BOSTON – North Dakota State women's basketball head coach
Jory Collins has been named the recipient of the 2026 Kay Yow National Coach of the Year award, presented annually to the top head coach in Women's division I college basketball, who embodies a winning spirit while displaying great character, on and off the court.
Collins guided NDSU to its third straight 20-win season with a 29-5 overall record, which is the most wins in the NDSU Division I era. He also helped the Bison win their first-ever Summit League regular season title after assembling a 15-1 overall record in league play, which was the most Summit League wins in program history. Additionally, the Bison went 12-0 in true road games this season and their 12 wins tied UConn in the regular season for the most in the nation.
NDSU also assembled a 23-game win streak, which was the longest in Summit League history and longest for the Bison since the 2004-05 season. The Bison ascended to the No. 1 ranking in the College Insider Mid-Major Top 25 Poll for the first time in program history after starting the season unranked.
NDSU closed the season advancing to the Summit League Tournament championship game and making its fourth straight appearance in a postseason tournament after advancing to the second round of the Women's Basketball Invitation Tournament (WBIT).
The full release can be found
here and additional information is available at
KayYowAward.com.
About the Kay Yow Award
CollegeInsider.com pays tribute to one of the true icons of women's college basketball with the Kay Yow Award, which is presented annually to the Division I women's head coach who embodies a winning spirit while displaying great character, on and off the court.
Yow, who lost a long battle with cancer in 2009, became the sixth head coach in the history of Division I women's basketball to reach the 700-win plateau, finishing with a sterling record of 737–344 in her 34 seasons at NC State. She was the first women's coach in ACC history to eclipse 600 wins at the same school and directed NC State to 19 top-three finishes in the ACC standings. Her 1997-98 squad advanced all the way to the Final Four in Kansas City.
She was wildly successful in every forum in which she coached, leading gold medal winners at the 1981 World University Games, the 1986 Goodwill Games, 1986 World Championship Games and the 1988 Olympic Games. As an assistant, Yow was on the Olympic gold medal winning 1984 coaching staff in Los Angeles. In addition, she was an assistant on the gold medal-winning teams at the 1979 World University Games, the 1983 Pan American Games and the 1984 R. Williams Jones Cup.
The Kay Yow award voting panel is made up of current division I coaches, athletic administrators, and senior College Insider staff members. The recipient of the 2025-26 award will be announced in April.