Rollie Massimino, best known for guiding the Villanova Wildcats to the 1985 NCAA Championship, built the Northwood University program from scratch in 2006. The Seahawks have appeared in nine National Tournaments including two Final Four appearances.
Massimino has led the Seahawks to seven Sun Conference Regular Season Championships and two Tournament Championships. Massimino joined the 800-win club with a 77-47 victory over Trinity Baptist on December 14th, 2016.
Massimino was named the 2011 NAIA National Coach of the Year and followed that up by being named the Rawlings National Coach of the Year in 2012. Within in the Sun Conference, Massimino has been named Coach of the Year five times with the most recent coming during the 2015/16 season.
For his achievements in college basketball, Massimino was elected as a member of the 2013 class of the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in Kansas City, Missouri. In 2017, Massimino was named a finalist for the Naismith Hall of Fame.
During the 2012 season, Coach Massimino became the 39th coach to record 700 career wins, and became just the third coach in college basketball history to reach the 700-win plateau and win an NCAA National Championship during their coaching career.
Prior to Massimino’s time with the Seahawks, he racked up numerous awards at Villanova. In 1985, he was tabbed National Coach of the Year by both MacGregor Sporting Goods and Playboy magazine while in 1982 he earned Big East Coach of the Year accolades, just one of eight times he was honored on a league basis in the NCAA.
Noted for his "Family Style" coaching, Massimino is considered to be one of the greatest college coaches of all time. He motivates his players with the belief that “Enthusiasm is Contagious!” That message reflects Coach Massimino’s view of life. By giving 100 percent, on and off the court, those around you can’t help but believe and become inspired. In Massimino’s case, he instills enthusiasm into those around him by seemingly giving 110 percent - all the time. He motivates through his ceaseless energy while his enthusiasm for life and the game of basketball radiates onto to his players.
Massimino took his Villanova program to the top in 1985, when the Wildcats pounced on heavily-favored Georgetown to take the NCAA Championship on April 1. During his tenure at Villanova, the Wildcats earned 16 postseason tournament berths with 11 being in the NCAA Tournament. In Villanova’s 12 seasons of Big East play under Massimino, his squads earned two regular-season titles, advanced to the conference championship game three times and compiled a 110-80 (.578) regular-season record.
Massimino began his coaching career in 1956 after graduating from the University of Vermont where he played varsity basketball for three years.
His first three seasons he served as an assistant coach at Cranford (NJ) High school before securing his first head coaching job at Hillside (NJ) High School, his prep alma mater, in 1959. From there he moved to Lexington (MA) High School in 1963 where he led one squad to a state championship and another to a 20-1 record.
In ten seasons as a high school coach, Massimino compiled a 160-61 record. He debuted at the collegiate coaching level in 1969 as the head coach at the State University of New York (SUNY)-Stony Brook. His first team went 19-6, won the conference championship and earned a berth in the NCAA small college tournament. Massimino’s next step was an assistant’s position at the University of Pennsylvania under the late Chuck Daly, known for winning back-to-back NBA championships with the Detroit Pistons in 1989 and 1990. In March 1973, Massimino left Penn to succeed Jack Kraft as the head coach at Villanova.
Massimino has a master’s degree equivalent in health and physical education from Rutgers University (1959) and a bachelor’s degree from Vermont (1956) in education. Massimino and his wife Mary Jane have five children - Tom, Lee Ann, Michele, Roland (R.C.) and Andrew - as well as 17 grandchildren.