Women's Basketball
Roos, Jennifer

Jennifer Roos
- Title:
- Head Women's Basketball Coach
- Email:
- jroos@bgsu.edu
- Phone:
- 419-372-7069
Jennifer Roos recently completed her sixth season as head coach of the Bowling Green women's basketball program, and her 17th overall year with the Falcon program, in 2017-18. Roos assumed the head-coaching position on April 16, 2012, after 11 years as an assistant coach on the BG staff, the last eight as associate head coach.
In that 17-year span, the Falcons fashioned an overall record of 350-189 and a MAC mark of 178-104. Those numbers represent a success rate of nearly 70 percent, both overall and in conference action.
Over her final 14 years, however, the numbers were even more staggering. The Falcons went 329-154 overall, 167-83 in MAC regular-season play and 190-93 in all games vs. league foes during that time.
BGSU’s teams have enjoyed tremendous success in the classroom. The Falcons have been named to the WBCA's Academic Top 25 Team Honor Roll eight times in the last 10 seasons. BG ranked fifth in the entire nation in both 2008-09 and 2014-15, and the Falcons were sixth in the country in '09-10.
The Falcons were ranked 23rd in the land on the 2006-07 list -- with a team that advanced to the NCAA's "Sweet Sixteen" on the court -- and BGSU was 11th in 2010-11, 24th in 2011-12 and 25th in both 2013-14 and '15-16.
BGSU has made the WBCA's Academic Top 25 list nine times over the last 16 years. No other MAC institution has made the list more than twice in that time.
In 2013-14, her second season at the helm, all Roos did was guide the Falcons to 30 wins, the second-highest victory total in program and Mid-American Conference history. She was named the MAC Coach of the Year, and also earned Region 4 Coach-of-the-Year honors.
The '13-14 Falcons won the MAC's regular-season title outright, with a 17-1 league mark, and posted non-conference wins over regional foes Ohio State and Michigan in the month of November. Â Nearly five months later, BGSU downed U-M a second time, one of three WNIT victories as the Brown and Orange advanced all the way to the quarterfinal round of that 64-team tournament.
BG's postseason victims included High Point and St. Bonaventure, in addition to the Wolverines, before the Falcons fell by five points to Rutgers. It marked the second time in as many years that BG lost to the eventual WNIT champion.
BGSU’s overall win total in that ‘13-14 campaign fell just one shy of matching the school and MAC records for most victories in a season, and the Falcons’ total 17 MAC wins tied that school mark.
Roos was one of eight winners of a Russell Athletic/WBCA Region Coach of the Year award in 2014, joining such luminaries as Geno Auriemma, Muffet McGraw, Kim Mulkey and former BGSU head coach Curt Miller in that elite group.
In 2014-15, Roos and her staff guided a youthful Falcon squad through an injury-filled season. Four of the 12 student-athletes on the preseason roster, including a pair of starters, had suffered season-ending injuries by the first week of January. A fifth player (and third starter) saw injuries limit her to just 35 total minutes played during the MAC schedule. The Brown and Orange went 10-18 in '15-16 and 8-23 in the '16-17 campaign.
In her first season at the helm, Roos led the Falcons to an overall record of 24-11 and a MAC record of 11-5. That 2012-13 team advanced to the third round of the WNIT with wins over SMU and Duquesne, before the Falcons fell by three points to eventual tourney champion Drexel.
The '12-13 Falcons set several program standards at the defensive end of the floor. BGSU allowed just 54.3 points per game, a new school record. That broke the mark of 55.7 ppg allowed, set the previous year.
Additionally, the Falcons allowed MAC opponents to score only 51.9 points per contest, again breaking a school record set the previous year. The 2012-13 team won six games against teams that advanced to national postseason play, including a pair of 25-point wins over both nationally-ranked Dayton and eventual MAC Tournament champion Central Michigan at the Stroh Center. The Dayton result marked the Flyers' only loss in 27 regular-season games that year.
For her efforts in '12-13, Roos was named a Mid-Major Rookie Coach of the Year in Kenny Kallina's annual College Coaching Awards. She was just one of three coaches on that list.
