This spring, Jill Batcheller led Drexel to an historic season — a school-record 13 wins and the school’s first NCAA tournament appearance. With many of the top players coming back in 2022, there were some eyebrows raised when Batcheller left Drexel to take the head coaching position at Villanova, a school less than 10 miles from Drexel’s campus.
“I keep saying to everyone on the outside looking in, it wasn’t about Drexel,” Batcheller said. “It was about me. I grew up two miles away from the Villanova campus. Growing up around Villanova basketball and this university, it’s a job I’ve always seen for myself. Being part of a school that’s won national championships, it’s so exciting.”
Batcheller played the sport in high school at Archbishop Carroll in Radnor, Pa., just down the road from Villanova on the Main Line in Philadelphia’s suburbs, and ever since has been a part of building programs.
She played at Syracuse, joining the team when the program was less than a decade old, and scored over 100 points in her career while helping the Orange win their first Big East championship (2007).
She then took assistant coaching positions at St. Joseph’s and Brown before getting her first shot as a head coach at Bryant University, a program that had just transitioned from the NCAA Division II level to Division I. In six seasons leading the Bulldogs, she won five Northeast Conference regular-season championships and advanced to the NCAA tournament three times.
That led to the opportunity at Drexel, where she inherited a program coming off losing records in four of the previous five seasons. After going 6-10 in her first season in 2019, Batcheller and the Dragons showed promise in 2020 with a 5-2 record before COVID-19 shut things down. That promise came true last season with the record 13 wins, including three wins over traditional CAA power Towson, the first time Drexel had beaten the school since 2014.
And now, she gets to see what she can do at Villanova, a school that has never reached the NCAA tournament despite being located in one of the hotbeds of high school talent.
“The potential is limitless,” Batcheller said. “I do see this program being Big East champions, competing for national championships. The reach we’re able to have in recruiting with the academic and athletic profile of this school, I even more believe it now that I’m here.”
Making the transition easier will be the fact that Batcheller brought along assistant coaches Kelsea Donnelly and Maddie Lesher. They first joined her staff at Bryant, made the move to Drexel and now take on the challenge together at Villanova.