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Head Coach
Cindy Martin
E-mail Coach
Martin
In only two seasons at IUP, Cindy
Martin has brought the Crimson Hawks to the top of the PSAC and
established her program as one of the best in the East Region.

In 2006-07, IUP won its first PSAC championship since 1988, defeated
archrival California in the conference tournament final and earned the
No. 3 seed in the NCAA East Region tournament.
The Crimson Hawks then defeated Barton and Pitt Johnstown, snapping an
eight-game losing streak to the Mountain Cats, before dropping a narrow
decision to powerful Glenville State in the Sweet 16.
The team finished with a record of 24-9, tied for the second most wins
in school history, and took the PSAC West championship with a 9-3
division record.
Martin was named the PSAC West Coach of the Year and saw several of her
players earn conference and region accolades, led by sophomore Jahzinga
Tracey. Tracey was named the PSAC West Player of the Year, MVP of
the conference tournament and Daktronics first team all-region.
She was joined by senior Katie Glaws on the East Region all-tournament
team.
Four IUP players earned berths on the all-conference team. Tracey
was selected to the first team while Glaws, Staci Heberling and Lauren
Fisher were tabbed to the second team.
Under Martin's direction, IUP has a two-year record of 43-18, and her
winning percentage of .705 is the best in school history with a minimum
of 50 games coached.
In her first season at IUP, the Crimson Hawks were 19-9 and finished second in the PSAC West with an 8-4
division record after being picked to finish fifth in the preseason
coach's poll. The 19 wins included a road victory over eventual East
Region champion Charleston, which was ranked fifth in the nation at the
time, was tied for the third most
victories in a season in school history and represented the highest
total ever for a first-year IUP head coach.
The team had a 9.5 game improvement
from a 9-18 campaign in 2004-05, the seventh best increase in Division
II women's basketball.
In addition to the many
accomplishments on the court, Martin's squad has represented itself well off
the court. In 2005-06, the team was ranked 15th in the country by the WBCA for
its overall grade point average of 3.422 and Kara Taylor was the IUP
Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year.
In
2006-07, Glaws was a first team ESPN the Magazine Academic
All-District II selection as well as a recipient of the PSAC Top 10 award for
combined athletic and academic excellence.
As if basketball and academics were
not enough to keep Martin and the team busy, they were also very
successful in their community service efforts. The team completed
a total of 27 projects during the past two seasons, including hosting the Susan G. Komen
Breast Cancer Foundation "Shoot for the Cure®"
Classic that included several of the top teams in the country.
During the two years of the "Shoot
for the Cure®" Classic, the women's basketball
program donated a total of $19,200 to the Komen Foundation to aid in
breast cancer research and education.
In
2005-06, the team joined forces with a
group on campus to raise $13,000 for the Red Cross to aid the displaced
victims of Hurricane Katrina. The Indiana County Human Services
Council took notice and awarded the IUP women's basketball team the
"Volunteer Organization of the Year" for their community service
efforts.
Martin came to IUP
after four years as the top assistant and recruiting coordinator at Big
East member West Virginia. Martin helped lead
the Mountaineer program back to respectability, culminating in
consecutive 21-win seasons her final two years and a pair of postseason
appearances.
In 2003-04, the
Mountaineers qualified for the NCAA tournament for the first time in 13
years. In March 2005, the team advanced to the championship game of the
postseason Women’s National Invitation Tournament (WNIT).
Martin
helped
assemble three straight recruiting classes that ranked among the top 20
in the nation according to the All-Star Girls Report, including the
class of 2003 that was judged the country’s fourth best.
Among the players
Martin recruited to West Virginia were Meg Bulger, the 2004 Big East
Freshman of the Year, and Yolanda Paige, a second round selection by the
Indiana Fever in the 2005 WNBA draft.
In 2003, Martin
brought in 6-5 center Yelena Leuchanka, the No. 1 ranked junior college
player in the nation as rated by the All-Star Girls Report. She is
currently playing professionally overseas and spent the 2006 WNBA season
playing for the Charlotte Sting.
Prior to joining the
staff in Morgantown, Martin was an assistant coach in the junior
college ranks in Florida, including one season each at Santa Fe
(1999-00) and Seminole (2000-01). Her Seminole squad posted an overall
record of 24-6 and was undefeated in eight games in the Mid-Florida
Conference, the first time the team had accomplished that feat.
In the summer of
2001, Martin was chosen as head coach of Team Florida USA, an
academically selected high school unit which toured Europe. The team
won 14 of 16 games and captured the Delfin Cup in Tampere, Finland.
Martin also coached on the high school
level, serving as head junior varsity coach and
varsity assistant at PK Yonge High School in Gainesville, Fla., in
1998-99.
Martin enjoyed a
stellar college playing career. In two seasons at Flagler (Fla.)
College she was an all-conference and all-region point guard, averaging
17 points and 5.4 assists from 1995-97.
She then transferred
to the University of Florida, where she was a member of the Lady Gators Sweet
Sixteen team in 1997-98 under Carol Ross, one of the top head coaches in
women’s basketball history and currently the head coach at SEC power University of
Mississippi.
Martin is
a 1999 graduate of the University of Florida with a bachelor’s degree in
exercise and sport sciences from the College of Health and Human
Performance. She is a native of Jacksonville, Fla., where her
family currently resides.
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