Even prior to her appointment as head coach, Roos was a major reason for the program's incredible run of success. She joined Curt Miller's staff in July of 2001, and helped the Falcons to at least one MAC championship of some kind in each of Miller's last eight seasons. BGSU won eight-straight MAC divisional crowns from 2005-12. The Falcons also captured five MAC Tournament crowns in that time.
The 2014 MAC regular-season title marked BG's ninth such crown in 10 seasons. The Falcons earned the title outright eight times during that span.
The 2014 trip to the WNIT marked BGSU's 10th consecutive national postseason appearance, and the Falcons won 20 games for the 11th consecutive season. Both streaks remain MAC records by far.
Roos, a member of multiple Halls of Fame, was in charge of the Falcon defense during her tenure on Miller's staff, and also served as the team's recruiting coordinator. After three years as an assistant coach with the Falcons, she was elevated to associate head coach in the summer of 2004.
When Miller missed several games due to health issues in January of 2012, Roos assumed interim head-coaching duties and led the Falcons to a 2-0 record, with wins over CMU and Northern Illinois prior to Miller's return to the bench in early February of that year.
Roos had a record of 5-2 in WNIT games with the Falcons. She and Miller are the only two Falcon head coaches to lead BG to WNIT victories. Miller had a record of 2-3 in the tourney.
In the spring of 2009, Roos was one of just five national winners of BasketballScoop.com's "Rising Star" Award. The award recognizes assistant coaches that are the best in the business as determined by their peers.
On the way to that award, Roos was named one of 20 semifinalists in late March of '09. Coaches made it to the semifinalist stage through a nomination process by their peers. Then, the list was cut to 10 finalists, who were the leading vote-getters in the site's online voting. From there, a panel of coaches selected the five winners.
The 2011-12 season saw the staff perform one of the top coaching jobs in their tenure. After losing six seniors and nearly 5,500 points from the previous season's club, the Falcons proceeded to win the MAC's regular-season crown yet again, with a 14-2 league mark and 24 wins overall.
In 2010-11, the Falcons had an overall mark of 28-5, winning a MAC East Division title with a 13-3 slate, then capturing three more games to win the league tournament title for the fifth time in seven seasons.
The 2009-10 season saw the Falcons go 27-7 with a MAC ledger of 14-2. BGSU won the conference regular-season and tournament titles, returning to the NCAA Championships for the fourth time in a six-year span. BG had the MAC Player of the Year -- Lauren Prochaska -- for the fourth consecutive season, and Prochaska went on to earn MAC Tournament MVP honors as well.
On the court, BGSU got off to an 0-2 start in '08-09, with a pair of double-digit losses on the road. With four-year floor general Kate Achter having graduated, surely this would be the year the Falcons' magical run came to an end, right?
Ummm, no.
The Falcons, with nine first- or second-year players on the 13-woman active roster, proceeded to win a school-record 25 consecutive games, going from late November to March without a loss. That run included wins in each of the first 14 contests of the conference schedule, en route to a 15-1 MAC record. The young Falcons posted a total of 29 wins, the second-highest total in MAC women's basketball history, and advanced to the third round of the WNIT.
The success of the '08-09 campaign came after a 2007-08 season that was, well, successful. With a roster containing 10 underclassmen -- including seven freshmen -- the Falcons put together a 26-8 season, advancing to the second round of the WNIT. The Orange and Brown went 13-3 in MAC regular-season play to win the conference title yet again.
Hoops fans know that the Falcons' 2006-07 season remains the finest year in MAC women's basketball history. After posting a 28-3 mark -- a conference record for wins at the time -- in the 2005-06 season, the Falcons shattered that record with a 31-win season in '06-07. The latter BG team beat Oklahoma State and Vanderbilt in the NCAA Championships to become the first-ever MAC women's team to advance to the 'Sweet Sixteen' of the national tourney.
