Assistant Coach Molly Dullea
Phone: (773) 702-5142
E-mail: mdullea@uchicago.edu
Molly Dullea begins her first season as assistant women's basketball coach in 2007-08.
Dullea came to Chicago in August 2007 following a two-year stint as an assistant coach at Wesleyan University, where she assisted in all phases of the women's basketball program.
She gained her first coaching experience at Noble & Greenough School in Massachusetts, where she served as head coach of an underclassmen squad and assistant coach for the 22-3 varsity team in 2004-05.
Dullea enjoyed an outstanding playing career at St. Anselm College from 2000-04. A three-year starting point guard, she finished her career in sixth place on the NCAA Division II school's all-time assists chart. She was named the team's Most Valuable Player in 2004 and Defensive Player of the Year in 2003 and 2004.
Dullea earned a bachelor's degree in sociology from St. Anselm in 2004 before receiving a master's degree in social sciences from Wesleyan in 2007.
Assistant Coach Steve White
Steve White begins his second year with the Chicago coaching staff in 2007-08.
White is a 2005 graduate of Purdue University, where he spent two years assisting the women's basketball staff in player development and opponent scouting.
He also spent three years as a summer basketball camp counselor.
White holds a bachelor's degree in liberal arts and is working toward a master's degree in business administration from North Central College.
Assistant Coach Korry Schwanz
Following a stellar playing career at Chicago, Korry Schwanz joins the coaching staff beginning in 2007-08.
A four-time All-University Athletic Association selection from 2003-07, Schwanz finished her career as the third-leading scorer (1,226 points) in Chicago history and as one of only two players in the program's 36-year history to collect at least 1,000 points and 250 assists.
As a senior in 2006-07, Schwanz was the most accurate free throw shooter in the NCAA Division III (93.2%), thus becoming Chicago women's basketball's first-ever national statistical champion.
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