Women's Basketball

Felisha Legette-Jack
- Title:
- Head Coach
- Email:
- suwball@syr.edu
Follow Coach Jack on Twitter - @CuseCoachJackÂ
Felisha Legette-Jack, a 1989 graduate of Syracuse University and Orange All-American, is home. The Syracuse native and 20-year collegiate head coach took the reins of the Orange basketball program on March 26, 2022.
In three seasons leading the Orange, Felisha Legette-Jack has resurrected a Syracuse program from the bottom of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) to one of the top teams in the nation’s best conference. Legette-Jack guided Syracuse to back-to-back 20-win seasons in her first two years and made a postseason tournament both seasons.
In 2022-23 she took Syracuse to the Super 16 of the Women’s NIT (WNIT) and finished with a 20-13 record. The Orange reached new heights in her second season on The Hill matching program bests in regular season wins (23), conference wins (13) and ACC road wins (6). Syracuse was picked to finish ninth in the ACC but posted a 13-5 record and earned the No. 3 seed in the ACC tournament, tying the biggest jump from preseason expectations to final standings in ACC history. Legette-Jack was named ACC Coach of the Year in 2024, becoming the first Syracuse head coach to earn the honor in men’s or women’s basketball. She led SU to its first NCAA Tournament win since 2021 as the Orange finished 24-8 after an eight-point loss to UConn in the NCAA Tournament Second Round. Syracuse is 36-13 at home during Legette-Jack’s tenure at Syracuse and is 56-40 through her first three seasons on The Hill.
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Legette-Jack is synonymous with Syracuse women’s basketball success. The 1985 BIG EAST Conference Freshman of the Year, three-time All-BIG EAST selection and Syracuse’s first two-time honorable mention All-American. Legette-Jack helped lead the Orange to their first BIG EAST Championship and NCAA Tournament appearance in school history. More than 30 years later, she still ranks in the top-10 on Syracuse’s career scoring and rebounding lists. She is one of three players in program history to score more than 1,500 points (1,526) and grab more than 900 rebounds (927).
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One of the all-time Orange greats, Legette-Jack returns to her hometown with more than 30 years of coaching experience. She spent the last 10 years building the University at Buffalo’s women’s program into one of the perennial powers in the Mid-American Conference (MAC), leading the Bulls to four NCAA Tournaments, including the 2018 Sweet Sixteen. She is the all-time winningest coach in Bulls history with a 202-115 record and four MAC Tournament Championships. During her career she has guided three different Division I programs to a combined 13 winning seasons, nine postseason berths and six 20-win seasons, and has accrued a 343-279 record.
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Legette-Jack led Nottingham High School to a pair of state titles before attending Syracuse, where she was a standout on Coach Barbara Jacobs’ teams from 1984-89.
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As a student-athlete at Syracuse, Legette-Jack earned BIG EAST Freshman of the Year honors after helping lead the Orange to their first BIG EAST Championship in school history. As a sophomore, Legette-Jack averaged a double-double (15.8 ppg and 10.1 rpg) en route to honorable mention All-America honors and All-BIG EAST recognition.
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The next year she earned honorable mention All-America and All-BIG EAST Second Team recognition. After missing the 1987-88 season due to a knee injury, she returned to earn the court earn All-BIG EAST honors for the fourth time in 1988-89. She finished her career as the program’s all-time leader in points, rebounds, field goals made and attempted, and free throws made and attempted.
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After graduating from Syracuse with bachelor’s degrees in child and family studies and psychology in 1989, Legette-Jack began her coaching career at Westhill Senior High School on the city’s West side in 1989. She made the move to the collegiate level as an assistant at Boston College from 1991-93 and never looked back.
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Following her stint at BC, Legette-Jack returned home to Syracuse as an assistant on Coach Marianna Freeman’s staff from 1993-2000. She left in 2000 to become an assistant coach at Michigan State for two seasons, before landing her first head coaching job at Hofstra in 2002.
