David Riley
Current team: Loyola Academy | |
Career record: | |
Former school(s): none | |
Other leadership: IHSSBCA Chair (1998-2004) | |
IHSSBCA Hall of Fame (2011) |
David Riley is the long time Scholastic Bowl coach at Loyola Academy in Wilmette, Illinois. He is a librarian at the school, and has a virtually endless reserve of knowledge in the fields of literature, gourmet foods, Hungarian history, and classical music.
Coaching
Riley has accrued an impressive win-loss record, which includes well over 600 victories in his career. In 1996, his Ramblers won their first Sectional Title, and advanced downstate where they lost a gut wrenching 210-158 decision to Notre Dame High School of Peoria, on some very bad questions. They won their Sectional again in 2009, under the captainship of Jack Glerum, and finished 4th in Peoria that year. The Ramblers also almost went downstate in 2010, but lost on a circle-of-death tiebreaker by 3.3 pp20TUH.
Riley's teams also claimed at least four Regional titles in 2003, 2005, 2009, and 2010.
Riley also served as coach for Team Illinois from 2002-2007, leading the team to a second place finish in his inaugural season. In 2005 and 2007, last minute health issues forced him to stay at home and not travel with the team. Over his tenure, Team Illinois finished in second once (2002), third twice (2004 & 2005), and won the tournament championship in 2007. Though Riley did not travel with the team, he is at least partially responsible for the 2007 Team Illinois Travel Disaster. He reclaimed his role as Team Illinois Coach last year, along with Mike Laudermith, at the first incarnation of the NASAT. Riley Lead Team Illinois to a 3rd place finish after losing the tiebreaker game against South Carolina. Riley will once again coach Team Illinois this year.
Coach Riley for some reason took Loyola to one NAC, but has long since stopped attending. Since then, he has taken his team to 2 PACE NSC's and more NAQT HSNCT's.
Among Riley's favorite coaching stories is the one about Loyola's historic victory over Wheaton North in the semifinals of the 2004 "Bulldog Classic" at Richards High School in Oak Lawn. It would turn out to be Wheaton North's only loss of the season en route to their third consecutive state title, and a 95-1 record.
While Riley has rarely had reliable, long-term assistance in his coaching duties, in 2004, a former player, Matt Laird returned to act as an assistant. Laird coached the team for 5 years, took 2 off, and returned this year to once again coach the frosh/soph.
Amongst Riley's most famous thing to do while coaching is accusing his players of having no sense of civilization every time they miss something related to opera, old movies, or 60s girl groups.
Riley the Reformer
Few Illinois coaches have led a charge for change for as long as David Riley. For well over a decade, Riley has railed against the entrenched establishment to make changes in Illinois Scholastic Bowl, including (but not limited to): improved questions, a greater reliance in pyramidailty, changes in rules to open up the game to players, and give greater power to moderators to make the best call, instead of relying on outdated "behavior" based rules which could only penalize better teams.
For a number of years, Riley was President of the IHSSBCA, from which he could help focus the conversation of reform in Illinois. He also served two terms on the IHSA Scholastic Bowl Advisory Board where he acted to council the IHSA on reforming itself.
Riley was among the first coaches to host an NAQT event in Illinois, and was for a few years the tournament director for the NAQT State Tournament.
Riley also originated the Ultima tournament which he continues to host at Loyola. Through 2008, the Ultima was in the format of the Panasonic Academic Challenge and was intended to act as a gauge for potential Team Illinois players for the upcoming year. Due to the IHSSBCA's 2008 decision not to continue sponsorship of Team Illinois, Ultima will be held on an IS set beginning in 2009. Participation is strictly reserved for teams based on a Riley-invented points system which ranks teams based on the previous year's varsity and frosh-soph performance.