That '06-07 season saw BGSU listed in the national rankings in both the Associated Press and USA Today/ESPN Coaches polls for nearly the entire season, reaching a school- and league-best ranking of 15th in the final AP listing.
The 2005-06 team set a MAC record for wins (broken by the '06-07 Falcons) by going 28-3 overall. The Falcons posted a perfect 16-0 conference mark, and added three more wins in the league tournament. In the '06-07 campaign, the club went 15-1 in league regular-season action, and again had a 3-0 mark in the MAC Tournament.
In 2004-05, the staff guided the Falcons, picked to finish third in the West Division, to the league's best overall record, a MAC regular-season championship and the top seed for the MAC Tournament. In downtown Cleveland, the Brown and Orange downed Miami, Eastern Michigan and Kent State to capture the school's first conference tourney crown and NCAA Championships bid in over a decade. In the NCAAs, the Falcons led nationally-ranked Kansas State at the half before succumbing, 70-60.
All of that success came after a magical 2003-04 campaign, when Miller, Roos and the staff orchestrated one of the top turnarounds in the nation. BGSU, picked to finish sixth in the MAC West, tied for second (just a game out of first), finishing 21-10 overall. That marked a nine-win improvement over the prior season, tying for 11th in the country in that category.
In conference play, the coaching staff guided the Brown and Orange to an 11-5 ledger, a complete reversal of the prior year's league record (5-11). In 2003-04, the Falcons finished with a winning record -- both overall and in MAC action -- for the first time in six years. BGSU, six games better than the previous season in conference play, was the only MAC team to improve by more than three games over the 2002-03 season.
In 2002-03, the Brown and Orange went 12-16 overall. After posting the most successful non-conference season in over a decade, that edition of the Falcons -- in BGSU's first season in the MAC's West Division -- amassed a 5-11 league ledger that included a win over the division's co-champion.
The Falcons posted a 9-19 overall record in 2001-02, the first winter with Miller and Roos on the BG bench. Despite the loss of Preseason All-MAC Team member Francine Miller for all but four games, BGSU went 6-10 in league action and featured a much-improved defense from prior years.
Roos came to the Falcon program after spending eight years at Davidson College. She became a coach with the Wildcats upon her graduation from the school.
Roos served as the recruiting coordinator for her final two seasons, the scheduling coordinator for the last five years and the scouting coordinator during all eight years at Davidson.
Roos, a native of Louisville, Ky., was a member of both the 1991-92 Davidson club team and the 1992-93 varsity squad. The latter season marked the varsity program's first after a six-year absence.
During that 1992-93 season, Roos was the sole upperclassman among the team's starting five. She led DC in minutes, steals and assists, and was one of only two players to start all 22 games.
Roos was a standout in field hockey during her undergraduate years. She was a four-year letterwinner and a three-time MVP for Davidson. Roos led the 'Cats to a 50-15-6 record in her four seasons, and helped the squad to three consecutive Deep South Association championships.
Roos served as a captain for both the field hockey and basketball teams as a senior. She also lettered in lacrosse at Davidson.
Roos graduated from Davidson in 1993, with a B.A. in history, upon which she began her coaching career at the school.
In January of 2006, Roos was inducted into the Davidson Athletics Hall of Fame. She was inducted into her high school's (Kentucky Country Day) Hall of Fame in February of 2010.
THE ROOS FILE
NAME: Jennifer Roos
DATE HIRED AT BGSU: July 2, 2001
NAMED HEAD COACH: April 16, 2012
HOMETOWN: Louisville, Ky.
