June 26, 2017

Patrick Baldwin has been named head coach of the UW-Milwaukee men's basketball team.
 
Baldwin joins UWM from Northwestern University and becomes the seventh head coach since Milwaukee's 1990 move to NCAA Division I.
 
Baldwin will be formally introduced during a news conference 12:30 p.m. Thursday at the Union Art Gallery in the UWM Student Union, 2200 E. Kenwood Blvd., Milwaukee. The news conference will be livestreamed at MKEPanthers.com.
 
"We are proud to have Patrick join the UW-Milwaukee family," said UWM Chancellor Mark Mone. "His deep commitment to have our student-athletes succeed in the classroom as well as on the court reflects the values of Milwaukee basketball. I know he will also play an important role in helping to connect our university to the community."
 
Baldwin has spent the past four seasons as an assistant coach at Northwestern, helping rebuild his alma mater into a force in the Big Ten.
 
"Patrick has played a major role in the resurgence of a successful program and is ready to take the next step as a head coach," Milwaukee Director of Athletics Amanda Braun said. "We are very happy that step will be taken at UWM and as a Panther. He is very familiar with the Horizon League and the Midwest and will continue to build on the foundation we have put in place. I am thrilled to welcome Patrick, his wife, Shawn, and their children to the Milwaukee program."
 
"I want to thank Amanda Braun and Chancellor Mone for affording me the opportunity and honor to serve as the head coach at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee," Baldwin said. "I am extremely excited about this opportunity to lead a program that has a great tradition of winning, resources to help facilitate our ascension in the Horizon League and commitment from the entire administration. Our main goal and focus is to compete and win championships. I can't wait to get started with our current roster of student-athletes and work toward achieving great success both on and off the court."
 
A key member of the Northwestern coaching staff under head coach Chris Collins, Baldwin saw the Wildcats increase their win total in each of his four years there.
 
That culminated last season with a school-record 24 victories and the first NCAA tournament berth in school history. NU's 2016-17 season also included 10 wins in Big Ten play for the first time since the 1930s. That followed what was a school-record 20 wins during the 2015-16 campaign.
 
As an assistant coach at NU, where he worked primarily with the guards, Baldwin helped the Wildcats land recruiting classes ranked in the nation's top 30.
 
"The entire Wildcats community is thrilled for Pat Baldwin, an outstanding representative of our university," said Northwestern Vice President for Athletics & Recreation Jim Phillips. "He was an exceptional student-athlete, and has been an incredible mentor for our young men during his tenure on the men's basketball staff."
 
Baldwin, a 1994 graduate of Northwestern, was one of the top players in school history. He still stands among the top 20 scorers, was a three-time team captain, graduated as the school's all-time leader in steals and assists, and was the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year as a senior.
 
"I'd like to thank the Northwestern University community under the leadership of President Morty Schapiro, Vice President for Athletics & Recreation Jim Phillips and his staff, head coach Chris Collins, the staff and players for four unbelievable years," Baldwin said. "I was able to come back to my alma mater and be a part of a tremendous transformation in the men's basketball program, culminating in a dance in the NCAA tournament. Thank you for all of the great memories."
 
Baldwin played professionally in Bosnia and Croatia before joining the coaching ranks. He has valuable firsthand experience in the Horizon League, beginning with two seasons as an assistant at UW-Green Bay before a seven-year stop at Loyola Chicago, where he finished as the associate head coach. Prior to arriving at Northwestern, he spent two seasons at Missouri State, where he recruited Missouri Valley Conference Freshman of the Year Marcus Marshall.
 
A native of Leavenworth, Kansas, Baldwin got his coaching start during the 2001-02 season at Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Missouri.
 
Baldwin was a standout player for Northwestern from 1990-94. He still ranks first in school history with 272 career steals, second all-time with 452 assists and 20th with 1,189 points. His 90 steals as a freshman in 1990-91 are the school's single-season record, while his 154 assists as a senior in 1993-94 rank third in school history.
 
Patrick and Shawn (née Karey – herself a former Northwestern volleyball player) have four children: Patrick, Tatum, Brooke and Claire.