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| Coach Lin Dunn | |
|---|---|
| WNBA's Indiana Fever | |
| Born | 1948 |
| Nationality | American |
| College | University of Tennessee-Martin |
| WNBA career | 2000–present |
| Regular season | 72–92 (.439) |
| Postseason | 7–8 (.467) |
| Profile | WNBA Info Page |
| WNBA Head Coach of | |
| Seattle Storm (2000-2002) Indiana Fever (2008-present) |
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| WNBA Assistant Coach of | |
| Indiana Fever (2004-2007) | |
Lin Dunn is an American longtime women's basketball coach. She is most known for being the first coach and general manager for the Seattle Storm. She has more than 500 wins to her name.
The 1969 University of Tennessee-Martin graduate coached for decades in the college ranks, amassing a 447-257 record in 25 seasons as a college head coach. In her tenure at Austin Peay State University, the University of Mississippi, the University of Miami and Purdue University, she made the NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship seven times, and the Final Four once, in 1994 with Purdue. She is in the Athletics Hall of Fame at both Austin Peay and Miami. Dunn also was president of the Women's Basketball Coaches Association in 1984-85.
She came to the pros with the American Basketball League's Portland Power in 1996. She was ABL's coach of the year in 1998, right before that league folded. Dunn then became the first coach and GM of the expansion Seattle Storm in the ABL's rival, the WNBA. Her folksy southern personality was a hit in urbane Seattle, with fans often wearing Dunn masks and quoting her rustic aphorisms. The team started with a dismal 6-26 season.
Dunn left the Storm just as it was starting to have success. New superstars Lauren Jackson and Sue Bird led the team to the 2002 playoffs, where they were swept by the Los Angeles Sparks. Dunn then resigned, leaving the path open for Anne Donovan to build a championship team just two seasons later.
Dunn now is the head coach with the Indiana Fever.
| Preceded by Initial coach |
Seattle Storm Head Coach 2000-2002 |
Succeeded by Anne Donovan |
| Preceded by Brian Winters |
Indiana Fever Head Coach 2008–current |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
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