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BORTON'S BIO
Pam Borton embarks
on her sixth season at the helm of the women’s basketball
program at the
University
of Minnesota
with her philosophy and system firmly in place. Her teams
have been built, and will continue to be built, on the ethic
of hard work paying dividends. Borton’s Golden Gophers play
with a focused tenacity, the same quality these young women
display in the classroom and in their everyday lives.
Athletic success on the surface breaks down to the simple
wins and losses. The Golden Gopher program obviously
relishes its tradition of success on the court, however to
those lucky few who don the Maroon and Gold, there is so
much more. One can point to postseason appearances in every
season that Borton has graced the sidelines and although
impressive in itself, there is still more to be proud of. A
deeper look reveals signposts such as nationally ranked
attendance averages and academic achievements that have the
Golden Gophers building upon an accomplished, proud and
lasting tradition.
In the coaching realm where 20-win seasons are significant
indicators of success, Borton has averaged 20 wins over her
nine seasons as a head coach. As she completes a full decade
as a head coach in 2007-08, Borton is 19 wins away from
gathering the 200th victory of her coaching career. Along
the way with Borton at the reigns, Minnesota has enjoyed
seasons with 25 or more wins three times, four NCAA
Tournament appearances, three Sweet Sixteens, as well as a
magical ride to the Final Four in 2004.
Borton celebrated her 100th victory at
Minnesota
during the 2006-07 season with a 70-67 victory over Kent State
in the Northern Arizona Thanksgiving Tournament. She added
an exclamation point to number 100 by accomplishing the feat
faster than any other coach, men or women, in modern Golden
Gopher history.
Borton successfully completed one of her most successful
seasons of teaching when she molded her 2006-07 squad,
tabbed the second-youngest team in the nation starting the
season with eight freshmen and one senior, into a team that
posted a winning record (17-16) and advanced to the
second-round of the WNIT. The season marked the emergence of
Emily Fox, who went on earn All-Big Ten Second Team accord
and a spot on the
USA
Pan American team.
Borton’s charges also perform at the highest level in the
classroom, combining for a 3.2 grade point average during
the 2006-07 school year. The Gophers have earned a team GPA
of over 3.0 in every semester that she has been the head
coach. In 2005,
Minnesota
was honored by the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association
(WBCA) for having one of the nation’s top 25 team GPAs. Led
by ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District honoree Leslie
Knight, the Gophers had five of six eligible players honored
on the Academic All-Big Ten Team a year ago.
The Gophers marked a 19-10 record in 2005-06 and advanced to
their fifth consecutive NCAA Tournament.
Minnesota
extended their streak of national rankings in the Associated
Press Poll to a school-record 83 consecutive weeks and
finished the season ranked No. 25.
Coach Borton was the first coach in Big Ten history to lead
a school to 25 or more wins in each of her first three
seasons, accomplishing this feat at Minnesota from 2002-05.
Borton’s 76 wins over a span of her first three seasons with
the Golden Gophers ranks second in Big Ten annuals. Even
some of the greatest names in the history of coaching, such
as Pat Summitt and Geno Auriemna, are unable to boast of a
trio of 20-plus win seasons out of the blocks, much less
25-plus. Borton’s 26 wins in the 2004-05 campaign were the
most in school history during the NCAA era.
On the heels of the Gophers’ historic trek to the 2004 Final
Four, Borton guided her 2004-05 squad to the highest of
expectations where the Gophers succeeded on a level never
before seen in school history. Minnesota tallied 26 wins and earned passage
to the Gophers’ third straight Sweet 16. The Gophers went
farther than ever in the Big Ten Tournament, finishing as
the tourney runner-up, losing a tough finale to
Michigan
State. Overall, the
Gophers’ 26-8 overall record would include six losses to
teams that played in the 2005 Final Four.
Minnesota
was ranked No. 11 in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches National
Poll and No. 12 in the Associated Press National Poll to
complete the 2004-05 campaign.
At season’s end, Borton saw her senior All-American Janel
McCarville named the No. 1 pick overall by the Charlotte
Sting in the 2005 WNBA Draft to become the first player from
the Big Ten Conference to be drafted No. 1 overall. In
addition to McCarville collecting several All-America
awards, Borton herself was honored as one of 25 finalists
for the Naismith Coach of the year award for the second time
in three years.
Borton led the Gophers to their first Final Four in school
history and a record of 25-9 in the 2003-04 campaign. The
national exposure gave Borton the opportunity to announce
the arrival of the Golden Gophers as one of the elite teams
in the nation.
Minnesota
has been nationally ranked in every poll during Borton’s
tenure, peaking at No. 4 in the ESPN/USA Today following the
Final Four. However, it was the fascinating march to the
Final Four that made Minnesota a household name across the nation
and one of the most popular sporting teams ever in its home
state.
The Gophers accomplished many program firsts during the
2003-04 season in addition to their Final Four appearance.
Minnesota
started the season with 15 consecutive victories; the
longest overall winning streak and the best start to a
season. At 15-0, the Gophers were the last undefeated team
in the nation. The team was ranked in the top 10 of the
Associated Press national poll for a school-record eight
weeks.
As Minnesota’s
national ranking soared, so did its attendance figures. A
record crowd of 14,363 packed Williams Arena to see the
Gophers defeat then No. 5-ranked Penn
State
on Feb. 8, 2004.
