cided to give up Division 1 women’s basketball coaching careers to start a bedsheet company, they raised more than a few eyebrows. The road from sports to business is well-
traveled, but this leap of faith was anything but a slam dunk.
Walvius, 47, a former All-American at Virginia Tech, had been head coach at the University of South Carolina, part of the most competitive women’s basketball conference in the nation, for 11 years. Having turned around a moribund program, Walvius was Coach of the Year in the Southeastern Conference in 2002 and took her team to the post-season tournament five times. Marciniak, 38, a tenacious point guard and team captain for the legendary coach Pat Summitt at the University of Tennessee and most valuable player of the Volunteers’ 1996 national championship team, played professionally for six years and went on to a coaching career of her own. She joined Walvius as an assistant at South Carolina in 2002. The pair were lifelong basketball and fitness junkies, and careers in busi-
ness had not flashed on the radar screen for either of them. The idea that they would suddenly end their coaching careers to become entrepreneurs was startling enough. But to make such a move in order to sell bedsheets seemed to border on sheer lunacy. “My parents told me I was nuts,” said Walvius, who was a Division 1 head coach for 18 years. “They kept asking, ‘What coaching job are you going to get?’ Even after the first two years, they said, ‘You’re making bedsheets? Really?’ ” Of course, these are not ordinary bedsheets. Sheex, the company they founded, is selling an entirely new kind of product with the hope of building a brand by turning innovation into a disruptive force. What Walvius and Marciniak are
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betting on is that the world is ready for a new kind of “high performance” bedsheet, made not from cotton but from the same type of fabric used in athletic apparel by such brands as Under Armour. The synthetic poly-spandex fabric, now a de facto standard among serious athletes from high school to the pros, changed the sports fashion landscape. Unlike cotton, which becomes soaked with sweat and stays wet, this material wicks sweat, dries quickly, keeps an athlete cool in the summer and warm in the winter, and offers a high level of comfort. Under Armour, a hugely successful company founded in 1996 by Kevin Plank, a former University of Maryland football player, triggered an upheaval in athletic apparel fabrics. Competing against giants like Nike and Adidas, Under Armour
Courtesy of Sheex (all)
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n 2008, when Susan Walvius and Michelle Marciniak de-
Between the