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Scott Merritt Headshot 2023-24

Scott Merritt

Scott Merritt enters his second season as the head coach of the Gardner-Webb women's basketball program in 2024-25. In year one, Merritt led the Runnin' Bulldogs to five Big South Conference wins, coached a pair of all-conference selections at season's end, and the preseason league player of the year entering the 2024-25 season. Merritt grabbed his first win overall on December 15th at Appalachian State, guiding the Runnin' Bulldogs to a 82-78 road win.

Merritt arrived at Gardner-Webb prior to the 2023-24 season from the University of Wisconsin, where he previously served as the Badgers' Associate Head Coach from 2021 to 2023, helping to lead that program to new heights in the Big Ten Conference.

“Coach Merritt has already impressed me as a tenacious competitor and as an effective communicator; equally important, he understands the mission of a university that wants its student-athletes to be truly outstanding in all that they do.  With Coach Merritt's leadership, Gardner-Webb's Women's Basketball program can now elevate to the next level by winning games in the NCAA Tournament" said Gardner-Webb University President Dr. William Downs.
 
“The members of our women’s basketball team asked me to ensure our next head coach was a confident and consistent winner, was a strong cultural fit, and had the ability to help them find opportunities to play professional basketball worldwide after graduation,” said Vice President and Director of Athletics Dr. Andrew T. Goodrich on Merritt's hire in 2023. “Coach Merritt is all of these things and more. He was a championship caliber player at Marquette, including making it to the 2003 Final Four. As an assistant coach he helped lead the top-10 ranked Golden Eagles to three Big East Conference Championships and played nine seasons of professional basketball all over the world.

“After conversations with some of the best college basketball coaches in the country and hearing his vision and strategies to lead the program, it became clear to me that Scott is an incredible coach, teacher, recruiter, and leader who has the knowledge, skills, ability, and passion to take this program to the next level.”
 
In his final season as an assistant at Wisconsin, Merritt helped the Badgers to their highest Big Ten win total since 2010-11 and the program’s highest Big Ten finish in 11 seasons. A late-season win over 12th-ranked Michigan gave Wisconsin a first-round bye in the Big Ten Tournament.
 
Merritt was an assistant coach at Illinois during the 2020-2021 season and spent the previous six seasons as an assistant coach at his alma mater, Marquette University.
 
During his time at Marquette, Merritt helped the Golden Eagles steadily improve. Marquette reached 25 wins by his third season on staff, a season that was capped by the school’s first ever Big East championship and the program’s first NCAA Tournament berth since 2011.
 
He helped the Golden Eagles to three Big East titles during his time on the sidelines. In addition to the 2017 tournament championship, Marquette won regular season titles in 2018 and 2019. The program also notched four consecutive 20-win seasons, including a school-record 27 wins in 2018-19 – when Marquette soared as high as No. 8 in the Associated Press national poll.
 
Marquette reached three consecutive NCAA Tournaments and were poised to make a fourth appearance in 2020 before the event was canceled.

Merritt recruited and coached two Big East Players of the Year – Allazia Blockton (2018) and Natisha Hiedeman (2019). One of his post players, Erika Davenport, finished her career with more than 1,000 career points and 1,000 career rebounds – becoming just the fourth woman in school history to do so.
 
Prior to joining the women’s staff at Marquette, Merritt was an assistant coach with the Menomonee Falls (Wisc.) High boy’s basketball team.
 
Merritt played professional basketball in Italy, Puerto Rico, Ukraine, Cyprus, Turkey, Japan and South Korea internationally from 2004-2013 and played in the NBDL with the Columbus (Ga.) Riverdragons, Austin (Texas) Toros and Tulsa (Okla.) 66ers during that same span.
 
He was runner up for NBDL Rookie of the Year in 2005 with Columbus and was a second-team All-NBDL selection with Austin in 2006.
 
A 6-foot-10 center at Marquette, Merritt emerged as a force down low for the Golden Eagles under head coach Tom Crean. He was a four-year letterwinner and finished his career with 1,049 points, 697 rebounds and 113 blocks – all which rank among the school’s best.
 
Merritt finished as the program’s all-time leader with 126 career games played and helped the Golden Eagles to a Final Four appearance as a junior in 2003 – averaging 10.1 points and 6.6 rebounds per game in a lineup that included future NBA superstar Dwayne Wade. He bumped those averages to 11.2 points and 7.1 rebounds per game as a senior. Merritt started 63 games over his final two seasons with Marquette. In the Golden Eagles' Final Four loss to Kansas, Merritt played 24 minutes and recorded a double-double with 12 points and 11 rebounds. Seven of those boards came on the offensive end of the floor.
 
Merritt is a 2004 graduate of Marquette’s College of Communications. He and his wife, Ashley, have four children – Laila, Isaiah, Mariah and Sienna.