Eric Musselman made his USC basketball debut. Opening night could not have gone any better. The Trojans looked very well-coached throughout.
USC opened up its season with a dominant 77-51 victory over Chattanooga on Monday, beginning the Eric Musselman era with a bang. The Trojans looked like a well-oiled machine and did not play like a team which had just one returning player from Andy Enfield’s last team. This group, comprised almost entirely of transfers, looked sharp and connected at both ends of the floor. Guard Chibuzo Agbo scored a team-high 14 points on 4-of-9 from 3 while forward Matt Knowling added 13 off the bench. It was an all-around successful night for the Trojans, who had seven players score 8 or more points in the win. The Trojans held the Mocs to just 27.8% shooting from the floor including 17.6% beyond the arc.
The win is reflective of this team’s identity that was showcased in its exhibition win over Gonzaga in late October.
Kevin Sweeney, a college basketball writer for Sports Illustrated, put it this way:
“USC didn’t treat this (Gonzaga) like an exhibition, really pushed its starters to the brink and did everything it could to win the game. Probably a decent move by Muss – try to build some buy-in and confidence inside the locker room while getting a big-name win to build excitement with the fans. Was impressed with how Claude looked as essentially a full-time point guard (a new role for him) and the positional size and shooting they have from 1-4 is impressive.”
In his first year with the program, head coach Eric Musselman seems to be putting an emphasis on culture and making his players buy into his plan. While Chattanooga is one of the easier opponents this team will face this season, a big win, with no roadblocks, will make any Trojan fan happy. This was a very strong and positive opening game. Keep in mind that Terrance Williams, the Michigan transfer who is expected to be one of USC’s better scorers this season, did not play due to injury. USC did really well without him. Imagine what could happen when he gets healthy and gets playing time.
Amir Abdur-Rahim’s tragic passing at age 43 shocked the college basketball world on Thursday.
The college basketball world was rocked by the tragic passing of South Florida coach Amir Abdur-Rahim on Thursday.
Abdur-Rahim was undergoing a medical procedure at a Tampa-area hospital when he died from complications, according to a statement from the university.
“All of us with South Florida Athletics are grieving with the loved ones of Coach Abdur-Rahim,” USF athletic director Michael Kelly said in a statement. “He was authentic, driven, and his infectious personality captivated all of Bulls Nation. Coach Abdur-Rahim leaves a lasting impact on our student-athletes, the University, and the community. We are supporting those closest to him, including his family, team, and athletics staff, to ensure they have the resources they need to deal with this tremendous loss.”
There was an immediate outpouring of shock, grief, and remembrance for the 43-year-old, who is survived by his wife and three children.
Abdur-Rahim was the younger brother of former Cal forward and NBA All-Star Shareef Abdur-Rahim, who posted about his brother’s passing on social media Friday morning.
Abdur-Rahim was an assistant coach at Murray State, Georgia Tech, Charleston, Texas A&M and Georgia where he helped recruit superstar Anthony Edwards. He then took over as head coach at Kennesaw State and catapulted the program to new heights, going from 1-28 in the 2019-20 season to 26-9 in 2022-23, making the NCAA Tournament and nearly taking down three seed Xavier.
Abdur-Rahim was then hired on at South Florida and immediately found success, leading the Bulls to a 25-8 record and their first AAC regular season championship. The 25 wins was a school record, and they were ranked in the AP Top 25 for the first time in school history.
More than that, he was beloved by his players, staff, peers, and fans alike, and his passing leaves a big hole in the college basketball world just days before the 2024-25 season begins.
12 college programs are ranked in the USA TODAY Sports top 25 coaches poll in both men’s and women’s basketball, including UConn in the top five for both.
The 2024-25 college basketball season is under two weeks away, with the UConn Huskies and South Carolina Gamecocks set to defend their national championships in men’s and women’s hoops, respectively.
UConn replaces four of five starters from Dan Hurley’s second straight national championship squad, and the Huskies ranked third in the USA TODAY Sports men’s basketball preseason coaches poll behind Kansas and Alabama.
Meanwhile, Dawn Staley’s South Carolina team was picked first in the women’s poll after an undefeated 38-0 season, just ahead of UConn and USC.
That means UConn had both its men’s and women’s programs inside the top five of the USA TODAY coaches polls, the only school to accomplish said feat and one of 12 to have both programs ranked inside the top 25.
Here is a look at each of those programs, including where they are ranked in each poll as well as conference affiliation:
AJ Dybantsa could command over $4M in NIL money, and the Utah Jazz ownership could help the BYU Cougars land the No. 1 overall prospect.
The BYU Cougars are one of seven teams reportedly still in the running for AJ Dybantsa, the top high school prospect in the country and a player with legitimate superstar potential. But it sounds like landing the Utah Prep star is going to cost a pretty penny…or slightly more.
