Fred Chmiel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TitleHead coach
ConferenceMAC
Record51–42 (.548)†
Fred Chmiel
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamBowling Green
ConferenceMAC
Record51–42 (.548)†
Biographical details
Alma materExcelsior College
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1994–1995Feather River College (men's asst.)
1995–1999Feather River College (men's HC)
1999–2005Lassen College (men's HC)
2005Charlotte Sting (asst.)
2006San Jose Spiders
2006–2008Temple (asst.)
2008–2010San Diego State (asst.)
2010–2014Penn State (asst.)
2014–2015Minnesota (asst.)
2015–2023South Carolina (asst.)
2023–presentBowling Green
Head coaching record
Overall51–42 (.548)†

Fredrick Joe Chmiel is an American women's basketball coach. He is currently the women's basketball head coach at the Bowling Green State University.[1] He previously served as the head coach at Feather River College, Lassen College and the San Jose Spiders of the NWBL. He also was an assistant coach in the WNBA and at several NCAA Division I universities including the University of South Carolina where he was part of two national championship teams.[2]

Chmiel played basketball at Feather River College in California where he was All-Golden Valley Conference first-team. He also attended the University of Alaska-Fairbanks. He earned a bachelor's degree in liberal studies from Excelsior College and a master's degree in athletics administration from Concordia University.[3][4][5]

Coaching career

Chmiel began is coaching career as an assistant coach of the women's basketball team at Feather River College in 1994 and took over as the head coach the following year where he stayed for four seasons. In 1999 he took over as the head coach at Lassen College where he won three Golden Valley Conference championships.[6]

In 2005 he was an assistant with the Charlotte Sting of the WNBA where he coached future Hall of Famer Dawn Staley. He was also a WNBA scout with the Indiana Fever and Detroit Shock.[7] In 2006 he was the head coach of the NWBL's San Jose Spiders.[4]

He accepted his first Division I assistant coach position under Dawn Staley from 2006 through 2008 when she was the head coach at Temple.[8] He held an assistant coach position for two seasons at San Diego State, four seasons at Penn State, and one season at Minnesota before reuniting with Staley as one of her assistants at South Carolina in 2015.[4][3][9] During his eight years with the Gamecocks they won two national titles and advanced to the final four in each of his final three seasons.[10] He helped coach A'ja Wilson and Aliyah Boston to National Player of the Year awards.[11]

Bowling Green

On April 8, 2023, he was named as the 10th head coach women's basketball head coach at Bowling Green.[12]

Head coaching record

NWBL

Team Year G W L W–L% Finish PG PW PL PW–L% Result
San Jose Spiders200618810.4443rd211.500Won third place game

College

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Bowling Green (Mid-American Conference) (2023–present)
2023–24[13] Bowling Green 16–1510–8T–4thWNIT First Round
2024–25 Bowling Green 18–1311–7T–5th
2025–26 Bowling Green 17–149–9T-6th
Bowling Green: 51–42 (.548)30–24 (.556)
Total:51–42 (.548)†

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Coaching record does not include his collegiate men's basketball coaching record at Feather River College and Lassen College because it is unknown to the author.

Personal life

References

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