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Jim Christian

James Patrick Christian (born February 6, 1965) is an American college basketball coach who is the head coach of the Canisius Golden Griffins. He previously served as the head coach at Boston College, Kent State, TCU and Ohio.


Column 1
Christian in 2019
Head coach
Canisius
MAAC
13–49 (.210)
(1965-02-06) February 6, 1965Bethpage, New York, U.S.
Boston University
Rhode Island
Sydney City Comets
Guard
Western Kentucky (assistant)
Saint Francis (PA) (assistant)
Western Kentucky (assistant)
Miami (OH) (assistant)
Pittsburgh (assistant)
Kent State (assistant)
Kent State
TCU
Ohio
Boston College
Canisius
333–335 (.499)
0–2 (NCAA Division I)0–5 (NIT)1–1 (CBI)2–1 (CIT)
2 MAC tournament (2006, 2008)3 MAC regular season (2006, 2008, 2013)5 MAC East Division (2003, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2013)
2× MAC Coach of the Year (2006, 2008)

James Patrick Christian (born February 6, 1965) is an American college basketball coach who is the head coach of the Canisius Golden Griffins. He previously served as the head coach at Boston College, Kent State, TCU and Ohio.

Christian was born in Bethpage, New York. He was an all-state guard at St. Dominic High School in nearby Oyster Bay while playing under Ralph Willard, who later was the head coach at Western Kentucky, Pittsburgh, and Holy Cross. Following his prep career, Christian was recruited by coach Rick Pitino at Boston University where he played two seasons before transferring to the University of Rhode Island. Both Willard and Pitino also attended St. Dominic High School.

Christian played his final two campaigns under Tom Penders at the University of Rhode Island, where he helped the Rams reach the Sweet Sixteen of the 1988 NCAA tournament. The former standout guard guided the Rams to victories over Missouri and Syracuse before dropping a 73–72 decision to Duke in the Sweet 16 round.

After earning his bachelor's degree in consumer affairs from the University of Rhode Island in 1988, Christian spent one season playing professionally in the Australian Basketball Association for the Sydney City Comets.

After returning to the United States, Christian became the Western Kentucky University Hilltoppers' assistant coach under head coach Ralph Willard from 1990 to 1992. From there, Christian went on to assist head coaches Tom McConnell at Saint Francis University (1992–1994), Matt Kilcullen again at Western Kentucky University (1994–1995), Herb Sendek at Miami University (1995–1996), Ralph Willard at University of Pittsburgh (1996–1999), and Stan Heath at Kent State University (2001–2002).

After assisting former head coach Stan Heath in the 2001–02 season, Christian became head coach at Kent State University from 2002 to 2008, where he led the Golden Flashes to six consecutive seasons of twenty or more wins, four MAC East division titles, two overall MAC titles, and two conference tournament championships. His teams also had five post-season appearances, three in the NIT and two in the NCAA Tournament. His record at Kent State was 137–59.

At Texas Christian University, Christian took over the position vacated by Neil Dougherty in March 2008. In Christian's final year coaching the Horned Frogs, he helped the program break a seven-year losing streak and gave them a bid in the College Basketball Invitational Tournament. The squad posted an 18–15 overall record, four more wins than in any season since 2004–05, and ended with its best finish ever in the Mountain West Conference at fifth place.

On Tuesday, April 3, 2012, Christian was named the new head basketball coach at Ohio, becoming the program's 17th head coach, after former head coach John Groce left for Illinois.

In Christian's first year, the Ohio Bobcats shared the MAC regular season title with Akron with a conference record of 14–2, Ohio's first regular season title since 1994. Ohio earned themselves a No. 2 seed in the MAC tournament, where they beat Western Michigan 74–63. The following evening, Ohio lost to Akron 65–46 in the MAC Championships, losing a bid to the NCAA tournament. However, Ohio earned an at-large bid in the 2013 NIT tournament as a number 6 seed in the Alabama quadrant.

On April 3, 2014, Christian resigned his position at Ohio to become the head coach at Boston College, replacing Steve Donahue.

On April 3, 2014, Jim Christian was named the Head Coach at Boston College. Under Christian, the Eagles saw little success, winning just 6 games in conference play in his first 3 seasons. They found some success in his fourth season, going 19–16, their best record since the 2010–2011 season. They also clinched an invitation to the NIT, their first postseason appearance since they went to the NCAA Tournament in 2009. That was however, the extent of their success under coach Christian as they finished with a losing record every other season.

After starting the 2020–2021 season 3–13, Boston College fired Jim Christian as their head coach and named Scott Spinelli their interim coach. In .mw-parser-output .frac{white-space:nowrap}.mw-parser-output .frac .num,.mw-parser-output .frac .den{font-size:80%;line-height:0;vertical-align:super}.mw-parser-output .frac .den{vertical-align:sub}.mw-parser-output .sr-only{border:0;clip:rect(0,0,0,0);clip-path:polygon(0px 0px,0px 0px,0px 0px);height:1px;margin:-1px;overflow:hidden;padding:0;position:absolute;width:1px}7+1⁄2 seasons, Jim Christian was 78–132 overall, 26–94 in conference play.

On June 21, 2022, Jim Christian returned to Kent State as the Assistant Athletic Director.

On April 8, 2024, Christian was named head coach at Canisius.

Christian and his wife, Patty, were married in the summer of 2005, and have three children, MacKenzie, Zach, and Jay.

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Kent State Golden Flashes (Mid-American Conference) (2002–2008)
2002–03Kent State21–1012–61st (East)NIT First Round
2003–04Kent State22–913–51st (East)NIT First Round
2004–05Kent State20–1311–7T–2nd (East)NIT First Round
2005–06Kent State25–915–31st (East)NCAA Division I Round of 64
2006–07Kent State21–1112–42nd (East)
2007–08Kent State28–713–31st (East)NCAA Division I Round of 64
Kent State:137–59 (.699)76–28 (.731)
TCU Horned Frogs (Mountain West Conference) (2008–2012)
2008–09TCU14–175–117th
2009–10TCU13–195–117th
2010–11TCU11–221–159th
2011–12TCU18–157–75thCBI Quarterfinal
TCU:56–73 (.434)18–44 (.290)
Ohio Bobcats (Mid-American Conference) (2012–2014)
2012–13Ohio24–1014–2T–1st (East)NIT First Round
2013–14Ohio25–1211–73rd (East)CIT Quarterfinal
Ohio:49–22 (.690)25–9 (.735)
Boston College Eagles (Atlantic Coast Conference) (2014–2021)
2014–15Boston College13–194–1413th
2015–16Boston College7–250–1815th
2016–17Boston College9–232–1615th
2017–18Boston College19–167–1112thNIT First Round
2018–19Boston College14–175–13T–11th
2019–20Boston College13–197–13T–10th
2020–21Boston College3–131–915th
Boston College:78–132 (.371)26–94 (.217)
Canisius Golden Griffins (MAAC) (2024–present)
2024–25Canisius3–283–1713th
2025–26Canisius10–215–15T–11th
Canisius:13–49 (.210)8–32 (.200)
Total:333–335 (.499)
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 | | | | | |

  • Boston College profile
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