Minnesota’s average of 11,281 in
conference games led the Big Ten. Final attendance numbers
reached six figures for the first time in school history and
by season’s end, the Gophers averaged 9,703 fans per game,
an average that ranked sixth in the nation.
Minnesota was selected to host the first and second rounds
of the NCAA Tournament, the first time the Gophers played
host to a March Madness contest in Williams Arena. After
defeating UCLA and Kansas
State at home, fans followed the Golden
Gophers as they continued their tournament run in the NCAA
Mideast Regional in Norfolk,
Va., with wins over
Boston
College and Duke. The win
over Duke marked the first win in school history over a team
ranked No. 1 in the nation. Thanks to record-setting
attendance figures in 2004, both at home and on the road,
Williams Arena hosted the first and second rounds of NCAA
Tournament play in 2005 and 2007.
Following the season, the Gophers’ All-America guard and
all-time leading scorer Lindsay Whalen was drafted at No. 4
by the Connecticut
Sun, becoming the first
Minnesota
player drafted into the WNBA and the highest pick in Big Ten
history. Borton also collected the honor of National Coach
of the Year awarded by the New England Basketball Hall of
Fame.
Borton’s overall mark at
Minnesota
stands at 112-49 (181-95 overall in nine seasons). Minnesota posted a record of 25-6 in 2002-03,
Borton’s first season with the Golden Gophers. The mark was
the school’s best overall record during the NCAA era until
her squad bettered it with 26 wins in 2004-05. The Gophers
collected their first top-10 national ranking during the
season and advanced to their first Sweet 16 in the NCAA
Tournament. Borton was again among 25 national finalists for
the Naismith Coach of the Year Award.
Minnesota
fans flock to historic Williams Arena to support their
Golden Gophers. In Borton’s five seasons,
Minnesota
has ranked in the top 10 of the national attendance figures
four times, including top 5 showing in both the 2004-05 and
2005-06 seasons. Before the Borton era, there were only two
crowds of over 10,000 spectators in the Gopher record book.
There are now 21, highlighted by a sell-out of The Barn on
Feb. 8, 2004, versus
Penn
State.
When Big Ten opponents come to town, the Gophers’ attendance
figures are even more impressive.
Minnesota
has ranked first in conference attendance the last three of
the last four seasons. Since Borton’s arrival in 2002,
Minnesota
has posted four of the top 12 conference-only average
attendance figures in Big Ten history. An average attendance
of 11,281 fans per game in the 2003-04 season was the best
in Gopher history and ranks second all-time in Big Ten
history.
Borton has also made a huge contribution off the court, both
in the University community and the communities throughout
the state of Minnesota. Borton served as the department
spokesperson for the University’s
2005 Community Fund Drive
campaign. She also engaged and succeeded in leading a $1
million fundraising campaign for a new locker-room for the
Golden Gophers completed in 2006. A sought-after speaker in
the public and private sectors, Borton has entertained
several crowds with her message of success, including recent
appearances with metro area Rotary, Chamber of Commerce, and
Professional Women in Business groups, as well as several
large local companies such as Cargill and Comcast.
Coach Borton was named as the
Minnesota
women’s basketball coach on May 24, 2002, the seventh head
coach in the history of Golden Gopher women’s basketball.
Previously, Borton spent five years (1997-2002) at
Boston
College, where she was
promoted to associate head coach for the last two years. She
served as the Eagles’ recruiting coordinator and produced
top 25 recruiting classes three times.
Borton helped the Eagles to a 102-51 record, including NCAA
Tournament berths in 1999, 2000 and 2002.
Boston College advanced to the second round of the NCAA
Tournament in 1999 and 2000, and entered the 2002 tournament
as a No. 5 seed but was upset by
Mississippi
State in the first round.
Boston College finished the 2001-02 season with
a record of 23-8 overall and 12-4 (third) in the BIG EAST.
The Eagles lost to eventual undefeated national champion
Connecticut
in the BIG EAST Tournament championship game.
Borton joined the Boston College women's basketball staff as an assistant coach
in June 1997, after serving as the head coach at the University of Vermont
from 1993-97. In her four years as head coach at Vermont, she led the Catamounts to a 69-46
(.667) record, a North Atlantic Conference championship, and
an NCAA Tournament appearance in 1994.
A Fayette, Ohio native, Borton was an assistant at Vermont
for five years and was named head coach in May of 1993. In
her first season as head coach, she led
Vermont to the
North Atlantic Conference title, marking the third
consecutive championship for the Catamounts.
Vermont
finished second in the league in 1995-96 and 1996-97. As a Vermont assistant coach, Borton helped lead
the Catamounts to consecutive undefeated seasons in 1991-92
and 1992-93, including an NCAA-record 53 consecutive
regular-season victories.
Prior to her arrival at Vermont
in 1988, Borton served as an assistant coach with the Bowling Green University
women's basketball team for the 1987-88 season. Borton
received her Master's degree in Sports Management from
Bowling Green in 1988.
A 1987 graduate of Defiance College in
Ohio, Borton received a Bachelor of
Science Degree in Physical Education. She was a four-year
letter winner on the basketball team, served as the team
captain as a junior and senior, and was a third-team
All-American both years. A three-time all-conference and
all-district selection, Borton was named the conference and
district player of the year as a senior. Borton scored more
than 1,000 points during her collegiate career and was voted Defiance College's
Female Athlete of the Year as a senior.
Borton will be inducted into the Defiance College Athletic
Hall of Fame this fall.
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