Men's Basketball
Stewart, Marlon

Marlon Stewart
- Title:
- Assistant Coach
- Phone:
- 541-737-2076
Marlon Stewart enters his seventh year with the Oregon State men’s basketball program in 2024-25 and his sixth as an assistant coach. He served as the program’s Director of Basketball Operations during the 2018-19 season.
Stewart is an active member of the Oregon State University local and national communities. He serves on the first-ever President’s Commission on the Status of Black Faculty and Staff Affairs, ALL IN to Vote Planning Committee, NIL Implementation Committee, OSU Diversity Inclusion Working Group Steering Committee, Team Together Foundation Board of Directors, the Black Access & Student Success Initiative, as well as being a Rising Coaches Legacy Member.
His responsibilities on the Oregon State basketball staff are recruiting coordinator, scheduling, opponent scouting, skill development, player mentoring and compliance. He also assists with admissions, academics, life skills and holistic development.
Stewart has made an immediate impact in his first five seasons at Oregon State as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator.
He helped the Beavers continue their growth in 2023-24. Jordan Pope was named an All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention, and Oregon State's season was highlighted by a Jan. 25 win over No. 9 Arizona.
During his fourth season with the Beavers, Stewart helped guide one of the youngest teams in the nation, as over 50 percent of the teams points came from freshmen during 2022-23 - one of three Power 5 teams in that category. Jordan Pope earned Pac-12 All-Freshman honors, and Pope joined Tyler Bilodeau and Michael Rataj in scoring over six points per game, making Oregon State one of seven teams in the nation to have a trio of freshmen reach that mark.
During the 2020-21 season, Oregon State won the Pac-12 Conference Tournament championship for the first time in program history to earn an automatic bid in the NCAA Tournament. The Beavers won three games in the Big Dance to advance to the Elite Eight for the first time since 1982.
In one of the greatest runs in program history, Oregon State won nine straight road and neutral-site games, including four over Top 25 teams, to finish the season with a 20-13 record. The Beavers were No. 20 in the final Associated Press poll, the first time they were ranked in any poll since 1990.
In his first season at Oregon State as an assistant coach, the Beavers defeated two Top 25 teams for the first time since 1998-99, swept Stanford for the first time since 2008-09, had a seven-game winning streak, their longest since 1992-93, and opened the year 10-2, their best start since 1984-85.
Oregon State was on a three-game winning streak, including a win over Utah in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament before the season unexpectedly ended due to COVID-19.
Stewart was an assistant coach at the University of Hawai’i in 2017-18 and helped lead the Rainbow Warriors to a 17-13 record.
He was the Director of Basketball Operations from 2014-2016 and ultimately promoted to assistant coach at the University of Montana in 2016-17. He was the defensive coordinator and handled international recruiting at both places. They reached the postseason in two of those three seasons including a regular season Big Sky Championship.
He served as the technology and scouting assistant at the University of Virginia from 2012-14. In his two years at Virginia they reached the postseason both years, including an ACC regular season championship, ACC tournament championship and #1 seed in the NCAA tournament in the 2013-14 season.
Stewart began his professional career as the Video Coordinator at the University of California where he worked from 2008-12, reaching the post season in each of those four seasons, including three NCAA tournament berths.
He earned his bachelor’s degree in sports management from Washington State University in 2008. During his time in Pullman, he was a student manager with the men’s basketball team from 2003-06 and a student video coordinator from 2006-08 where they reached two consecutive NCAA tournaments in 2007 and 2008, including a trip to the Sweet 16.
Stewart was born on March 16, 1985 in Seattle, Wash. He and his wife, Morgan, were married in July of 2019.
Stewart is an active member of the Oregon State University local and national communities. He serves on the first-ever President’s Commission on the Status of Black Faculty and Staff Affairs, ALL IN to Vote Planning Committee, NIL Implementation Committee, OSU Diversity Inclusion Working Group Steering Committee, Team Together Foundation Board of Directors, the Black Access & Student Success Initiative, as well as being a Rising Coaches Legacy Member.
His responsibilities on the Oregon State basketball staff are recruiting coordinator, scheduling, opponent scouting, skill development, player mentoring and compliance. He also assists with admissions, academics, life skills and holistic development.
Stewart has made an immediate impact in his first five seasons at Oregon State as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator.
He helped the Beavers continue their growth in 2023-24. Jordan Pope was named an All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention, and Oregon State's season was highlighted by a Jan. 25 win over No. 9 Arizona.
During his fourth season with the Beavers, Stewart helped guide one of the youngest teams in the nation, as over 50 percent of the teams points came from freshmen during 2022-23 - one of three Power 5 teams in that category. Jordan Pope earned Pac-12 All-Freshman honors, and Pope joined Tyler Bilodeau and Michael Rataj in scoring over six points per game, making Oregon State one of seven teams in the nation to have a trio of freshmen reach that mark.
During the 2020-21 season, Oregon State won the Pac-12 Conference Tournament championship for the first time in program history to earn an automatic bid in the NCAA Tournament. The Beavers won three games in the Big Dance to advance to the Elite Eight for the first time since 1982.
In one of the greatest runs in program history, Oregon State won nine straight road and neutral-site games, including four over Top 25 teams, to finish the season with a 20-13 record. The Beavers were No. 20 in the final Associated Press poll, the first time they were ranked in any poll since 1990.
In his first season at Oregon State as an assistant coach, the Beavers defeated two Top 25 teams for the first time since 1998-99, swept Stanford for the first time since 2008-09, had a seven-game winning streak, their longest since 1992-93, and opened the year 10-2, their best start since 1984-85.
Oregon State was on a three-game winning streak, including a win over Utah in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament before the season unexpectedly ended due to COVID-19.
Stewart was an assistant coach at the University of Hawai’i in 2017-18 and helped lead the Rainbow Warriors to a 17-13 record.
He was the Director of Basketball Operations from 2014-2016 and ultimately promoted to assistant coach at the University of Montana in 2016-17. He was the defensive coordinator and handled international recruiting at both places. They reached the postseason in two of those three seasons including a regular season Big Sky Championship.
He served as the technology and scouting assistant at the University of Virginia from 2012-14. In his two years at Virginia they reached the postseason both years, including an ACC regular season championship, ACC tournament championship and #1 seed in the NCAA tournament in the 2013-14 season.
Stewart began his professional career as the Video Coordinator at the University of California where he worked from 2008-12, reaching the post season in each of those four seasons, including three NCAA tournament berths.
He earned his bachelor’s degree in sports management from Washington State University in 2008. During his time in Pullman, he was a student manager with the men’s basketball team from 2003-06 and a student video coordinator from 2006-08 where they reached two consecutive NCAA tournaments in 2007 and 2008, including a trip to the Sweet 16.
Stewart was born on March 16, 1985 in Seattle, Wash. He and his wife, Morgan, were married in July of 2019.