COLLEGE: Davidson, 1993
CHAMPIONSHIPS AT BGSU
2004-05
MAC West Division • MAC Regular Season • MAC Tournament
2005-06
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season • MAC Tournament
2006-07
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season • MAC Tournament
2007-08
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season
2008-09
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season
2009-10
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season • MAC Tournament
2010-11
MAC East Division • MAC Tournament
2011-12
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season
2013-14
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season
POSTSEASON APPEARANCES
NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS • 2005, 2006, 2007, 2010, 2011
NCAA 'SWEET SIXTEEN' • 2007
WNIT • 2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2014
WNIT QUARTERFINAL • 2014
HONORS & AWARDS
MAC COACH OF THE YEAR • 2014
WBCA REGION COACH OF THE YEAR • 2014
BGSU'S RECORD SINCE ROOS JOINED THE FALCONS
Season   Overall     MAC      MAC Finish    MAC Tournament
2001-02   9-19 (.321)   6-10 (.375)  4th in East    Lost in First Round
2002-03  12-16 (.429)  5-11 (.313)   T-6th in West   Lost in First Round
2003-04  21-10 (.677)  11- 5 (.688)  T-2nd in West   Advanced to Final
2004-05Â Â 23- 8 (.742) Â 13- 3 (.813) Â FIRST in West* Â CHAMPIONS
2005-06Â Â 28- 3 (.903) Â 16- 0 (1.00) Â FIRST in East* Â CHAMPIONS
2006-07Â Â 31- 4 (.886) Â 15- 1 (.938)Â Â FIRST in East* Â CHAMPIONS
2007-08 Â 26- 8 (.765) Â 13- 3 (.813) Â FIRST in East* Â Advanced to Semifinals
2008-09Â Â 29- 5 (.853) Â 15- 1 (.938) Â FIRST in East* Â Advanced to Final
2009-10Â Â 27- 7 (.794) Â 14- 2 (.875) Â FIRST in East* Â CHAMPIONS
2010-11  28- 5 (.848)  13- 3 (.813)  FIRST in East   CHAMPIONS
2011-12 Â 24- 7 (.774) Â 14- 2 (.875) Â FIRST in East* Â Advanced to Semifinals
2012-13  24-11 (.686)  11- 5 (.688)  2nd in East    Advanced to Third Round
2013-14 Â 30- 5 (.857) Â 17- 1 (.944) Â FIRST in East* Â Advanced to Semifinals
2014-15   9-21 (.300)  2-16 (.111)  6th in East    Lost in First Round
2015-16  10-18 (.357)  6-12 (.333)  4th in East    Lost in First Round
2016-17   8-23 (.258)  4-14 (.222)  5th in East    Lost in First Round
2017-18  11-19 (.367)  3-15 (.167)  T-5th in East  Lost in First Round
* best overall regular-season record in MAC
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In that 17-year span, the Falcons fashioned an overall record of 350-189 and a MAC mark of 178-104. Those numbers represent a success rate of nearly 70 percent, both overall and in conference action.
Over her final 14 years, however, the numbers were even more staggering. The Falcons went 329-154 overall, 167-83 in MAC regular-season play and 190-93 in all games vs. league foes during that time.
BGSU’s teams have enjoyed tremendous success in the classroom. The Falcons have been named to the WBCA's Academic Top 25 Team Honor Roll eight times in the last 10 seasons. BG ranked fifth in the entire nation in both 2008-09 and 2014-15, and the Falcons were sixth in the country in '09-10.
The Falcons were ranked 23rd in the land on the 2006-07 list -- with a team that advanced to the NCAA's "Sweet Sixteen" on the court -- and BGSU was 11th in 2010-11, 24th in 2011-12 and 25th in both 2013-14 and '15-16.
BGSU has made the WBCA's Academic Top 25 list nine times over the last 16 years. No other MAC institution has made the list more than twice in that time.
In 2013-14, her second season at the helm, all Roos did was guide the Falcons to 30 wins, the second-highest victory total in program and Mid-American Conference history. She was named the MAC Coach of the Year, and also earned Region 4 Coach-of-the-Year honors.
The '13-14 Falcons won the MAC's regular-season title outright, with a 17-1 league mark, and posted non-conference wins over regional foes Ohio State and Michigan in the month of November. Â Nearly five months later, BGSU downed U-M a second time, one of three WNIT victories as the Brown and Orange advanced all the way to the quarterfinal round of that 64-team tournament.
BG's postseason victims included High Point and St. Bonaventure, in addition to the Wolverines, before the Falcons fell by five points to Rutgers. It marked the second time in as many years that BG lost to the eventual WNIT champion.
