Alisa Kresge Explained

Alisa Kresge
Current Title:Head coach
Current Team:Vermont
Current Conference:America East
Birth Date:1 April 1985
Birth Place:Holmdel, New Jersey
Player Years1:2003–2007
Player Team1:Marist
Coach Years1:2009–2016
Coach Team1:Marist (assistant)
Coach Years2:2016–2018
Coach Team2:Vermont (assistant)
Coach Years3:2018–present
Coach Team3:Vermont
Championships:America East regular season (2023)
America East tournament (2023)
Awards:America East Coach of the Year (2023)

Alisa Kresge (born April 1, 1985) is a former American women's basketball player and current coach. She is the head coach of the Vermont Catamounts women's basketball team.[1]

Playing career

Kresge played at Marist where she was part of four MAAC regular season title teams, and three MAAC tournament championship teams. With the Red Foxes, Kresge made three NCAA Tournament appearances as a player, culminating in a Sweet 16 appearance in 2007.[2] She graduated as the school's all-time leader in assists with 596, and second all-time in steals with 222.[1]

Marist statistics

Source[3]

YearTeamGPPointsFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
2003–04Marist315932.1%31.3%40.0%3.62.31.40.21.9
2004–05Marist299232.6%40.6%44.2%4.75.61.80.13.2
2005–06Marist308724.5%24.0%54.7%4.05.81.70.32.9
2006–07Marist3511128.2%25.5%54.5%3.65.42.10.13.2
Career12534928.9%28.9%49.1%4.04.81.80.22.8

Coaching career

Marist

In 2009, Kresge joined the coaching staff of her alma mater under Brian Giorgis.[4] The Red Foxes would reach the postseason six of the eight years she was on staff with five NCAA Tournament appearances and a WNIT appearance.

Vermont

Kresge joined the coaching staff at Vermont in 2016, serving as associate head coach under Chris Day.[1] After Day resigned his position amid an investigation into his verbal conduct and subsequently took an assistant coaching position at La Salle, Kresge was given the title of interim head coach for the 2018–19 season.[5]

During her interim coaching season, Kresge guided the Catamounts to its best record in nearly a decade going 11–18 overall for the most wins since the 2009–10 season.[6] On April 9, 2019 the interim tag was officially lifted and Kresge was named the ninth head coach in Vermont women's basketball history.[7] During the 2021–22 season, Kresge led the Catamounts to the first 20-win season since the 2009–10 season, finishing with a 20–11 overall record and an appearance in the semifinals of the 2022 America East tournament.[8] The following season, the Catamounts claimed the America East regular season title for the first time in 21 years, and the America East tournament title for the first time since 2010, earning an appearance in the 2023 NCAA Tournament.[9] [10] Vermont faced second-seeded UConn, falling 95–52.[11]

The 2023–24 season saw Kresge guide Vermont to a 25–12 overall record, earning the team a berth in the 2024 WNIT, where it won three games en route to the Fab 4, falling to Saint Louis at Patrick Gym 57–54.[12]

Head coaching record

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alisa Kresge - Women's Basketball Coach. University of Vermont Athletics.
  2. Web site: Alisa Kresge - Women's Basketball. Marist College Athletics.
  3. Web site: NCAA Statistics. web1.ncaa.org. 2021-06-08.
  4. Web site: Alisa Kresge - Women's Basketball Coach. Marist College Athletics.
  5. Web site: Vermont women's basketball coach resigns amid investigation. USA TODAY.
  6. Web site: Interim no more: UVM, women's basketball coach Alisa Kresge agree to 4-year deal. Burlington Free Press.
  7. Web site: Alisa Kresge Named Head Coach of Women’s Basketball. University of Vermont Athletics.
  8. Web site: UVM women's basketball roars to first America East tournament win since 2013. Alex. Abrami. The Burlington Free Press.
  9. Web site: UVM women's basketball ends 21-year drought with America East championship. Burlington Free Press.
  10. Web site: UVM women's basketball seals first America East championship since 2010. Burlington Free Press.
  11. Web site: UConn opens March Madness run with 95-52 rout of Vermont. March 19, 2023. AP News.
  12. Web site: 'Epitome of Vermont women’s basketball': Utterback closes career following WNIT Fab 4 loss. Burlington Free Press.
  13. Web site: Women’s Basketball to Discontinue Remainder of 2020-21 Season. University of Vermont Athletics.