Women's Basketball
 

  Monique Rosati
Monique Rosati

Player Profile
Hometown:
Brooklyn, N.Y.

Position:
Director of Basketball Operations

Experience:
One season

Alma Mater:
Syracuse, '97


Following a 2007-08 regular season MAC championship finish, Monique Rosati recorded her first season with the Bowling Green State University women's basketball program as the Director of Basketball Operations.

Rosati (center) with her first senior class, Whitney Taylor (right) and Kate Achter (left).


Rosati, whose duties include assisting the coaching staff with film exchange, team travel, academic coordination and daily operations duties within the Falcons' basketball office, saw the program record a 26-8 overall record. She was appointed to the position in August of 2007.

Rosati and head coach Curt Miller first worked together at Syracuse University, where she served as a student manager for the women's basketball team (1994-2001). Miller was an assistant coach at Syracuse during the 1994-98 seasons. Rosati was named the head manager in 1996 and was responsible for tasks pertaining to statistics, video coordination, and public appearances while working towards the completion of a dual undergraduate program in International Relations and Spanish. Rosati continued her tenure with the Orange's staff as she pursued a master's degree from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs.

Her ties to Bowling Green basketball also include a link to current Falcons' head men's basketball coach Louis Orr who was an assistant with the Syracuse men's team from 1996-2000.

The Brooklyn, N.Y. native also serves as the historian and administrative assistant for McNabb Unlimited where she digitally archives all media coverage for fellow Syracuse graduate Donovan McNabb. Her efforts also extend to The Donovan McNabb Foundation, which creates awareness and raises money to fight diabetes.

Rosati's husband, Clayton, a fellow Syracuse alum, is also a new addition to the University and is an assistant professor in the School of Communication Studies.