Head Coach Brandon Rinta
Chehalis, Wash. native
Brandon Rinta went 16-13
and 5-9 in the Frontier
Conference in his first
season at the helm of
the Lewis-Clark State
men's basketball
program, which also
doubled as first year as
a collegiate head coach.
Rinta has strong ties in
the Pacific Northwest
and is highly respected
in the coaching
profession. He spent
five years as an
assistant coach at
Eastern Washington,
first for Ray Giacoletti,
who is now an assistant
coach at Gonzaga, and
then for Mike Burns, who
is now an assistant at
the University of San
Diego. During his five
years there he helped
form the most successful
teams in the program’s
history. Those teams
competed in the
postseason every year,
made it to the Big Sky
Championship game three
times, won the Big Sky
Conference title once,
won EWU’s first ever Big
Sky Tournament
Championship, and
participated in the NIT
and NCAA Tournaments for
the first time in school
history.
Rinta then spent the
next five years as the
top assistant and
associate head coach at
Northwest Nazarene
University in Nampa,
Idaho, a position he
held when he was hired
by LCSC. In his time at
NNU, he helped guide the
Crusaders to their most
successful seasons since
the program moved to
NCAA Division II. During
his five years there,
NNU tied the record for
most wins in a season,
claimed its first
postseason win, and
earned its first
national and regional
ranking. The team also
posted the highest team
GPA in the Great
Northwest Athletic
Conference three out of
those five years.
Rinta grew up in
Chehalis, Wash., and
graduated from W.F. West
High where he earned
four letters in
basketball and two in
football. He was an
all-state selection in
basketball his senior
season when he was named
the Black Hills Player
of the Year. He also was
his team’s MVP his
senior year in football
when he earned
second-team honors as a
running back and wide
receiver.
Rinta played two seasons
at Yakima Valley
Community College.
During his second year,
the team was co-coached
by legendary former Central
Washington coach Dean Nicholson and
current Boise State head
coach and former Gonzaga
assistant Leon Rice. He
earned first-team
all-NWAACC honors when
he averaged 13.3 points
and 7.2 rebounds per
game. He was the team
MVP, captain and Most
Inspirational his final
season there.
Rinta then transferred
to CWU for his final two
seasons. He started 53
games at CWU at guard
and helped the team to a
39-17 mark during those
seasons. In both years,
he served as co-captain
and won the team’s
Hustle Award. He also
won the Most
Inspirational Award his
senior year.
He
averaged 8.4 points, 4.0
rebounds, 2.2 assists,
and 1.5 steals at CWU.
He helped the team to
the NCAA Division II
West Regional both
seasons and the Pacific
West Conference
regular-season title as
a junior.
Rinta earned a
Bachelor’s degree in
Health Fitness Education
from CWU and a Master’s
degree in Athletic
Administration from
Eastern Washington.
Rinta, his wife Deanna,
and their daughter
Kendall reside in
Lewiston.
|
Coach
Brandon Rinta
Year-by-Year at
Lewis-Clark State |
|
Year |
Overall
Record |
Overall
Winning % |
Frontier
Record |
Frontier
Winning % |
Frontier Season |
Frontier Tourney |
Nationals
Record |
|
11-12 |
16-13 |
.551 |
5-9 |
.357 |
7th |
T-5th |
|
|
Total |
16-13 |
.551 |
5-9 |
.357 |
|
|
|
Assistant Coach Austin Johnson
Austin
is in his third year as
an assistant coach in
the Warrior program and
is a big part of the
Warrior recruiting
efforts.
Before
coming to LCSC, Austin
spent two years as a graduate
assistant coach at
Western Illinois
University in Macomb,
Ill. While with the
Leathernecks, Austin’s
duties included film
exchange, video editing,
scouting, recruiting,
and on-floor
instruction. In his last
season there, WIU posted
its most wins in 12
seasons and ranked 10th
in the NCAA in fewest
points allowed per game.
Austin was hired by
WIU after a brief stay
as a volunteer assistant
coach at Odessa Junior
College in Texas.
