Fran Fraschilla

Fran Fraschilla
Sport(s) Basketball
Biographical details
Born (1958-08-30) August 30, 1958
Brooklyn, New York
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1992–1996 Manhattan
1996–1998 St. John's
1999–2002 New Mexico
Head coaching record
Overall 176–99 (.640)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
NCAA Division I Tournament appearances (1993, 1995, 1998)
NIT appearances (1994, 1996, 20002002)
MAAC regular season championships (1993, 1995)
MAAC Tournament championship (1993)
Awards
MAAC Coach of the Year (1995)

Fran Fraschilla (born August 30, 1958) is an American basketball commentator and former college basketball coach.

Career

He served as head men's basketball coach at Manhattan College, St. John's University and the University of New Mexico, before joining ESPN as broadcast analyst. He currently serves as a game analyst, mostly on Big 12 action, and as a studio analyst for ESPN college basketball programming. He also covers the NBA Draft, focusing mostly on foreign players. He was an assistant coach at Providence with University of Tennessee coach Rick Barnes. His co-broadcaster on many Big 12 games is Brent Musburger. He also serves as ESPN's analyst for its broadcasts of FIBA tournaments. His son, James Fraschilla, played for the University of Oklahoma men's basketball team and was nominated for the Big 12 Sportsperson of the Year Award. His younger son Matthew Fraschilla is a senior playing basketball at Harvard University in 2016-17. Fraschilla's wife Meg O'Connell Fraschilla is a former publicist at the Southwest Conference and LSU.

Head coaching record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Manhattan (Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference) (1992–1996)
1992–93 Manhattan 23–7 12–2 1st NCAA First Round
1993–94 Manhattan 20–10 10–4 T-2nd NIT First Round
1994–95 Manhattan 26–5 12–2 1st NCAA Second Round
1995–96 Manhattan 17–12 9–5 3rd NIT First Round
Manhattan: 86–34 (.717) 43–13 (.768)
St. John's (Big East Conference) (1996–1998)
1996–97 St. John's 13–14 8–10 5th (BE6)
1997–98 St. John's 22–10 13–5 2nd (BE6) NCAA First Round
St. John's: 35–24 (.593) 21–15 (.583)
New Mexico (Mountain West Conference) (1999–2002)
1999–00 New Mexico 18–14 9–5 3rd NIT Second Round
2000–01 New Mexico 21–13 6–8 T-5th NIT Quarterfinal
2001–02 New Mexico 16–14 6–8 6th NIT First Round
New Mexico: 55–41 (.573) 21–21 (.500)
Total: 176–99 (.640)

      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

References

    External links


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