BGSU’s overall win total in that ‘13-14 campaign fell just one shy of matching the school and MAC records for most victories in a season, and the Falcons’ total 17 MAC wins tied that school mark.
Roos was one of eight winners of a Russell Athletic/WBCA Region Coach of the Year award in 2014, joining such luminaries as Geno Auriemma, Muffet McGraw, Kim Mulkey and former BGSU head coach Curt Miller in that elite group.
In 2014-15, Roos and her staff guided a youthful Falcon squad through an injury-filled season. Four of the 12 student-athletes on the preseason roster, including a pair of starters, had suffered season-ending injuries by the first week of January. A fifth player (and third starter) saw injuries limit her to just 35 total minutes played during the MAC schedule. The Brown and Orange went 10-18 in '15-16 and 8-23 in the '16-17 campaign.
In her first season at the helm, Roos led the Falcons to an overall record of 24-11 and a MAC record of 11-5. That 2012-13 team advanced to the third round of the WNIT with wins over SMU and Duquesne, before the Falcons fell by three points to eventual tourney champion Drexel.
The '12-13 Falcons set several program standards at the defensive end of the floor. BGSU allowed just 54.3 points per game, a new school record. That broke the mark of 55.7 ppg allowed, set the previous year.
Additionally, the Falcons allowed MAC opponents to score only 51.9 points per contest, again breaking a school record set the previous year. The 2012-13 team won six games against teams that advanced to national postseason play, including a pair of 25-point wins over both nationally-ranked Dayton and eventual MAC Tournament champion Central Michigan at the Stroh Center. The Dayton result marked the Flyers' only loss in 27 regular-season games that year.
For her efforts in '12-13, Roos was named a Mid-Major Rookie Coach of the Year in Kenny Kallina's annual College Coaching Awards. She was just one of three coaches on that list.
Even prior to her appointment as head coach, Roos was a major reason for the program's incredible run of success. She joined Curt Miller's staff in July of 2001, and helped the Falcons to at least one MAC championship of some kind in each of Miller's last eight seasons. BGSU won eight-straight MAC divisional crowns from 2005-12. The Falcons also captured five MAC Tournament crowns in that time.
The 2014 MAC regular-season title marked BG's ninth such crown in 10 seasons. The Falcons earned the title outright eight times during that span.
The 2014 trip to the WNIT marked BGSU's 10th consecutive national postseason appearance, and the Falcons won 20 games for the 11th consecutive season. Both streaks remain MAC records by far.
Roos, a member of multiple Halls of Fame, was in charge of the Falcon defense during her tenure on Miller's staff, and also served as the team's recruiting coordinator. After three years as an assistant coach with the Falcons, she was elevated to associate head coach in the summer of 2004.
When Miller missed several games due to health issues in January of 2012, Roos assumed interim head-coaching duties and led the Falcons to a 2-0 record, with wins over CMU and Northern Illinois prior to Miller's return to the bench in early February of that year.
Roos had a record of 5-2 in WNIT games with the Falcons. She and Miller are the only two Falcon head coaches to lead BG to WNIT victories. Miller had a record of 2-3 in the tourney.
In the spring of 2009, Roos was one of just five national winners of BasketballScoop.com's "Rising Star" Award. The award recognizes assistant coaches that are the best in the business as determined by their peers.
On the way to that award, Roos was named one of 20 semifinalists in late March of '09. Coaches made it to the semifinalist stage through a nomination process by their peers. Then, the list was cut to 10 finalists, who were the leading vote-getters in the site's online voting. From there, a panel of coaches selected the five winners.
The 2011-12 season saw the staff perform one of the top coaching jobs in their tenure. After losing six seniors and nearly 5,500 points from the previous season's club, the Falcons proceeded to win the MAC's regular-season crown yet again, with a 14-2 league mark and 24 wins overall.
In 2010-11, the Falcons had an overall mark of 28-5, winning a MAC East Division title with a 13-3 slate, then capturing three more games to win the league tournament title for the fifth time in seven seasons.
