Consistency is the mark of a winner. In her 29 years at the helm of the University of Virginia women's basketball program, Debbie Ryan has averaged 21.8 wins per season. She has recorded 20 or more wins in a season 20 times and 30 or more twice en route to 21 NCAA Tournament appearances and three consecutive Final Four berths.
This season, her 30th at UVa, Ryan embarks upon a new era as the Cavaliers play their first season in the state-of-the-art John Paul Jones Arena.
In 2004-05, Ryan became a member of a very elite club. On Dec. 29, she recorded the 600th victory in her career, becoming the 11th women's coach all-time to achieve 600 wins in her coaching career. She received the WBCA Victory Club Award for her achievements. Ryan stands 632-263 after 29 seasons at Virginia. Ryan is also the fifth coach in NCAA Division I history to reach the mark with all the wins coming at the same school.
Ryan is the architect behind UVa's rise to prominence in the 1990s, and

she has maintained that level of excellence. No other team in the ACC has been ranked in the AP and USA Today polls more total weeks or consecutive weeks than the Cavaliers. And only a few teams across the nation can match the level of success that the Cavaliers have experienced in NCAA competition. Her teams have been to 21 NCAA Tournaments, second only to Tennessee and Louisiana Tech. She directed UVa to three consecutive Final Four appearances in the 1990s and has consistently had the Cavaliers in contention for a national title.
In 1999, Ryan distinguished herself further by joining an elite group of coaches who have won 500 games at the Division I level. With the win over Florida State on Feb. 21, 1999, Ryan reached the 500 victory milestone. At that time, only five other coaches in Division I had attained 500 wins at one school: Pat Summit (Tennessee), Jody Conradt (Texas), Kay Yow (N.C. State), Mike Granelli (St. Peter's), and Marian Washington (Kansas).
When she won her 450th career game on Jan. 11, 1997 at N.C. State, she reached the 450-win milestone in only her 600th game, faster than any other men's or women's coach in the Atlantic Coast Conference. She was the first ACC coach to record 200 wins in league competition. In conference action, Ryan has a record of 265-116.
Other measures of Ryan's success include 12 appearances in the NCAA "Sweet 16", including 11 straight years (1987-97), three Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament titles, three straight Final Four appearances, the 1990 and 1992 East Regional titles, the 1991 Midwest Regional title, and 11 ACC regular-season crowns.
She was selected as the Naismith Coach of the Year in 1991 by the Atlanta Tipoff Club, and has

won the ACC Coach of the Year award seven times. She was named the Converse District III Coach of the Year and 2000 IKON/WBCA District III Coach of the Year and earned state-wide recognition as the Virginia state Coach of the Year four times.
Ryan gives credit for many of her personal awards to the incredible players who have come through the Virginia program. Ryan has recruited and developed players such as Val Ackerman, Cathy Grimes, Donna Holt, Dawn Staley, Tonya Cardoza, Heather and Heidi Burge, Tammi Reiss, Dena Evans, Wendy Palmer and Tora Suber. Players under Ryan's guidance have won 31 All-America honors, 17 Academic All-America honors, six ACC Player of the Year awards, and 56 All-Conference awards. Virginia also has the most three-time All-ACC first team selections (Dawn Staley, Donna Holt, and Wendy Palmer).
In addition to the accomplishments on the court, 100 percent of Virginia players who have completed their four-year eligibility have graduated from the University. Alumni of Ryan's program have gone on to successful careers in medicine, law, engineering, business and coaching.
Ryan's success does not end at the college level.
In August 2003, Ryan coached the USA Basketball women's team to a silver medal at the Pan American Games in the Dominican Republic. In 2001, she served as the head coach of the USA Basketball women's team that participated in the World University Games. Ryan led the squad to the gold medal in Beijing, China. The gold medal marked the first for the USA in the World University games since 1997. Ryan led the team to a 7-1 record and an 87-69 victory over China to claim the gold medal. USA Basketball honored Ryan as its Developmental Coach of the Year for 2001.

In 1988, she was the head coach of the United States Junior National Team. After accepting this honor, Ryan had the task of putting together a tournament-winning team in 10 days. The U.S. won five games including an exciting 70-68 victory over Brazil to win the Junior World Qualifying Tournament and earn a berth in the 1989 Junior World Championships. As a result, Ryan was named head coach of the 1989 Junior World Championship Team that finished seventh.
Ryan has taken an active role in basketball outside her coaching duties at UVa. She served on the USA Basketball Women's Games Committee for the 1989-92 quadrennium. The committee was responsible for staff and player selection, as well as for establishing guidelines at competitive events.

She is not only recognized within the coaching ranks, but also in the state-wide community. On Feb. 18, 1997, Ryan was honored by the Virginia General Assembly for her success and on February 5, 1991, Ryan was named the Outstanding Woman of the Year by the Virginia Women's Forum.
Ryan is also a Nike Advisory coach and has been speaking for Nike for 19 years. She is the author of three books, Virginia Defense, Virginia Summer Development Program, and Women's Basketball Drills- Conditioning.
She played collegiate basketball at Ursinus College, where she earned her bachelor's degree in physical education in 1975. Ryan received her master's degree in physical education from UVa while working as an assistant basketball and field hockey coach. She was named head women's basketball coach in 1977.
Ryan holds her own basketball camp at Virginia each summer and is a regular speaker at camps and clinics across the country.