Bruce Dudek/UAlbany Athletics
Kathleen Helman/UAlbany Athletics
Brent Warzocha/UAlbany Athletics
Bruce Dudek/UAlbany Athletics
Bob Mayberger/UAlbany Athletics
Megan Methven

Megan Methven

  • Title
    Associate Head Coach
  • Email
    mmethven@albany.edu
  • Phone
    (518)-442-3050
  • Alma Mater
    Stonehill

Coaching Experience

• Associate Head Coach, University at Albany (2018-present)
• Assistant Coach, United States Military Academy at West Point (2016-18)
• Assistant Coach, Stonehill College (2013-16)
 

Education

• B.A., Mathematics, Stonehill College (2010)
• M.Ed.L., Educational Leadership, Bridgewater State University (2015)
 

At UAlbany

Methven began her career with the Great Danes along with head coach Colleen Mullen ahead of the 2018-19 season. Throughout her first four seasons, she has helped Mullen lead UAlbany to 50 wins, most recently owning a 23-10 record during the 2021-22 season. 

During the 2021-22 season, she assisted in leading the Great Danes to a historic season with five postseason award winners and a trip to the NCAA Tournament after upsetting first-seeded Maine in Orono. After being named the Sixth Player of the Year, Morgan Haney competed for the Game-Changing Performance in the America East Championship. Kayla Cooper (MOP) and Ellen Hahne (All-Tournament) were honored for their contributions to the conference championship tournament as a whole. Helene Haegerstrand (First Team All-Conference), Kayla Cooper (Second Team All-Conference), Lucia Decortes (All-Defensive Team), and Lilly Phillips (All-Rookie Team) were all honored by the league based on their regular-season accomplishments.

Since the 2021-22 season, Methven has helped Mullen develop 2025 America East Player of the Year Kayla Cooper as well as nine AE All-Conference honorees, including four First Team members, two AE All-Defensive Team, three AE All-Rookie, and four AE All-Academic Team award winners. 

Beginning with the 2021-22 season, Methven has been a part of a coaching staff that has seen four consecutive 20-win seasons and four-straight postseason appearances (NCAA - 2022; WNIT - 2023,24; WBIT - 2025). She, along with the rest of the coaching staff, have seen three America East championship games in the last four seasons with two regular-season titles (2024, 25) and a tournament championship (2022).
 

Playing Career

Methven was a four-year member of the women's basketball team at Stonehill, finishing her career with 1,014 points. As a player, Methven appeared in four NCAA Tournaments, including leading the Skyhawks to a 27-5 record and a Northeast-10 Championship as a sophomore in 2007-08.
 

Prior to UAlbany

Methven served two seasons as an assistant at Army West Point, and three seasons as an assistant at Division II Stonehill College in Easton, Mass.

Methven helped mentor eight All-Northeast-10 Conference players while at Stonehill, while working with Women’s Basketball Coaches Association All-Americans Mary Louise Dixon (2013-14) and Tori Faieta (2014-15).

Prior to her position at Stonehill, Methven worked as a math teacher at Whitman-Hanson Regional High School in Whitman, Mass., from September 2010 to July 2013, while also serving as the head coach for the varsity girls’ basketball team during the 2012-13 season.

During her first season with the Black Knights, Methven helped coach the team to a 22-win season, marking the fifth consecutive year that Army has claimed 20 or more wins in a single season.

Methven began her tenure at Stonehill before the 2013-14 season and helped lead the team to a 19-10 overall record and a victory in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Stonehill posted a 24-5 mark in 2014-15 and reached the NCAA Sweet 16 after winning the Northeast-10 Conference regular-season title. In Methven’s final season in Easton, the Skyhawks finished 15-14 and earned a win over Le Moyne in the first round of the Northeast-10 Tournament.
 

Personal

Megan Methven earned her Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics from Stonehill College in 2010. While coaching for her alma mater, Methven earned her Master of Educational Leadership at Bridgewater State University (2015).


Last updated September 30, 2025.