The 2009-10 season saw the Falcons go 27-7 with a MAC ledger of 14-2. BGSU won the conference regular-season and tournament titles, returning to the NCAA Championships for the fourth time in a six-year span. BG had the MAC Player of the Year -- Lauren Prochaska -- for the fourth consecutive season, and Prochaska went on to earn MAC Tournament MVP honors as well.
On the court, BGSU got off to an 0-2 start in '08-09, with a pair of double-digit losses on the road. With four-year floor general Kate Achter having graduated, surely this would be the year the Falcons' magical run came to an end, right?
Ummm, no.
The Falcons, with nine first- or second-year players on the 13-woman active roster, proceeded to win a school-record 25 consecutive games, going from late November to March without a loss. That run included wins in each of the first 14 contests of the conference schedule, en route to a 15-1 MAC record. The young Falcons posted a total of 29 wins, the second-highest total in MAC women's basketball history, and advanced to the third round of the WNIT.
The success of the '08-09 campaign came after a 2007-08 season that was, well, successful. With a roster containing 10 underclassmen -- including seven freshmen -- the Falcons put together a 26-8 season, advancing to the second round of the WNIT. The Orange and Brown went 13-3 in MAC regular-season play to win the conference title yet again.
Hoops fans know that the Falcons' 2006-07 season remains the finest year in MAC women's basketball history. After posting a 28-3 mark -- a conference record for wins at the time -- in the 2005-06 season, the Falcons shattered that record with a 31-win season in '06-07. The latter BG team beat Oklahoma State and Vanderbilt in the NCAA Championships to become the first-ever MAC women's team to advance to the 'Sweet Sixteen' of the national tourney.
That '06-07 season saw BGSU listed in the national rankings in both the Associated Press and USA Today/ESPN Coaches polls for nearly the entire season, reaching a school- and league-best ranking of 15th in the final AP listing.
The 2005-06 team set a MAC record for wins (broken by the '06-07 Falcons) by going 28-3 overall. The Falcons posted a perfect 16-0 conference mark, and added three more wins in the league tournament. In the '06-07 campaign, the club went 15-1 in league regular-season action, and again had a 3-0 mark in the MAC Tournament.
In 2004-05, the staff guided the Falcons, picked to finish third in the West Division, to the league's best overall record, a MAC regular-season championship and the top seed for the MAC Tournament. In downtown Cleveland, the Brown and Orange downed Miami, Eastern Michigan and Kent State to capture the school's first conference tourney crown and NCAA Championships bid in over a decade. In the NCAAs, the Falcons led nationally-ranked Kansas State at the half before succumbing, 70-60.
All of that success came after a magical 2003-04 campaign, when Miller, Roos and the staff orchestrated one of the top turnarounds in the nation. BGSU, picked to finish sixth in the MAC West, tied for second (just a game out of first), finishing 21-10 overall. That marked a nine-win improvement over the prior season, tying for 11th in the country in that category.
In conference play, the coaching staff guided the Brown and Orange to an 11-5 ledger, a complete reversal of the prior year's league record (5-11). In 2003-04, the Falcons finished with a winning record -- both overall and in MAC action -- for the first time in six years. BGSU, six games better than the previous season in conference play, was the only MAC team to improve by more than three games over the 2002-03 season.
In 2002-03, the Brown and Orange went 12-16 overall. After posting the most successful non-conference season in over a decade, that edition of the Falcons -- in BGSU's first season in the MAC's West Division -- amassed a 5-11 league ledger that included a win over the division's co-champion.
The Falcons posted a 9-19 overall record in 2001-02, the first winter with Miller and Roos on the BG bench. Despite the loss of Preseason All-MAC Team member Francine Miller for all but four games, BGSU went 6-10 in league action and featured a much-improved defense from prior years.
Roos came to the Falcon program after spending eight years at Davidson College. She became a coach with the Wildcats upon her graduation from the school.
Roos served as the recruiting coordinator for her final two seasons, the scheduling coordinator for the last five years and the scouting coordinator during all eight years at Davidson.
