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Jim Brovelli

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Jim Brovelli
Personal information
Born (1942-04-15) April 15, 1942 (age 84)
Career information
High schoolSt. Ignatius
(San Francisco, California)
CollegeSan Francisco (1961–1964)
NBA draft1964: undrafted
PositionPoint guard
Coaching career1973–2000
Career history
Coaching
1973–1984San Diego
1985–1995San Francisco
1996–1997Denver Nuggets (assistant)
19971999Washington Wizards (assistant)
1999Washington Wizards (interim)
1999–2000Sioux Falls Skyforce

James Mario Brovelli (born April 15, 1942)[1] is the former men's basketball head coach of the University of San Francisco (USF) Dons[2] and hall of fame player.

Biography

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As a player Brovelli was a three-year letterman for USF, helping lead the Dons to the NCAA Western Regional in 1963 and 1964. He earned All-WCC honorable mention honors in 1964. Later, he was named the 1965 AAU Athlete of the Year.

He became the Dons head coach in 1984. Starting from scratch after USF's self-imposed three-year hiatus stemming from various NCAA recruiting violations incurred during the Quintin Dailey era, Brovelli led the Dons for ten seasons, including a 19-win campaign in 1993. His greatest victory as USF head coach came in 1988 when USF achieved a stunning upset of Digger Phelps and Notre Dame in front of a sellout crowd in USF's Memorial Gymnasium. He finished with 131 career victories at USF.

Prior to his USF stint he was the head coach for the University of San Diego Toreros from 1973 to 1984, successfully guiding their transition from NCAA Division II power to the Division I ranks. He took the Division II program to three NCAA Western Regionals, winning the championship in 1977–1978 and advancing to the Final Four while earning District VIII Coach of the Year honors. His final three years of coaching the Division II program saw the teams go 20–7, 22–7, and 19–7. Brovelli guided USD's move to the Division I West Coast Conference in 1979. His programs improved each year in the win column, and during his final year (1983–1984) at USD, he directed the Toreros to the program's first WCC championship and first appearance in the NCAA Division I Tournament. That season the Toreros finished 18–10 overall and 9–3 in league play, and Brovelli earned WCC Coach of the Year honors. At the time of his departure from San Diego he had 160 career victories and was the winningest men's basketball coach in USD history (since surpassed by Brad Holland).

After departing USF he was named director of player development with the Denver Nuggets on February 1, 1996. Later that following season he added assistant coach duties for the Nuggets.

Brovelli joined long-time friend, Bernie Bickerstaff, in 1998–99 as assistant coach, and on April 6, 1999, was named interim head coach of the Washington Wizards. He coached the final 18 games of the 1999 lockout-shortened season.

He next coached the Sioux Falls Skyforce in the Continental Basketball Association from 1999 to 2000, where he led the 'Force to a record of 30–26 and a playoff appearance.

Brovelli then signed on as a scout with the NBA's Charlotte Bobcats.

He has also coached the Japanese National Team and was a volunteer coach for the Minnesota Timberwolves for a season, in addition to serving as a member of the NCAA Recruiting Committee and Academic Committee.

More recently he was named director of athletics at College of Marin, while simultaneously providing radio color commentary for the USF Dons men's basketball home games.

Brovelli was inducted into the University of San Francisco Athletics Hall of Fame in 1982.[3]

Head coaching record

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NBA

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Team Year G W L W–L% Finish PG PW PL PW–L% Result
Washington 1998–99 18513.2786th in Atlantic Missed playoffs
Career 18513.278 000 

NCAA

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Record table
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
San Diego Toreros (Division II Independent) (1973–1979)
1973–74 San Diego 16–11Division II First Round
1974–75 San Diego 11–15
1975–76 San Diego 15–10
1976–77 San Diego 20–7
1977–78 San Diego 22–7Division II Quarterfinals
1978–79 San Diego 19–7Division II Regional Semifinals
San Diego Toreros (West Coast Athletic Conference) (1979–1984)
1979–80 San Diego 6–192–149th
1980–81 San Diego 10–163–11T–7th
1981–82 San Diego 11–154–106th
1982–83 San Diego 12–145–74th
1983–84 San Diego 18–109–31stNCAA Division I Preliminary Round
San Diego: 160–131 (.550)23–45 (.338)
San Francisco Dons (West Coast Athletic Conference/ West Coast Conference) (1985–1995)
1985–86 San Francisco 7–212–128th
1986–87 San Francisco 16–126–8T–4th
1987–88 San Francisco 13–155–96th
1988–89 San Francisco 16–128–64th
1989–90 San Francisco 8–204–10T–6th
1990–91 San Francisco 12–174–107th
1991–92 San Francisco 13–164–10T–6th
1992–93 San Francisco 19–128–64th
1993–94 San Francisco 17–118–6T–2nd
1994–95 San Francisco 11–184–10T–6th
San Francisco: 132–154 (.462)53–87 (.379)
Total:292–285 (.506)

      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

Personal life

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Brovelli received his degree in Business Administration from the University of San Francisco in 1964 and his master's from the University of the Pacific in 1966.

Brovelli is a long-time resident of San Rafael, CA with his wife, Nada. Their son, Mike (USF '95), was a Dons basketball standout, and their daughter, Michele (USD '96), was a Toreros basketball standout.

References

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  1. A Biographical Directory of Professional Basketball Coaches
  2. Littwin, Mike (March 10, 1985). "The Don's are Back". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 8, 2010.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  3. "Jim Brovelli (1982)". University of San Francisco Athletics. Retrieved June 26, 2025.
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