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31 for 30

A host of Oxy hoops greats return to campus to surprise men’s basketball coach Brian Newhall ’83 in commemoration of three decades on the hardwood

Following the 1987-88 basketball season, °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp head coach Bill Westphal left the Tigers to take the top coaching job at Grand Canyon University in Phoenix. His 27-year-old assistant, Brian Newhall ’83, was named interim head coach—and the following season the Tigers improved from 12-14 to 15-10 overall, finishing third in the SCIAC. Newhall was offered the job permanently—a position he clearly took to heart.

With a career coaching record of 434-333 as of February 6 (following the Tigers’ victory over Redlands), Newhall is Oxy’s winningest hoops coach of all time, and can claim a 100 percent graduation rate for his senior players. His resume boasts multiple SCIAC crowns, a run to the NCAA Division III Elite Eight in 2003, and the only perfect 14-0 season in SCIAC history that same year.

Dozens of players spanning the last three decades came back to surprise Newhall with a halftime ceremony during the Tigers’ January 26 contest against Caltech. A post-game reception was emceed by Ethan Caldwell ’90, who transferred to Oxy as a junior from Pitzer (where he played for the Sagehens under future San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich) and started on Newhall’s first varsity team.

ā€œBrian was ā€˜Coach Newhall’ to me for two years, and has been ā€˜Brian’ and really like a brother and close family member for 28 years,ā€ Caldwell said. ā€œI was excited to get to Oxy and try to help this new coach change the team culture—to change Pomona-Pitzer’s scouting report from ā€˜Great individuals and underperforming team’ to ā€˜Family and winners.ā€™ā€

An American studies major from Portland, Ore., Newhall played basketball for the Tigers for four years, earning team MVP honors in 1982 and 1983. As a senior, he helped propel the Tigers to their first SCIAC championship in three years and was named 1982-83 SCIAC Player of the Year.

In his 31st season as head coach, NewĀ­hall has put together one of his strongĀ­est squads in years. Zach Baines ’19, a 6'5" economics major from Stamford, Conn., set the Oxy single-game scoring record with 50 points in a win over Pacific University of Oregon in December. Austin DeWitz ’19, a 6'7" biology major from Oregon City, Ore., has averaged 17.6 points per game to date. And Ryan KaneĀ­shiro ’20, a 6'2" economics major from Santa Clarita, is a three-time SCIAC Defensive Player of the Week this season.

Going into the last two weeks of conference play, the Tigers were assured of their best finish since going 22-6 in 2007-08. ā€œBrian and his staff are as good as any in the nation,ā€ā€ˆsaid Caldwell, who announced the alumni funding of a new position—recruiting intern—to support Oxy’s efforts toward national success in men’s and women’s basketball. What separates Newhall from Popovich, he adds, ā€œis way less than he thinks.ā€