blank image Home blank image Site Map blank image Contact Us blank image Search blank image blank image E-mail This Article  blank image
Garnet to Cream Gradient Graphic
blank image
About Bates blank image Admissions blank image Academics blank image Campus life blank image Maine/World blank image Alumni life
blank image
Bates Now > Bates Now Story archiveblank image>blank image2001 Stories
blank image
Bates racquets programs swap head coaches
Aug. 9, 2001
blank image
blank image blank image
The Bates College tennis and squash programs will undergo an exchange of head coaches in the 2001-02 year. Effective immediately, men's tennis and men's squash coach Paul Gastonguay '89 will become head coach of men's and women's tennis, while John Illig, previously coach of both women's tennis and squash will take over both squash programs.

"In their time at Bates and throughout their careers, Paul and John have each had remarkable success coaching both tennis and squash," said Bates Director of Athletics Suzanne Coffey. "We felt that they can be even more effective coaches if they are able to focus exclusively on one sport. All four programs will benefit from this arrangement."

 Gastonguay was an All-American tennis player as a senior at Bates. He went on to play on the professional tour, serving for three years as a pratice partner for International Tennis Federation Hall-of-Famer Ivan Lendl. In six years coaching the Bobcat men's tennis program, Gastonguay has posted a 29-27 dual match record. Over the past two seasons, he has led Bates to consecutive appearances in the NCAA Division III tournament and a pair of top-three finishes in the prestigious New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC). Gastonguay was named 2001 NESCAC Coach of the Year after leading the Bobcats to a third-place finish despite losing three of six starters from his 2000 team.

Illig has coached at Bates since 1996, posting four winning records in five women's squash seasons, including a 17-9 record in 1997 that established a school record for wins in a season. He led the Bobcats to consecutive 13th-place finishes in the Women's Intercollegiate Squash Association (WISA) rankings in 2000 and 2001, their highest ever. In 2000, Illig was named by the United States Olympic Committee as the Developmental Squash Coach of the Year. In his 11 years of coaching squash, he has coached two All-Americans and two winners of WISA's Anne Wetzel Award, presented each year to a top player who began playing the sport in college. Illig is the 2001-03 president of WISA's executive board.

- Office of Communications and Media Relations

blank image blank image