Liz Mills is an Australian basketball coach who, since 2011, has coached elite level men's club and national basketball teams in Africa. Mills is the former head coach of Bangui Sporting Club for the 2023 Road to BAL (Basketball Africa League).[1]

Liz Mills
Bangui Sporting Club
PositionHead coach
LeagueBAL
Personal information
BornSydney, Australia
Coaching career2002–present
Career history
As coach:
2002–2011Northern Suburbs Basketball Association
2011–2013Heroes Play United
2012Zambia National University Team
2015–2016Matero Magic
2017Zambia men's national team (assistant)
2018Cameroon men's national team (assistant)
2019Patriots
2021Kenya men's national team
2022AS Salé
2022–2023ABC Fighters
2023–2024Bangui Sporting Club

Mills is the first female basketball head coach to lead a men's national team at a FIBA continental championship, as well as the first-ever female head coach in the Basketball Africa League (BAL) after debuting in 2022. She is also the first female head coach of a men's club team in Morocco, and subsequently in North Africa and the Middle East.[2]

Mills began her coaching career in Sydney, in 2002 working with junior boys and girls teams, as well as senior women's teams. Since 2011, Mills has been a head coach and assistant coach in Africa of senior men's club teams, national men's university teams and national men's teams.[3]

In 2021, Mills was the head coach of the Kenyan men's national team, becoming the only woman in the world at that time in charge of a men's national team not only in basketball but in any major sport.[4][5] She is the first and only female head coach in a men's continental championship (Afrobasket) since the International Basketball Federation FIBA was founded in 1932, when she coached Kenya at AfroBasket 2021.[6]

Coaching career

edit

Mills began her basketball coaching career in Sydney, Australia in 2002 whilst still in high school (Willoughby Girls High). She has coached junior boys and girls club teams, as well as representative girls teams for Northern Suburbs Basketball Association (NSBA), a representative club in North Sydney, Australia. Prior to relocating to Africa she has coached a senior women's representative team for NSBA.[3]

Whilst in Australia she completed an undergraduate degree in Sports Science and Sports Management (2008) at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) and in 2014 completed a Masters of Education in Sports Coaching at the University of Sydney (USYD).[7]

Prior to 2011, Mills had never coached men.[4] Mills started her coaching career in Africa in Zambia, where she was the head coach for Zambia's senior men's national league team Heroes Play United. Heroes went on to win the 2011/2012 national title, the first time the team had won in 8 years. She also coached the team the following season.[6] She went on to win another national title in Zambia's senior men's league in 2015/2016 as head coach of team Matero Magic. Whilst coaching in Zambia, Mills was also named as head coach for the Zambian men's National University Team. This team competed in the 2012 CUCSA Zone VI University Games, finishing second and competed in All Africa University Games (FASU) later that year where the team finished third.

At the club level, Mills worked with the Rwandan division 1 men's club team Patriots BBC for the 2019 Basketball Africa League Qualifiers. She led the team to the East Division Qualification Title, with the team going undefeated in the two rounds of qualifiers. The team went on to compete in the 2021 Basketball Africa League.[8]

Having served as assistant coach of the Zambia men's national team for the 2017 Afrobasket Zone VI qualifiers and Cameroon men's basketball teams for 2019 FIBA World Cup African Qualifiers, Mills joined the Kenyan Morans as head coach in January 2021.[9] She steered Kenya to qualifying for their first AfroBasket championship in 28 years, after beating 11-time African champions Angola 74-73 in Cameroon in February 2021 at the 2021 FIBA AfroBasket Qualifiers.[6][9] Previously Kenya had never beaten Angola. As head coach of the Morans at the 2021 FIBA Afrobasket Mills led Kenya to a 1-3 record. Kenya defeated Mali to pick up their first win at an AfroBasket and for the first time progressed past the first round group stage.[citation needed]

Basketball Africa League (2022–present)

edit

On 12 February 2022, she was announced as head coach of AS Salé a club in the Division Excellence, the top professional men's league in Morocco. Mills was the first female head coach of men's team in Morocco and the Arab world, In March 2022, Mills became the first female head coach of a men's team in the Basketball Africa League.[10] She left the team in May to pursue coaching opportunities with national teams in Africa.[11] On 4 September 2023 Coach Mills was named as the head coach of Bangui Sporting Club for the upcoming 2024 Road to BAL.[12] Road to BAL are the qualifiers for the 2024 Basketball Africa League.[citation needed]

