IUPUI Hall of Famer Matt Crenshaw was named the tenth head coach of the Jaguars' men's basketball program in April 2021. Crenshaw, the program's all-time leader in assists and longtime assistant coach, was selected following a national search, facilitated by an IUPUI campus-wide search committee and assisted by Parker Executive Search. He brings 15 years of collegiate coaching experience to the Jaguar program.
Before his return to IUPUI, Crenshaw spent three seasons as an assistant at Ball State, serving as the Cardinals' co-defensive coordinator. In addition, he was instrumental in BSU's guard development, recruiting efforts and advance scouting. Under his tutelage, Ball State boasted All-Mid-American Conference performers Tayler Persons, Ishmael El-Amin, K.J. Walton and 2019-20 MAC Freshman of the Year Jarron Coleman. In addition, Ball State had the MAC's best scoring defense during the 2019-2020 season and captured a West Division championship before the season was halted due to COVID-19.
Crenshaw previously spent 12 seasons on the IUPUI bench, including his final seven years as the program's associate head coach. He was on the IUPUI coaching staff when the Jaguars notched a 26-7 mark in 2007-2008, led by the program's first NBA Draft pick, George Hill. While at IUPUI, he coached 15 all-league performers, two all-district honorees, three Mid-Major All-Americans and one CoSIDA Academic All-American.
His time on the IUPUI sidelines spanned the tenures of three head coaches, starting with his college coach Ron Hunter. Crenshaw was instrumental in a pair of firsts - leading the Jaguars to their first NCAA Tournament as a player and helping the program to its first postseason victory as a coach.
That victory came in the 2010 College Basketball Invitational as part of a 25-win season in which IUPUI fell one win shy of tying the program's single-season record for victories. That season also included one of the Jaguars' two trips to the Summit League championship game during Crenshaw's time on the bench.
In May of 2013, Crenshaw was selected from a competitive field of talented assistant coaches and invited to participate in the NCAA's A.C.E (Achieving Coaching Excellence) Program. The professional development seminar provided an opportunity to focus on training and education in the areas of leadership, communication, campus relations, media, community involvement and program management. He was able to implement much of the training as he has excelled in academic oversight and been active on campus, both at IUPUI and Ball State. He's also helped spearhead community service initiatives in both Indianapolis and Muncie.
As a player, Crenshaw gained national acclaim in March 2003 when his last second jumper sent IUPUI to a thrilling win over Valparaiso in the Mid-Continent Conference championship game and the program's first-ever NCAA Tournament berth.
The Charlottesville, Va.-native capped his collegiate career with an outstanding senior season, earning Mid-Con Defensive Player of the Year honors and Honorable Mention All Mid-Con honors. The 6-foot-2 guard averaged 11.7 points, 5.6 assists and 4.4 rebounds per game as IUPUI went 21-11 overall. He shot 57.3 percent from the floor from his guard spot, while playing 36.3 minutes per game. He was a Preseason All Mid-Con selection prior to his senior season.
He finished his career ranked sixth in school history with 157 steals and led the Mid-Con as a junior and senior in assist-to-turnover ratio. He played in 123 career games, making 98 starts during his four years, totaling 923 points and 422 rebounds to accompany his school record 510 assists. He later had his No. 21 jersey retired by the program, becoming just the third former player to have his number retired to the IUPUI rafters.
After graduating from IUPUI in 2004, Crenshaw spent two years playing professionally both in the U.S. and overseas. He has played professionally in the ABA, Slovakia and Poland. While in Slovakia, he helped his squad to the Slovakian National Championship, while earning Playoff MVP honors. He was pegged by Eurobasket.com as the All-Slovakian League Import Player of the Year and First Team All-League before turning his attention to the coaching ranks.