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Jeff Boals

Jeff Boals
Sport(s) Basketball
Current position
Title Head coach
Team Stony Brook
Conference America East
Record 18–14 (.563)
Annual salary $258,968
Biographical details
Born (1972-09-05) September 5, 1972 (age 44)
Magnolia, Ohio
Playing career
1991–1995 Ohio
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1995–1996 Ohio (asst.)
1996–1999 Charleston (WV) (asst.)
1999–2003 Marshall (asst.)
2003–2004 Charleston (WV) (assoc. HC)
2004–2006 Robert Morris (asst.)
2006–2009 Akron (asst.)
2009–2016 Ohio State (asst.)
2016–present Stony Brook

Jeff Boals (born (1972-09-05)September 5, 1972) is the head coach of the Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team. He replaced Steve Pikiell, joining Stony Brook after seven years as an assistant coach for the Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team.

A 1995 graduate of Ohio University with a bachelor of science degree in biological sciences, Boals was a four-year letterwinner on the Bobcats' basketball team. Also a two-year captain, he helped guide OU to the 1994 MAC tournament and regular-season championships, the same season the program won the Preseason National Invitation Tournament. In the preseason NIT, the Bobcats notched road victories over Ohio State and Virginia before edging New Mexico State and George Washington at Madison Square Garden.

Boals landed his first coaching job as an assistant coach at his alma mater after graduating. He then took an assistant coaching job at the University of Charleston in West Virginia, where he stayed for three seasons before joining Marshall as an assistant coach from 1999 to 2003. Boals returned to Charleston as the associate head coach, for one season before jumping back to the Division I ranks with Robert Morris, then to Akron. He joined the coaching staff of Ohio State in 2009, where he has been a part of three Big Ten Conference regular season titles, four NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 appearances, an Elite Eight, and a Final Four appearance in 2012.

On April 8, 2016, Boals was named the 11th head coach in Stony Brook men's basketball history, and its third since moving to Division I.

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion


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