Danny Miles

Basketball Coach

Danny Miles was born in Medford, Oregon, United States on October 9th, 1945 and is the Basketball Coach. At the age of 78, Danny Miles biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
October 9, 1945
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Medford, Oregon, United States
Age
78 years old
Zodiac Sign
Libra
Profession
Baseball Player, Basketball Coach
Danny Miles Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 78 years old, Danny Miles physical status not available right now. We will update Danny Miles's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

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Danny Miles Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Danny Miles Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
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Danny Miles Career

Miles was known as a multi-sport athlete competing in baseball, football, and basketball. In 1962, he won the Oregon class 4A state championship in football and in 1963 he was recognized as the outstanding athlete at Medford High School (now known as North Medford). Miles received a scholarship for baseball from Oregon State University, but then enrolled at Southern Oregon State College (now Southern Oregon University) after an injury beginning in 1964. While at SOU, Miles continued as a multi-sport athlete and attained the following honors:

Coaching career

Miles was first hired by the Oregon Institute of Technology as an assistant coach for football, basketball and baseball in 1970. He said he thought he would become a college football coach and wanted to work in NCAA Division I in that sport. After his first year at Oregon Tech, Miles was promoted to the head coaching job both in basketball and baseball as well as offensive coordinator in football. During his 45 years as men's basketball head coach at Oregon Tech, the Hustlin' Owls won 1040 games while losing 437, for a .704 winning percentage. He had 10 seasons of 30 or more wins. During his career, he guided Oregon Tech to home-game winning streaks of 49 games and 64 games respectively.

Miles is known for his Value Point System, which he created and used. The system was described as providing "an all-encompassing look at how players and teams perform by weighing their positive contributions against their negative ones. The resulting number shows how effective the player is. A VPS of 1 is considered average, while anything north of 2 is elite." The system uses a score which "is calculated by using a mathematical formula that includes relevant basketball statistics."

Standout players that played under Miles at Oregon Tech included: Rafid Kiti (All-American First Team 1994), Saif Abdur-Rahman (All-American First Team 1999), LaMont Swinson (All-American First Team 2001), Todd Matthews (All-American Third Team 2003), Levell Hesia (All-American First Team 2005, All-American Second Team 2006, 2007), Ryan Fiegi (All-American Second Team 2007, All-American First Team 2008), Jguwon Hogges (All-American First Team 2009), Justin Parnell (All-American First Team 2010), Joseph Foster (All-American First Team 2011), Bobby Hunter (All-American First Team 2012).

A German coach, who served as Miles' assistant at Oregon Tech for one year, made him aware of Dirk Nowitzki. Miles went to Würzburg, Germany, when Nowitzki was 17 years old and tried to recruit Nowitzki for his team. However, the German had already high paying offers from professional basketball teams on the table. Miles instead recruited two of Nowitzki's teammates. During his tenure at Oregon Tech, Miles had a total of 28 international players on his teams from countries like Australia, Germany, and Mexico.

For more than ten years, Miles coached at basketball clinics in France during the summer break. In 2010 and 2011, Miles was involved in the Athletes In Action program which included working at basketball clinics in Kenya and Rwanda.

During his time at Oregon Tech, Miles was also the head softball coach for nine years with a 323-171(.654) record. Over seven years as the head baseball coach at Oregon Tech, his record was 132-103(.562).

On July 17, 2014 Miles announced that he would retire effective July 2016 at the end of his 45th year at OIT. Justin Parnell, a former player of his, was named as his successor at OIT.

Source

Danny Miles Awards
  • Medford High School Sports Hall of Fame
  • City of Medford Sports Hall of Fame
  • French Men's Basketball National Team U14 Assistant Coach (1996)
  • NAIA Hall of Fame - Basketball Coach (1996)
  • Oregon Institute of Technology Basketball Court named "Danny Miles Court" (1996)
  • 2x NAIA National Basketball Coach of the Year (2004, 2008)
  • A.T. Slats Gill All-Sports Coach of the Year (2004)
  • National winner of NAIA's Champion of Character award for all sports (2009)
  • USA Basketball Men's U19 National Team Training Camp - Court Coach (2011)
  • DNA Award at the Oregon Sports Award show (2012)