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Tulane University Athletics

Lisa Stockton

Lisa Stockton

Lisa Stockton By The Numbers

Tulane Record 579-324 (.641) in 29 years
Career Record 642-351 (.647) in 32 years
Post Season Appearances 21 (11 NCAA, 10 WNIT)


Why Tulane 2023



Lisa Stockton, the all-time winningest women’s basketball coach in the state of Louisiana and newest inductee to the Conference USA Hall of Fame, will wrap up her third decade at the helm of the Green Wave’s women’s basketball program during the 2023-24 season.

A 30-year veteran of the Division I head coaching ranks, Stockton is one of the most respected names in all of college basketball. The Greensboro, N.C. native was named one of the 25 most influential women in Louisiana sports history by The Advocate in 2022. In 2020, Silver Waves Media tabbed her as one of the 100 Most Impactful People nationally across the sport of women’s college basketball. To that end, Stockton was a member of the NCAA Women’s Basketball Issues Committee and was previously on its Academic Subcommittee. Dubbed one of CitiBusiness’s 2007 Women of the Year, she is currently on the NCAA regional ranking committee, has also had two stints on the Kodak All-American Committee, twice chaired the C-USA Women’s Basketball Coaches and served four terms as the WBCA Conference Captain. 

A 2017 inductee to the Guilford County Sports Hall of Fame, Stockton was named her league’s Coach of the Year three times and Louisiana’s Coach of the Year twice. She is also one of only two active coaches (Stanford’s Tara Vanderveer) to take one of U.S. News & World Report’s Top 40 academic institutions to at least 11 NCAA Tournaments. Stockton is most proud of her student athletes’ collective accomplishments in the classroom, as every four-year player has completed their degrees under her leadership.

Stockton has also made the Pelican State a priority in the construction of her program. Of the 23 players who have become members of Tulane’s 1,000-Point Club during her tenure, 13 hail from the state of Louisiana. She has also had seven players inducted to the school’s athletic Hall of Fame with five coming via homegrown talent.

In NOLA, Stockton has led Tulane to 21 postseason appearances, while averaging 20 wins a season. She has also helped the Olive and Blue secure five conference tournament titles and four regular season conference titles. While leading the Green Wave, Stockton has mentored six All-Americans and five WNBA draft picks.

While team success has been the ultimate goal, individual recognition has been a constant as well under her leadership. In her 29 years, Tulane has seen 28 different student-athletes earn all-conference honors 53 times and 13 receive All-Freshman recognition.

Stockton’s own playing career began at Greensboro’s Western Guilford High School before heading to Wake Forest University. During her four years with the Demon Deacons (1983-86), she set the school’s career records in scoring (1,347), scoring average (12.1 ppg), field goals made (592), field goals attempted (1,262), field goal percentage (.462), assists (330), steals (206) and minutes played (3,385).

Stockton still holds the Wake Forest record for consecutive games started (97) and still ranks in the top 10 for points, made field goals, assists and steals. As a senior, she was named honorable mention Fast Break All-American after scoring 473 points and hitting 204-of-415 shots (.491), pulling down 94 rebounds, dishing out 97 assists and tallying 58 steals.

Stockton earned a spot on the ACC Academic Honor Roll following each of her final two seasons and graduated cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in health and sports science in 1986. 

She was drafted by the National Women’s Basketball Association following her senior season but chose instead to begin her coaching career as a volunteer assistant at the University of North Carolina for the 1986-87 season where she helped the Tar Heels go 19-10 overall, advancing to the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Stockton also enveloped herself in post-graduate studies and completed her master’s degree in 1987. 

From there, she accepted her first collegiate head coaching position at Division III Greensboro College. In three seasons, she helped guide the Pride to a combined 63-27 record en route to a pair of Dixie Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Coach of the Year honors.

Stockton returned to the Division I level the following year when she accepted the top assistant position at Georgia Tech. While there, she was responsible for coordinating recruiting efforts, monitoring academic progress, the supervision of scheduling and coaching the offense. In her four years in Atlanta, the Ramblin’ Wreck went 63-52, including a 20-win campaign in 1991-92. The following season, Georgia Tech advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in school history. 

Stockton then came to NOLA for the 1994-95 season, where she led the Green Wave to nine consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances.

(Updated 8/10/23)