Austin earned his
Master’s in Sports
Management at WIU after
graduating from Oklahoma
Wesleyan University in
2008 with a degree in
Business Marketing.
He is the fourth of
five children to David
and Gayle Johnson and
grew up in Wichita, Kan.
After high school he
enrolled at Butler
Community College and
redshirted his freshman
year on the basketball
team. He then
transferred to Oklahoma
Wesleyan where he was a
starter his final two
seasons. He wound up
with 1,207 career points
and made more than 250
3-pointers. He was
captain of the team his
senior season and helped
the squad to a 26-8
record, its best ever,
and its first appearance
in the NAIA National
Tournament where the
team advanced to the
Sweet 16 round.
Austin was a two-time
all-Midlands Collegiate
Athletic Conference
selection and was chosen
Oklahoma Wesleyan’s Male
Athlete of the Year in
2008. He also earned
NAIA Scholar-Athlete
honors and made the
Dean’s List at OWU.
Austin is active in
volunteer/ministry work
with both the Fellowship
of Christian Athletes
and Athletes in Action.
He has worked at a
number of basketball
camps, including ones at
Texas, Bradley, South
Florida, Drake, and
Wyoming, as well as
smaller camps throughout
the Midwest.
Assistant Coach Drew Church
Drew is in his
second
year as a
student-assistant
coach in the Warrior
program. He is
currently working on
his Bachelor’s
degree in Sports
Administration and
has a GPA of a 3.80.
Drew is
familiar with LCSC
as he grew up in the
area and attended
Lapwai High School
where he was a
standout basketball
player. During his
senior year in 2008,
he earned Idaho
State Class 1A
All-State honors
from the Idaho
Statesman. He was a
two-time
first-team All-Whitepine
League pick and also
played for the Idaho
Select Basketball
Summer Travel Team,
which consisted of
10 elite high school
players from Idaho
and played in elite
tournaments in
Seattle, Los
Angeles, and Las
Vegas.
Drew
then played two
seasons at Columbia
Basin Community
College in Pasco,
Wash., where he was
a NWAACC East Region
second-team
selection as a
sophomore when he
averaged 13 points,
seven rebounds, and
two assists per
game. He also was
selected to play in
the NWAACC East
Region All-Star
Game.
In 2010, Drew was the
junior varsity coach
and assistant
varsity coach at
Genesee High School.
Genesee won the
Whitepine League
title and finished
second in the Idaho
State 1A Tournament.
Drew plans to
graduate this year
and then continue on
to earn a Master’s
degree in a related
field. He also plans
to work as a
graduate assistant
coach during this
time.
Drew
comes from a sports
family. His father
Dan was a baseball
player in Lewiston
and his mother Tami
was a coach at
Lapwai High for
several seasons.
Drew’s grandfather
is legendary
Lewiston High and
Lewis-Clark Twins
American Legion
coach Dwight Church.
Assistant
Coach Mark Ackerman
Mark Ackerman will
join the Lewis-Clark
State coaching staff
for the 2012-13
season, with his
primary duties being
the team's strength
and conditioning
coach and
fundraising
coordinator.
Mark's background
includes seven years
of coaching at the
collegiate level,
with stops at
Philadelphia
University, Northern
Iowa and the
University of
Colorado-Colorado
Springs. He has been
mentored by
legendary coaches
like Herb Magee
(Philadelphia) and
Eldon Miller (UNI,
Ohio State). HIs
last coaching
position was as the
head coach at Asotin
High School from
2000-2003 before
being called up for
active duty military
service as a captain
in the United States
Army.
Mark's
educational
background includes
a Bachelor's degree
from Gonzaga, a
Master's in Physical
Education-Scientific
Bases of Sport from
Northern Iowa and a
professional degree
from Wake Forest's
School of Medicine
Physician Assistant
program.
Mark
currently resides in
Clarkston with his
wife, Laura and son,
Conrad. He has two
children in college
-- a daughter Claire
at Carroll and a son
Brian at
Alaska-Fairbanks.
Mark works as a
physician assistant
in the emergency
department at St
Joseph Regional
Medical Center.
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