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Patrick Filien, Peripatetic Basketball Coach, Dies at 51


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Those we’ve lost

Patrick Filien, Peripatetic Basketball Coach, Dies at 51

After assistant coaching jobs around the country, he found his dream job as the head coach at a small college in Albany, N.Y. He died of Covid-19.

Credit…University of Albany

  • Feb. 25, 2021, 3:45 p.m. ET

This obituary is part of a series about people who have died in the coronavirus pandemic. Read about others here.

After nearly 25 years as an assistant coach of men’s and women’s basketball teams at seven colleges, Pat Filien achieved his professional dream in 2018: He became a head coach.

But he faced an unusual challenge. He was named not only to coach the first men’s basketball team at Bryant & Stratton’s campus in Albany, N.Y., but also to take charge of the small college’s inaugural plunge into sports as its athletic director.

“Everywhere else I had been, everything was already established,” he told The Times Union of Albany in 2019. “This was something I’ve had to create. You name it, I’m doing it. This time last year, we didn’t even have a recruit. I didn’t even have a basketball.”

In addition to guiding the basketball team to an 18-10 record and the small-college United States Collegiate Athletic Association tournament in the 2018-19 season, Mr. Filien oversaw the start-up of the school’s baseball team in 2018 and the creation of the women’s basketball team and the men’s and women’s soccer teams in 2019.

Mr. Filien died on Feb. 4 at his home in East Greenbush, near Albany. He was 51.

The cause was Covid-19, his brother Robert said.

Patrick John Filien (pronounced FILL-ee-en) was born on Sept. 28, 1969, in Brooklyn and raised in Ozone Park, Queens. His father, Jean-Claude, had started a cellphone company in Haiti; his mother, Yolande (Charlemagne) Filien, was a legal secretary.

Pat played football — he was the quarterback of his Pop Warner football team — as well as baseball and basketball, together with his brother Robert and another brother, Lesly.

After playing for the Fashion Institute of Technology’s basketball team, he transferred to the College of Saint Rose in Albany, where he helped the Golden Knights to their first appearance in the Division II N.C.A.A. men’s tournament, in 1992.

A 6-foot-7 forward, he was known for his exuberance, his embrace of opponents after a game and his fierce rebounding.

“He literally rebounded the ball like he hadn’t eaten in a month and the ball was meat,” Brian Beaury, the former Saint Rose coach, said in The Times Union’s obituary for Mr. Filien.

After Mr. Filien’s graduation, he embarked on a series of coaching jobs around the country that included stints at the University of Vermont, from 2001 to 2005, and the State University of New York at Albany, from 2005 to 2011. His teams won five consecutive conference titles, three of them while he was at Vermont and two more at Albany.

“That’s what he talked about most,” his brother Robert said by phone.

In addition to his brothers, Mr. Filien is survived by his wife, Tiffani (Adams) Filien; his parents; his daughter, Lauren, who plays high school basketball in East Greenbush; his son, Marcus, a forward on the Cornell University basketball team; and his sister, Marie Hamilton.

After moving around so much in his coaching career, Mr. Filien was glad for landing at Bryant & Stratton, which allowed him finally to settle down, in Albany. And he had ambitions to move his school up in the ranks.

“He loved it,” Robert Filien said of his brother’s job. “He was hoping to make a name for Bryant & Stratton and make it a Division III school.”

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Source: Basketball - nytimes.com


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