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In four years, Legette-Jack turned Hofstra’s program around. During her final season Hofstra was 19-12 and advanced to the second round of the Women’s National Invitational Tournament (WNIT).
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Named head coach at Indiana University in 2006, Legette-Jack guided the that program for six years. She led the Hoosiers to consecutive WNITs in her first three seasons, including a 20-win season and WNIT Quarterfinal appearance in 2009.Â
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In 2012, she returned to the Empire State when she was named the head coach at Buffalo. Legette-Jack put the UB program on the map during her decade in the Queen City. She led four Buffalo teams to four NCAA Tournaments, most recently this season, and developed the first WNBA Draft pick in school history, Cierra Dillard, who was selected by the Minnesota Lynx in 2019. Her UB teams have had five 20-win seasons and averaged more than 19 wins a campaign during her tenure.
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The 2021-22 Bulls posted a 25-9 record, including a 16-4 mark in MAC play, and were 14-1 at home. Legette-Jack developed three All-MAC honorees in Dyaisha Fair, Georgia Woolley and Summer Hemphill. Fair finished the season ranked fourth in the nation in scoring average (23.4 points per game) and Woolley also earned MAC Freshman of the Year honors.
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The Bulls had their most successful season in 2017-18, posting a 29-6 record, including 12-0 at home. UB earned the first NCAA at-large bid for the MAC since 1996 and danced its way to the Sweet Sixteen for the first time in school history.
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Legette-Jack is enshrined in multiple halls of fame, including the Greater Syracuse Hall of Fame, the Syracuse Urban Sports Hall of Fame and the Syracuse University Orange Plus Hall of Fame. She was named to the BIG EAST Silver Anniversary team in 2004 and became the first female in Syracuse University history to have her jersey retired last fall when her No. 33 jersey was raised to the rafters of the Carrier Dome on Nov. 14, 2021.
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Born Sept. 4, 1966, in Syracuse, Legette-Jack and her husband David, have one son, David Maceo, who is currently playing professional basketball in Newcastle, England.
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Felisha Legette-Jack, a 1989 graduate of Syracuse University and Orange All-American, is home. The Syracuse native and 20-year collegiate head coach took the reins of the Orange basketball program on March 26, 2022.
In three seasons leading the Orange, Felisha Legette-Jack has resurrected a Syracuse program from the bottom of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) to one of the top teams in the nation’s best conference. Legette-Jack guided Syracuse to back-to-back 20-win seasons in her first two years and made a postseason tournament both seasons.
In 2022-23 she took Syracuse to the Super 16 of the Women’s NIT (WNIT) and finished with a 20-13 record. The Orange reached new heights in her second season on The Hill matching program bests in regular season wins (23), conference wins (13) and ACC road wins (6). Syracuse was picked to finish ninth in the ACC but posted a 13-5 record and earned the No. 3 seed in the ACC tournament, tying the biggest jump from preseason expectations to final standings in ACC history. Legette-Jack was named ACC Coach of the Year in 2024, becoming the first Syracuse head coach to earn the honor in men’s or women’s basketball. She led SU to its first NCAA Tournament win since 2021 as the Orange finished 24-8 after an eight-point loss to UConn in the NCAA Tournament Second Round. Syracuse is 36-13 at home during Legette-Jack’s tenure at Syracuse and is 56-40 through her first three seasons on The Hill.
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Legette-Jack is synonymous with Syracuse women’s basketball success. The 1985 BIG EAST Conference Freshman of the Year, three-time All-BIG EAST selection and Syracuse’s first two-time honorable mention All-American. Legette-Jack helped lead the Orange to their first BIG EAST Championship and NCAA Tournament appearance in school history. More than 30 years later, she still ranks in the top-10 on Syracuse’s career scoring and rebounding lists. She is one of three players in program history to score more than 1,500 points (1,526) and grab more than 900 rebounds (927).
