|
| Ben O'Brien needed just 106 games to reach 100 career wins, doing so faster than any other men's or women's college basketball coach at any level. Photo by Brian Bishop, d3photography.com |
The University of Scranton announced today that head women's basketball coach Ben O'Brien has accepted the position of head coach at Lafayette. A national search for the program's next head coach will begin immediately, as Division III women's basketball's pipeline of head coaches directly to jobs in NCAA Division I continues.
O'Brien departs Scranton after a historic and remarkably successful tenure, compiling a 117–7 record (.943) while elevating the Royals to national prominence. Under his leadership, the program captured four Landmark Conference championships (2023, 2024, 2025, 2026) and made four consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances. Scranton advanced to three straight NCAA Elite Eight rounds (2024–26), reached the program's first NCAA Final Four since 2019, including advancing to the national title game.
"I would like to thank Ben O'Brien for his outstanding leadership of the Lady Royals basketball program over these last four years," said athletic director Dave Martin. "Coach O'Brien built on the history and tradition of our women's basketball program and provided us with many exciting moments that captivated the Scranton community. Under Ben's direction, our team reached new competitive heights while representing Scranton in a manner that made Royals everywhere proud. While we are disappointed by his departure, we wish Ben, Mandy, and the entire O'Brien family well in their new endeavor."
Next season, Scranton will have its fifth women's basketball coach since the legendary Mike Strong retired, which came 13 seasons ago, after the 2013-14 season. One of those coaches, Trevor Woodruff, also went directly from Scranton to the Patriot League, at Bucknell.
O'Brien's tenure was marked by several historic milestones. He reached 100 career wins in fewer games than any other men's or women's college basketball coach in history at any level and tied for the fastest in any collegiate sport, a milestone which he reached in his 106th career game. He also led Scranton to a landmark victory as the first NCAA Division III women's basketball team to defeat a Power 4 opponent, in an exhibition game.
He takes over a Leopards program which went 11-19 this past season under Kia Damon-Olson. Damon-Olson coached Lafayette for nine seasons, compiling a record of 92-161.
Individually, O'Brien earned numerous accolades, including D3hoops.com National Coach of the Year honors in 2026. He was also a WBCA National Coach of the Year finalist in 2023 and 2026, the D3hoops.com Region 5 Coach of the Year in 2026, and a two-time Landmark Conference Coach of the Year (2023, 2026).
Beyond team success, O'Brien played a key role in player development, guiding three All-Americans and multiple all-region and all-conference selections. His players earned two All-Region Player of the Year honors, one All-Region Rookie of the Year award, and multiple Landmark Conference major awards, including Player, Defensive Player, and Rookie of the Year distinctions.
"I am incredibly thankful for my time at The University of Scranton," said O'Brien. "It has been an honor to coach such an outstanding group of student-athletes and to be part of a special community. I'm grateful for the support from our administration, alumni, and fans throughout this journey."
From D-III to D-IThe list of coaches to go directly from D-III to D-I head coaching jobs since 2000 has gotten longer in the past decade. Click on the links to see stories on each coach's jump. |
||||
| Coach, D-III school | D-I school | Year | Best year there | Current job |
| Lisa Stone, UW-Eau Claire | Drake | 2000-01 | 25-8, 2001-02 | Back in D-III, head coach at Wash U (21-7 in 25-26) |
| Candace Crabtree, Rowan | Drexel | 2000-01 | 19-10, 2000-01 | Out of coaching, development at MIT |
| Richard Barron, Sewanee | Princeton | 2000-01 | 21-7, 2005-06 | Out as Maine men's head coach after 21-22 |
| Tammy Smith, Muhlenberg | Lafayette | 2001-02 | 14-16, 2007-08 | Out of coaching |
| Julie Goodenough, Hardin-Simmons | Oklahoma St. | 2002-03 | 8-20, 2003-04 | 274 career wins at D-I Abilene Christian (26-4 in 15-16) |
| Mary Hegarty, Chapman | Long Beach St. | 2003-04 | 19-9, 2004-05 | Out of coaching, associate AD at Santa Ana College |
| Kristin Hughes, Case | Colgate | 2004-05 | 12-18, 2004-05 | Out of coaching, AD at Smith |
| Stefanie Pemper, Bowdoin | Navy | 2008-09 | 25-8, 2017-18 | Out of coaching |
| Scott Rueck, George Fox | Oregon St. | 2010-11 | 31-4, 2016-17 | 339 career wins at Oregon State |
| Aaron Roussell, Chicago | Bucknell | 2012-13 | 28-6, 2018-19 | New HC at Virginia after going 148-70 at Richmond |
| Greg Todd, Transylvania | Morehead St. | 2013-14 | 24-11, 2018-19 | 101-63 at D-I Eastern Kentucky (25-9 in 25-26) |
| Nancy Fahey, Washington U. | Illinois | 2016-17 | 11-19, 2019-20 | Retired after 21-22 season |
| Loree Payne, Puget Sound | Northern Arizona | 2016-17 | 27-8, 2024-25 | D-I Santa Clara (24-10 in 25-26) |
| Marc Mitchell, FDU-Florham | St. Peter's | 2017-18 | 13-15, 2020-21 | D-I Indiana State (10-22 in 25-26) |
| Scott Hemer, SUNY Geneseo | Canisius | 2017-18 | 11-19, 2018-19 | Retired after 20-21 season |
| Michael Meek, George Fox | Portland | 2018-19 | 31-5, 2024-25 | 150-77 at Portland |
| Trevor Woodruff, Scranton | Bucknell | 2018-19 | 24-6, 2019-20 | 111-85 at Bucknell |
| Lauren Sumski, Rhodes | Lipscomb | 2018-19 | 20-12, 2024-25 | 96-110 at Lipscomb |
| Carla Berube, Tufts | Princeton | 2018-19 | 26-1, 2019-20 | Northwestern for 2026-27 |
| Kelly Morrone, John Carroll | Merrimack | 2020-21 | 19-13, 2025-26 | Merrimack |
| Adrienne Shibles, Bowdoin | Dartmouth | 2021-22 | 3-23, 2021-22 | Assistant AD/SWA at Bates |
| Tamika Williams-Jeter, Wittenberg | Dayton | 2022-23 | 18-13, 2024-25 | Dayton |
| Emily Garner, Trinity (Conn.) | Cornell (N.Y.) | 2023-24 | 9-18, 2025-26 | Cornell |
| Juli Fulks, Transylvania | Marshall | 2023-24 | 25-9, 2025-26 | Marshall |
| Drew Long, McMurry | Houston Christian | 2024-25 | 8-21, 2025-26 | Houston Christian |
| Ben O'Brien, Scranton | Lafayette | 2025-26 | ||