Greg Lansing
Gregory A. Lansing is a current special assistant to the head coach at Arizona State. An assistant and head coach at the high school and college levels since 1990, he was most recently the head men's basketball coach at Indiana State University from 2010 to 2021, having twice previously been an assistant coach at Indiana State.
Originally from Harlan, Iowa, Lansing played college basketball at South Dakota and was the North Central Conference Defensive Player of the Year as a senior in 1990. After two years as a graduate assistant there, Lansing was an assistant coach at South Dakota from 1992 to 1993. From 1993 to 1995, Lansing was head coach at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Des Moines, Iowa, where he led the boys' basketball program to its first winning seasons in over a decade. Lansing then returned to the college level as Indiana State assistant coach from 1995 to 1999 during a turnaround where Indiana State had a winning season for the first time in over 15 years. Then from 1999 to 2006, Lansing was an assistant coach at the University of Iowa, where he helped Iowa win the 2001 Big Ten tournament.
After his second stint as an assistant coach at Indiana State from 2006 to 2010, Lansing became head coach at Indiana State. Lansing led Indiana State to a Missouri Valley Conference tournament title in his debut season and subsequently took Indiana State to the 2012 College Basketball Invitational and the National Invitation Tournaments of 2013 and 2014. Those were the only postseason appearances in his time as head coach, and Indiana State declined to renew his contract following the 2020β21 season. With a 181β164 cumulative record in 11 seasons, Lansing has the second most wins among Indiana State head coaches.
Early life and education
Lansing was born in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, where his father Dave was a high school basketball coach. Lansing later grew up in Harlan, Iowa, and attended Harlan Community High School, where he graduated in 1986 and earned all-state honors in baseball, basketball, and football.After high school, Lansing attended the University of South Dakota. On the South Dakota Coyotes men's basketball team, Lansing played at guard from 1986 to 1990 under head coach Dave Boots. As a senior in 1989β90, he averaged 3.4 points, 1.2 rebounds, and 2.3 assists and was the North Central Conference Defensive Player of the Year, concluding his college career with one of the highest career assist totals in program history. Lansing was also part of South Dakota teams that appeared in the 1989 and 1990 NCAA Division II Tournaments. Lansing graduated from South Dakota in 1990 with a bachelor's degree in physical education.
Coaching career
Early coaching career (1990β2010)
After his playing career, Lansing remained at South Dakota from 1990 to 1992 as a graduate assistant under Dave Boots. Lansing completed his master's degree in counseling in 1992 and was promoted to full-time assistant coach that year.Returning to Iowa, Lansing was head coach at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Des Moines from 1993 to 1995. Lansing led Roosevelt to consecutive winning seasons; the program had 12 straight losing seasons before his hire.
In 1995 under head coach Sherman Dillard, Lansing returned to the college level in the first of multiple stints at Indiana State. Lansing helped Indiana State achieve a 16β11 record in 1997β98, the first of four straight winning seasons and the first winning season since 1980.
After four years at Indiana State, Lansing became an assistant coach at Iowa under Steve Alford. Lansing helped the 2000β01 Iowa team win the Big Ten tournament, advance to the second round of the NCAA tournament, and finish with a year-end no. 24 national ranking. Iowa next appeared in the NCAA Tournament in 2005 and 2006.
Lansing returned to Indiana State to be an assistant again on June 30, 2006, this time under Royce Waltman. He was promoted to associate head coach in 2007 under new head coach Kevin McKenna. The 2009β10 Indiana State team qualified for the 2010 College Basketball Invitational, the first postseason appearance since the 2001 NCAA Tournament.
Indiana State head coach (2010β2021)
After McKenna resigned to accept an offer to be assistant coach at Oregon, Indiana State promoted Lansing to head coach on June 15, 2010.In his debut season as head coach, Lansing led Indiana State to a 20β14 record, MVC tournament title, and NCAA tournament automatic berth. He became the second Indiana State rookie head coach to lead the program to the NCAA Tournament, last achieved by Bill Hodges in 1979.
Lansing led the 2011β12 Indiana State team to an 18β15 record and a berth in the 2012 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament. On December 17, 2011, Indiana State upset no. 25 Vanderbilt 61β55.
In the 2012β13 season, Indiana State finished 18β15 and made the 2013 National Invitation Tournament, losing in the first round to Lansing's former team Iowa. The regular season included upsets of ranked Wichita State and Creighton teams.
In 2013β14, Lansing reached a new high in total wins with a 23β11 record. For the third straight season, Indiana State upset a nationally ranked opponent, this time no. 21 Notre Dame on November 17, 2013, by a score of 83β70.
After this initial success, Indiana State had losing records from the 2014β15 to 2018β19 seasons. On December 7, 2016, Lansing set a new school record with a fifth win over a ranked opponent, 72β71 at home over no. 16 Butler; however, Indiana State finished the season 11β20, the worst in Lansing's tenure.
Indiana State opened the 2017β18 season with a 90β69 win at Indiana on November 10, setting new records for margin of victory over Indiana and three-pointers made by an opponent at Assembly Hall. The season concluded with a 13β18 record.
For the first time since 1946, Indiana State defeated a Pac-12 Conference opponent on December 22, 2018, with a 72β67 win over Colorado at the 2018 Diamond Head Classic in Hawaii; Indiana State was the runner-up in tournament and improved to 15β16 to end the season.
The 2019β20 team had the first winning record in six years at 18β12 with a third-place finish in the MVC standings. The 2020β21 team had a second straight winning record at 15β10 and finished fourth in the MVC.
On March 8, 2021, Indiana State athletic director Sherard Clinkscales announced that the university would not renew Lansing's contract after its March 31 expiration, citing concern for the "long-term success of the program." Lansing concluded his Indiana State head coaching record with a cumulative 181β164 record, one win short of all-time wins leader Duane Klueh.