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One of the all-time Orange greats, Legette-Jack returns to her hometown with more than 30 years of coaching experience. She spent the last 10 years building the University at Buffalo’s women’s program into one of the perennial powers in the Mid-American Conference (MAC), leading the Bulls to four NCAA Tournaments, including the 2018 Sweet Sixteen. She is the all-time winningest coach in Bulls history with a 202-115 record and four MAC Tournament Championships. During her career she has guided three different Division I programs to a combined 13 winning seasons, nine postseason berths and six 20-win seasons, and has accrued a 343-279 record.
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Legette-Jack led Nottingham High School to a pair of state titles before attending Syracuse, where she was a standout on Coach Barbara Jacobs’ teams from 1984-89.
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As a student-athlete at Syracuse, Legette-Jack earned BIG EAST Freshman of the Year honors after helping lead the Orange to their first BIG EAST Championship in school history. As a sophomore, Legette-Jack averaged a double-double (15.8 ppg and 10.1 rpg) en route to honorable mention All-America honors and All-BIG EAST recognition.
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The next year she earned honorable mention All-America and All-BIG EAST Second Team recognition. After missing the 1987-88 season due to a knee injury, she returned to earn the court earn All-BIG EAST honors for the fourth time in 1988-89. She finished her career as the program’s all-time leader in points, rebounds, field goals made and attempted, and free throws made and attempted.
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After graduating from Syracuse with bachelor’s degrees in child and family studies and psychology in 1989, Legette-Jack began her coaching career at Westhill Senior High School on the city’s West side in 1989. She made the move to the collegiate level as an assistant at Boston College from 1991-93 and never looked back.
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Following her stint at BC, Legette-Jack returned home to Syracuse as an assistant on Coach Marianna Freeman’s staff from 1993-2000. She left in 2000 to become an assistant coach at Michigan State for two seasons, before landing her first head coaching job at Hofstra in 2002.
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In four years, Legette-Jack turned Hofstra’s program around. During her final season Hofstra was 19-12 and advanced to the second round of the Women’s National Invitational Tournament (WNIT).
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Named head coach at Indiana University in 2006, Legette-Jack guided the that program for six years. She led the Hoosiers to consecutive WNITs in her first three seasons, including a 20-win season and WNIT Quarterfinal appearance in 2009.Â
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In 2012, she returned to the Empire State when she was named the head coach at Buffalo. Legette-Jack put the UB program on the map during her decade in the Queen City. She led four Buffalo teams to four NCAA Tournaments, most recently this season, and developed the first WNBA Draft pick in school history, Cierra Dillard, who was selected by the Minnesota Lynx in 2019. Her UB teams have had five 20-win seasons and averaged more than 19 wins a campaign during her tenure.
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The 2021-22 Bulls posted a 25-9 record, including a 16-4 mark in MAC play, and were 14-1 at home. Legette-Jack developed three All-MAC honorees in Dyaisha Fair, Georgia Woolley and Summer Hemphill. Fair finished the season ranked fourth in the nation in scoring average (23.4 points per game) and Woolley also earned MAC Freshman of the Year honors.
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The Bulls had their most successful season in 2017-18, posting a 29-6 record, including 12-0 at home. UB earned the first NCAA at-large bid for the MAC since 1996 and danced its way to the Sweet Sixteen for the first time in school history.
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Legette-Jack is enshrined in multiple halls of fame, including the Greater Syracuse Hall of Fame, the Syracuse Urban Sports Hall of Fame and the Syracuse University Orange Plus Hall of Fame. She was named to the BIG EAST Silver Anniversary team in 2004 and became the first female in Syracuse University history to have her jersey retired last fall when her No. 33 jersey was raised to the rafters of the Carrier Dome on Nov. 14, 2021.
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Born Sept. 4, 1966, in Syracuse, Legette-Jack and her husband David, have one son, David Maceo, who is currently playing professional basketball in Newcastle, England.
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