On 2 December 2022, Mills signed for Ivorian team ABC Fighters, who earlier qualified for the 2023 BAL season.[13] In their first appearance in the BAL, Mills lead the team to the playoffs, where they fell to Angolan club team Petro de Luanda in the quarter finals.[14]

On 4 September 2023 Mills was announced as the head coach of Central African Republic club team Bangui Sporting Club for the upcoming 2024 Road to BAL.[1] The Road to BAL is the qualifiers for the 2024 BAL season. On 5 November, Bangui Sporting Club won the Road to BAL Western Conference Finals and qualified for the 2024 BAL season.[15] Mills declined to re-sign with Bangui Sporting Club for the 2024 Basketball Africa League due to the non-payment of her salary and bonus for the second round of the 2023 Road to BAL.[16]

Personal

edit

Mills grew up in Sydney with a passion for coaching basketball since an early age.[6] She and her identical twin sister, Vik,[4] grew up playing multiple sports such as netball, tennis, athletics and swimming. With Vik, she started playing basketball at the age of 15. They played club and representative basketball for Northern Suburbs Basketball Association at both the junior and senior level. Mills took her first basketball coaching position at age 16,[4] on many occasions co-coaching with her sister Vik.[citation needed]

Head coaching record

edit
Legend
Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W–L % Win–loss %
Playoffs PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW–L % Playoff win–loss %
Team Year G W L W–L% Finish PG PW PL PW–L% Result
AS Salé 2022 5 3 2 .600 3rd in Sahara Conference 1 0 1 .000 Lost in Quarterfinals
ABC Fighters 2023 5 3 2 .600 4th in Sahara Conference 1 0 1 .000 Lost in Quarterfinals

Global Women In Basketball Coaching Network

edit

In August 2022 Mills launched the Global Women In Basketball Coaching Network via Facebook. Co-founded with her twin sister Vic, the network is the first international network for female basketball coaches. The mission of the network is to connect female coaches from around the world on a platform where they can engage, empower, and elevate each other to success.[17]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "Basketball Africa League : Coach Liz Mills dirigera le Bangui Sporting Club lors des qualifications".
  2. ^ "How Liz Mills became the BAL's first woman coach". NBA.com.
  3. ^ a b "Fastbreaksa: Dropping Dimes with Coach Liz Mills on Apple Podcasts".
  4. ^ a b c d Liz Mills Takes Big Step for Female Basketball Coaches Gerald Imray (U.S. News & World Report), 19 March 2021. Accessed 31 August 2021.
  5. ^ "Liz Mills trailblazing for more female coaches in men's basketball". FIBA.basketball. Retrieved 1 September 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d Australian coach blazes a trail for women in African basketball France 24, 24 August 2021. Accessed 31 August 2021.
  7. ^ "Basketball 1sts with Head Coach Liz Mills → She Speaks Sport". 30 June 2023.
  8. ^ "Patriots BBC at the Africa Champions Clubs ROAD TO B.A.L 2020 2019".
  9. ^ a b "Kenya coach Liz Mills opens the door wide for women".
  10. ^ "Coach Mills Is Ready for the Show". AS Salé Basketball. 12 February 2022. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  11. ^ "Mills to leave AS Sale for national team after BAL exit ]". ESPN.com. 22 May 2022. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  12. ^ "Australian Coach Liz Mills Joins Bangui Sporting Club for 2024 Basketball Africa League Qualifiers". 5 September 2023.
  13. ^ Sikubwabo, Damas (2 December 2022). "Liz Mills joins Ivory Coast's ABC ahead of BAL 2023". The New Times. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  14. ^ "Petro remain unbeaten, join AS Douanes in BAL semis". 21 May 2023.
  15. ^ "Bangui win West Division Elite 16".
  16. ^ "Financial woes threaten Bangui's historic BAL campaign". ESPN.com. 19 April 2024. Retrieved 23 May 2024.
  17. ^ "Liz Mills' legacy continues to grow with creation of female coaching network".
edit