Roos, a native of Louisville, Ky., was a member of both the 1991-92 Davidson club team and the 1992-93 varsity squad. The latter season marked the varsity program's first after a six-year absence.
During that 1992-93 season, Roos was the sole upperclassman among the team's starting five. She led DC in minutes, steals and assists, and was one of only two players to start all 22 games.
Roos was a standout in field hockey during her undergraduate years. She was a four-year letterwinner and a three-time MVP for Davidson. Roos led the 'Cats to a 50-15-6 record in her four seasons, and helped the squad to three consecutive Deep South Association championships.
Roos served as a captain for both the field hockey and basketball teams as a senior. She also lettered in lacrosse at Davidson.
Roos graduated from Davidson in 1993, with a B.A. in history, upon which she began her coaching career at the school.
In January of 2006, Roos was inducted into the Davidson Athletics Hall of Fame. She was inducted into her high school's (Kentucky Country Day) Hall of Fame in February of 2010.
THE ROOS FILE
NAME: Jennifer Roos
DATE HIRED AT BGSU: July 2, 2001
NAMED HEAD COACH: April 16, 2012
HOMETOWN: Louisville, Ky.
COLLEGE: Davidson, 1993
CHAMPIONSHIPS AT BGSU
2004-05
MAC West Division • MAC Regular Season • MAC Tournament
2005-06
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season • MAC Tournament
2006-07
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season • MAC Tournament
2007-08
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season
2008-09
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season
2009-10
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season • MAC Tournament
2010-11
MAC East Division • MAC Tournament
2011-12
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season
2013-14
MAC East Division • MAC Regular Season
POSTSEASON APPEARANCES
NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS • 2005, 2006, 2007, 2010, 2011
NCAA 'SWEET SIXTEEN' • 2007
WNIT • 2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2014
WNIT QUARTERFINAL • 2014
HONORS & AWARDS
MAC COACH OF THE YEAR • 2014
WBCA REGION COACH OF THE YEAR • 2014
BGSU'S RECORD SINCE ROOS JOINED THE FALCONS
Season   Overall     MAC      MAC Finish    MAC Tournament
2001-02   9-19 (.321)   6-10 (.375)  4th in East    Lost in First Round
2002-03  12-16 (.429)  5-11 (.313)   T-6th in West   Lost in First Round
2003-04  21-10 (.677)  11- 5 (.688)  T-2nd in West   Advanced to Final
2004-05Â Â 23- 8 (.742) Â 13- 3 (.813) Â FIRST in West* Â CHAMPIONS
2005-06Â Â 28- 3 (.903) Â 16- 0 (1.00) Â FIRST in East* Â CHAMPIONS
2006-07Â Â 31- 4 (.886) Â 15- 1 (.938)Â Â FIRST in East* Â CHAMPIONS
2007-08 Â 26- 8 (.765) Â 13- 3 (.813) Â FIRST in East* Â Advanced to Semifinals
2008-09Â Â 29- 5 (.853) Â 15- 1 (.938) Â FIRST in East* Â Advanced to Final
2009-10Â Â 27- 7 (.794) Â 14- 2 (.875) Â FIRST in East* Â CHAMPIONS
2010-11  28- 5 (.848)  13- 3 (.813)  FIRST in East   CHAMPIONS
2011-12 Â 24- 7 (.774) Â 14- 2 (.875) Â FIRST in East* Â Advanced to Semifinals
2012-13  24-11 (.686)  11- 5 (.688)  2nd in East    Advanced to Third Round
2013-14 Â 30- 5 (.857) Â 17- 1 (.944) Â FIRST in East* Â Advanced to Semifinals
2014-15   9-21 (.300)  2-16 (.111)  6th in East    Lost in First Round
2015-16  10-18 (.357)  6-12 (.333)  4th in East    Lost in First Round
2016-17   8-23 (.258)  4-14 (.222)  5th in East    Lost in First Round
2017-18  11-19 (.367)  3-15 (.167)  T-5th in East  Lost in First Round
* best overall regular-season record in MAC
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