Lee competed
in the league until 2005. Jessica and Kristen
Kinder (2004) also played briefly on the beach.
Akers - who finished in the top 20 of the AVP
standings in her first four seasons on tour - was
the 2002 AVP Rookie of the Year, an honor Lee
earned one year later.Three former Notre Dame
competitors were active in the United States
Professional Volleyball league in 2002 - Boylan
and Kreher were members of the Minnesota
Chill and Molly Stark played for the St. Louis
Quest.
Five of Brown's former Irish assistants have
gone on to become head coaches: Robin Davis
(Boise State), Devin Scruggs (Nevada), Steve
Schlick (Cal Poly), Sue Woodstra (Pittsburgh,
California, Humboldt State), and 2004 AVCA
National Coach of the Year Jim McLaughlin
(Washington), who led the Huskies to the 2005
NCAA title.
Brown also coached several premier players at
Arizona State, including three-time Olympian
Tammy (Webb) Liebl (1988-96) and All-
Americans Christy Nore and Regina Stahl.
The Sun Devils were ranked among the top
programs in the nation
for six seasons, and in
1986 Brown led the Sun
Devils to a 27-7 record
and was named Pacific-
10 Conference Coach of
the Year. She compiled a
117-83 record en route
to five NCAA
Tournament berths
while at Arizona State.
After serving as a program
consultant since
1986, Brown took a
leave of absence in 1988
to serve as an assistant
coach for the United
States National Team
before accepting a fulltime
national team position
in 1989. Brown's
duties centered on helping
improve the national team's defense and her
efforts played a role in a United States bronzemedal
finish at the 1990 World Championship in
China. She also coached national teams in the
1985 and 1991 Olympic Festivals.
Since picking up the sport late in her high
school days, Brown has become one of the most
respected and accomplished individuals in all of
volleyball. She grew up in the Los Angeles suburb
of El Segundo to become one of the nation's
top prep players. She competed as a 17-year-old
for the United States at the 1974 World
Championship in Mexico City and a year later
played on the adidas team that won the USVBA
title.
After graduating from El Segundo High
School, she captained the University of Southern
California to a 72-1 two-year record and national
titles in both 1976 and 1977, including a 38-0
run in 1977 that, until 1998, was the only
unbeaten season in Division I women's volleyball
history. Her 1977 squad is still considered one of
the all-time greatest at any level of volleyball.
Brown (then Debbie Landreth) twice was named
a collegiate All-American and received the
Mikasa Award as the "nation's best all-around
player" in 1976 and 1977.
The 5-foot-8 outside hitter left USC prior to
her junior year, accepting an invitation to train
full-time with the U.S. national team. She cocaptained
the team to a fifth-place finish at the
1978 World Championships.A year later, she and
her teammates - including all-time greats Debbie
Green, Flo Hyman, Sue Woodstra and Rita
Crockett - qualified for the Olympics in Moscow
and were considered serious medal contenders
before the U.S. elected to boycott the games.
Four of Brown's former USA teammates went
on to become college head coaches, while
Debbie Green is in her 22nd season as an assistant
at Long Beach State, and Diane
(McCormick) French is the technical director for
the U.S. national team.
After serving as co-captain of the 1980
Olympic team, Brown completed her degree in
physical education at Arizona State in 1982. An
undergraduate, she began her coaching career as
an assistant under Dale Flickinger at ASU, fillingthat role from 1980-82 before serving in the
same capacity at Central Arizona College during
the 1982 season. She returned to Arizona State as
head coach in 1983.
Her international experience and travels has
afforded her the opportunity to coach and play in
22 countries across the world. In honor of her
work, Brown was selected as an Olympic
Torchbearer for the 2002 Winter Olympic Torch
Relay when it traveled through the Northern
Indiana area.
In May of 1995, USA Volleyball named Brown
an "All-Time Great Volleyball Player," the highest
honor given by the organization. Brown and
fellow honoree Karch Kiraly, a three-time
Olympic gold medalist and beach volleyball legend,
were recognized at the U.S. Open
Championships in Springfield, Mass., and had
their photos and records added to the Volleyball
Hall of Fame in Holyoke, Mass. Established in
1954, the "All-Time Great" designation honors
players with Olympic, national team or All-
America honors, U.S. Open Championships, and
overall dominance during a particular era.
Among the 51 previous winners before Brown
were Hyman, Woodstra, Green, Crockett, and
Laurel Brassey - all former teammates.
Brown earned USVBA All-America honors
eight times and won the USVBA's Kilgore
Sportsmanship Award in 1983. A six-time
USVBA first-team All-American, Brown was a
member of the USVBA Board of Directors and
the U.S. Olympic Committee's Athlete Advisory
Council. She served a two-year term (1995-96)
as president of the American Volleyball Coaches
Association and was a member of its All-America
selection committee.
In 2003, Brown was recognized for her outstanding
career by the NCAA with the Silver
Anniversary Award, which annually recognizes
six distinguished student-athletes for accomplishments
since concluding their collegiate playing
days 25 years ago.
Brown played for the 1975, 1985 and 1986
USVBA national-championship teams. In 1992,
she joined several of her former Olympic squad
teammates to capture the USVBA senior division
national title in Reno, Nev.
Recognizing Brown's effort and success, the
Notre Dame Monogram Club bestowed upon
her an honorary monogram at the annual club
banquet in 1999.
Brown has been actively involved in the
Fellowship of Christian Athletes and Young Life,
serving as a motivational speaker and coach at
national banquets and camps. She also volunteers
for Rebuilding Together, a home-rehabilitation
program in South Bend.
Brown and her husband of 27 years, Dennis,
have two sons, Connor and Ryan.
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