Tim Miles

Basketball Coach

Tim Miles was born in Doland, South Dakota, United States on August 20th, 1966 and is the Basketball Coach. At the age of 57, Tim 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
August 20, 1966
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Doland, South Dakota, United States
Age
57 years old
Zodiac Sign
Leo
Profession
Basketball Coach
Tim Miles Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 57 years old, Tim Miles physical status not available right now. We will update Tim Miles's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

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Tim Miles Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Tim Miles Life

Timothy Sean Miles (born August 20, 1966) is an American college basketball coach.

Miles previously served as the head coach at Colorado State University and the University of Nebraska.

Miles is a graduate of the University of Mary.

Tim Miles is currently an analyst for Big Ten Network, Fox Sports, and Fox Sports 1.

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Tim Miles Career

Coaching career

Following his playing career at the University of Mary, Miles spent five seasons as an assistant coach at Northern State University, where the Wolves went to four NAIA II national tournaments and two national championship games. In 1995, Miles left to accept his first head coaching job at NAIA II Mayville State. In both his seasons at Mayville State, Miles led the Comets to NDCAC Championships and the NAIA II National Tournament. In 1997, he accepted the Southwest Minnesota State job and led the Mustangs to four straight winning seasons including a historic season in 2001. Leading Southwest State to their first NSIC championship and NCAA II regional berth. Southwest State won the North Central Region Championship and advanced to the NCAA II Elite Eight in Bakersfield, CA.

Miles took over at North Dakota State in the spring of 2001. Shortly thereafter, the school declared its intent to reclassify from NCAA II to transition to NCAA I. The school would be ineligible for postseason play in its first five years of the transition, and was initially without a conference. On January 21, 2006, in just the school's second year in Division I, NDSU pulled off a shocking 62–55 upset of No. 12 Wisconsin at the Kohl Center. The Bison, starting three freshmen, ended Wisconsin's 27-game home winning streak against non-conference opponents. Miles would be named the Division I Independent Coach of the Year by CBS Sportsline.

The following season the Bison pulled off another stunning upset, upsetting No. 8 Marquette in the championship game of the Blue and Gold Classic. The Bison finished 20–8, their best season under Miles. North Dakota State joined the Summit League the year after Miles departed and the Bison made the NCAA Tournament under the guidance of new head coach Saul Phillips, who was previously Miles' assistant.

On March 22, 2007, Miles was named head coach at Colorado State, replacing Dale Layer. Miles inherited just two players from the 2007 roster, and as a result the program struggled immensely. After going winless in conference play in his first season, Miles' teams gradually improved over the following years.

In May 2011, after winning 19 games and guiding CSU to its seventh NIT appearance, he signed a 5-year contract extension with Colorado State.

The following season, the Rams defeated three ranked teams, all at home at Moby Arena. On January 28, CSU upset No. 13 San Diego State for the program's first win over a ranked opponent since 2004. Just over a month later, the Rams stunned No. 18 New Mexico. Then, on February 29, Colorado State rallied from a 15-point deficit at halftime to defeat No. 17 UNLV 66-59. CSU finished 20–11 overall and 8–6 in the Mountain West, and was awarded an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament. It was CSU's first trip to the tournament since 2003 and their first at-large bid since 1990. The Rams were the No. 11 seed in the West Regional and fell to No. 6 seed Murray State.

On March 24, 2012 Miles was named head coach at Nebraska, replacing Doc Sadler. Historically, the Cornhuskers have fielded one of the weakest high-major college programs in Division I, making the NCAA Tournament only six times before Miles' arrival and losing in the first round all six times. In 2014, Miles' second season, he coached the Huskers to the NCAA tournament, the school's first tournament berth since 1998, but the Cornhuskers lost to Baylor in the first round. After three seasons of single-digit conference wins, Miles guided the team to a 22–11 record in the 2017–18 season, achieving a program record 13 conference wins before falling in the first round of the NIT. In 2018-19, Miles led Nebraska to a 10-2 start and another Top 25 ranking, before several injuries derailed Nebraska's NCAA Tournament hopes. The Huskers made the quarterfinals of the Big Ten tournament but lost to Wisconsin 66-62. The Huskers made the Big Ten quarter-finals five of seven years under Miles. The NIT came calling again and the Huskers beat Butler, but lost at TCU to end their season at 19-17. The Huskers ranked 10th nationally in single-season attendance, averaging 15,341 fans per game, as Nebraska was one of nine programs nationally to average at least 15,000 fans in each of the past six seasons.

Miles was relieved of his duties on March 26, 2019, finishing as the coach with the third-most wins in Nebraska men's basketball history. Nebraska athletic director Bill Moos stated that “Ultimately, we have not maintained a level of consistent success and stability on the court, and after a full review I have made the decision to move in another direction for the leadership of our program.”

On April 6, 2021, Miles was hired as the head men's basketball coach at San Jose State University. On November 11, 2021, Miles got his 400th career win against Cal State Fullerton.

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Kate Bush's "Running Up That Hill" on "Stranger Things" took 2 years to get to

www.popsugar.co.uk, August 23, 2022
Forget the climbing hills, Kate Bush's 1985 hit "Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God) has risen to the top of the charts, becoming Max's new favorite song in "Stranger Things" season four. Since the series began, "Stranger Things" has been reworking classic 1980s songs, but "Running Up That Hill" has resonant with fans on a whole new level that even the formally private Bush could not comprehend. However, it wasn't easy to get the song on the radio. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter on Aug. 22, a group of Warner Music executives discussed how they landed the "Running Up That Hill" contract. "It's not like advertising where we get a very quick 'Can we use this song?' We have to work out if we can and if they can afford it," Tim Miles, senior VP sync for Warner Music Group's UK and Europe region. "TV has a long history." They wanted to know if the song could be used because the music was so important to this period," he said. "It took about two years to really talk to Kate and her staff and decide what this was going to be." This is probably the longest TV discussions I have ever seen because they had to get it correct. The song is obviously so popular. They must have had some back-ups, but I'm sure this was their all-time favorite."