Nate James Named Head Coach at Austin Peay University

The coaching carousel continues.

Austin Peay State University Director of Athletics Gerald Harrison announced Friday the hiring of Duke University’s Nate James as its 13th head men’s basketball coach.

James will be formally introduced with a welcoming event set for 2 p.m. CT on Tuesday, April 6 at the Dunn Center on APSU’s campus.

“I’m extremely excited and honored to be the 13th head men’s basketball coach at Austin Peay State University,” said James. “To have the opportunity to lead my own program, be part of the amazing vision for a place like APSU and serve a community that embraces its university and student-athletes has been a dream of mine for quite some time. It is exactly what every coach wishes for. I will work endlessly to build a basketball culture with the type of culture that every player, alum, donor and fan will always be proud of. This is an amazing day to be a Gov! Let’s Go Peay!”

Twenty years ago to this date, James played 20 minutes for Duke in the 2001 NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship game win against Arizona, earning the first of three national title rings he’d pick up as a Blue Devil — one as a player and two as an assistant coach under one of college basketball’s most legendary names.

“I’ve known Nate since he was 18 years old, and he’s been on our campus for nearly 20 years,” said Duke Head Coach Mike Krzyzewski. “I’ve seen him grow from being a high school center, to becoming one of the most selfless leaders in Duke Basketball history to being an outstanding assistant coach. Austin Peay is getting a remarkable man, who is married to a remarkable woman, Bobbi. I could not be happier for them and their family, as I am for Austin Peay. Nate is a leader, a terrific worker and a trustworthy friend. You can count on anything that he says. He earned the respect of his teammates as one of the captains of our 2001 national championship team, and has since brought that championship mentality to our coaching staff. I will miss Nate immensely. Austin Peay has one of the great people in college athletics in Gerald Harrison as its director of athletics and he has made an amazing hire. I’m looking forward to seeing the success they’ll have together.”

James becomes the 11th former Duke player or staff member under Coach K currently serving as a head coach at the Division I level or the NBA, joining Tommy Amaker (Harvard), Kenney Blakeney (Howard), Mike Brey (Notre Dame), Jeff Capel (Pittsburgh), Chris Collins (Northwestern), Johnny Dawkins (UCF), Bobby Hurley (Arizona State), Greg Paulus (Niagara), Mike Schrage (Elon) and Quin Snyder (Utah Jazz).

The 43-year old James has basketball — and success — ingrained in him. From his time as a player to his tenure as a coach, James has been a part of 22 regular-season, tournament or national title teams. Thirty players in James’ sphere of influence have earned All-ACC honors during his time at Duke, with 17 earning All-America honors, five earning National Freshman of the Year and two — Marvin Bagley III in 2018 and Zion Williamson in 2019 — being named National Player of the Year. During his time, Duke had five players named ACC Player of the Year and eight named ACC Freshman of the Year, including six in seven seasons from 2014-20.

“I am excited to welcome Nate, Bobbi, Nate III and Dash to Austin Peay and introduce them to the Clarksville community,” said Harrison. “Nate is a man of incredible integrity who has been a huge part of one of college basketball’s most successful programs for much of the last two decades. He is committed to the student-athlete experience and the principles of the ‘Total Gov Concept.’ His depth of experience, his ability to recruit and retain outstanding young men, and his desire to help them excel on and off the court will make him a huge asset to our university and our department. Simply put, Nate James is a champion and a leader. I am proud to say he is the head coach of the Austin Peay Men’s Basketball team.”

James’ credentials are unimpeachable — after spending much of the last two-plus decades in Durham as a player and coach, few can boast the combination of high-level experience, expertise and credibility his name carries in the scope of Division I college basketball.

“Euphoric congratulations to Nate, Bobbi and the children on this well-deserved leadership opportunity,” said Duke Vice President and Director of Athletic Kevin White. “To be sure, Nate’s championship experience — both as a student-athlete and coach — is elite and he leaves Duke well-prepared to transition into the head coaching role at Austin Peay. The best is yet to come for Coach James.”

Since 2008, James has been on the Duke men’s basketball staff under Coach K, starting out as an assistant strength and conditioning coach before working his way into an on-court role in 2009 and eventually ascending to an associate head coach role in 2017, where he remained for the past four seasons.

With James on staff, the Blue Devils won a pair of national titles in 2010 and 2015 and won 30 or more games five times. James and the Blue Devils advanced to the Sweet 16 eight times, the Elite Eight five times and made two Final Four appearances both resulting in national titles in 2010 and 2015. With James in the fold, Duke hung six conference championship banners, including three-straight ACC Tournament titles from 2009-11 and again in 2017 and 2019.

During his time in Durham, James helped in the recruitment and development of some of the most notable names to take the floor in the history of Cameron Indoor Stadium. Since 2009, Duke has produced 21 first-round NBA Draft choices, including nine players in the top-10 since 2015. Four former Blue Devils from James’ time on the sidelines — Zion Williamson, Kyrie Irving, Jayson Tatum and Brandon Ingram — have earned All-Star nods just in the last two seasons.

From 1996-01, James played under Krzyzewski, accumulating more than 1,000 points across his career. The two-time captain helped the Blue Devils win or share five ACC regular-season titles during his playing career—a feat no other player in ACC history can claim. In fact, James tallied nine total titles as a player—one NCAA Championship, five regular-season ACC crowns and three more ACC Tournament Championship rings. As a senior, he was named third-team All-ACC by the league’s media and was a member of the league’s All-Defensive Team.

Following his collegiate career, James played professionally from 2002-07 both domestically and overseas, with stops in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, France, Germany, Greece, Holland, Hungary, Italy, Japan, the Philippines, Poland and Russia during a whirlwind international career. True to his winning pedigree, James helped teams in Hungary and the Netherlands earn league titles. He also earned an invite to training camp with the Philadelphia 76ers in 2004.

Before becoming a linchpin to some of Krzyzewski’s most successful Duke squads, James was a 1996 McDonald’s All-American at Saint John’s Catholic Prep in Maryland, where he won the three-point contest and was also named the McDonald’s All-American Sportsmanship Award winner. The son of a Marine, James spent his youth in Quantico, Virginia; Albany, Georgia; San Diego, California; and Washington, D.C. before his father retired as a Sergeant Major.  

James graduated from Duke in 2001 with a degree in sociology and a minor in African-American studies. He and his wife, actress Bobbi Baker James, have two sons, Nathanial Drake James III and Michael Dash James.

Per release

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