Dybantsa is expected to land an NIL package over $3 million, and a source close to the BYU program told Pete Nakos that the Cougars are prepared to pay $4-4.5M to land the 6’9 wing, with financial backing coming from Utah Jazz owner Ryan Smith and executive and former BYU standout Danny Ainge.
Dybantsa wrapped up an official visit at BYU on Oct. 11, his fifth OV in the last six weeks. Previous visits included Kansas State, Kansas, North Carolina, and Alabama. Auburn and Baylor are the two other schools in Dybantsa’s top seven.
While Dybantsa’s father indicated NIL is not a driving factor in his son’s recruitment, the allure of staying in Utah and playing in the Big 12, and potentially teaming up with current teammate and four-star point guard prospect JJ Mandaquit, could lead to a seismic shift in the college basketball landscape.
Ever since former Phoenix Suns assistant coach Kevin Young took over for Mark Pope at BYU this offseason, the Cougars have gone to work bringing high profile talent to Provo. Russian guard and incoming freshman Egor Demin is considered a one-and-done talent, while Purdue decommit Kanon Catchings has that potential as well.
It appears Young has the green light to pursue anyone and everyone he can convince to join his program, no matter the cost. When NBA ownership groups are in your pocket, in this day and age, just about anything is possible on the hardwood.
The two-time defending national champion UConn Huskies were ranked No. 3 with the Houston Cougars No. 4. The Duke Blue Devils and freshman sensation Cooper Flagg rounded out the top five.
Fresh off the program’s first trip to the Final Four in school history, and led by returning players like top-scoring guard Mark Sears (a 2024-25 AP preseason All-American) and forward Grant Nelson, Alabama has a grueling nonconference slate — even by Oats’ scheduling standards.
In a stretch from mid-November through mid-December, the Crimson Tide will travel to West Lafayette, Ind., to face the 13th-ranked Purdue Boilermakers on Nov. 15, followed by the 24th-ranked Illinois Fighting Illini at Birmingham’s Legacy Arena on Nov. 20.
The Tide will then head to Las Vegas for the Players Era Festival starting Nov. 26 with a game against Houston, followed by a matchup with No. 25 Rutgers a day later. Alabama will close the Players Era Festival with a matchup against unranked Notre Dame on Nov. 30.
From there, the Crimson Tide visits the 10th-ranked North Carolina Tar Heels in Chapel Hill for a Sweet 16 rematch with RJ Davis and company on Dec. 4 as part of the SEC-ACC Challenge. Alabama closes its stretch of Top 25 competition against the 14th-ranked Creighton Bluejays on Dec. 14 in Tuscaloosa.
Alabama opens the regular season against UNC Asheville at Coleman Coliseum on Monday, Nov. 4. Tipoff is set for 8 p.m. The game will be televised on ESPNU.
2024-25 Preseason Men’s Basketball Coaches Poll
Rank
School
Last Year’s Record
Points
1
Kansas
23-11
743 (15)
2
Alabama
25-12
718 (6)
3
Connecticut
37-3
717 (6)
4
Houston
32-5
698 (4)
5
Duke
27-9
625
6
Iowa State
29-8
591
7
Gonzaga
27-8
575
8
Baylor
24-11
545
9
Arizona
27-9
510
10
North Carolina
29-8
498
11
Auburn
27-8
465
12
Tennessee
27-9
437
13
Purdue
34-5
390
14
Creighton
25-10
342
15
Texas A&M
21-15
332
16
Arkansas
16-17
272
17
Marquette
27-10
268
18
Indiana
19-14
208
19
Texas
21-13
166
20
Cincinnati
22-15
163
21
Florida
24-12
130
22
UCLA
16-17
123
23
Kentucky
23-10
95
24
Illinois
29-9
87
25
Mississippi
20-12
66
Dropped Out:
No. 13 North Carolina State (26-15); No. 15 Clemson (24-12); No. 18 San Diego State (26-11); No. 20 Utah State (28-7); No. 22 Saint Mary’s (26-8); No. 23 South Carolina (26-8); No. 24 Washington State (25-10); No. 25 Texas Tech (23-11)
Others Receiving Votes:
Texas Tech (23-11) 60; Rutgers (15-17) 57; St. John’s (20-13) 42; Xavier (16-18) 26; Michigan State (20-15) 25; Brigham Young (23-11) 16; Oregon (24-12) 16; Kansas State (19-15) 11; Boise State (22-11) 9; Saint Mary’s (26-8) 9; Clemson (24-12) 8; Dayton (25-8) 7; Ohio State (22-14) 7; Maryland (16-17) 4; Grand Canyon (30-5) 3; Mississippi State (21-14) 2; Princeton (24-5) 2; San Diego State (26-11) 2; Virginia (23-11) 2; Wake Forest (21-14); Wisconsin (22-14)
The USA TODAY Sports Board of Coaches is made up of 31 head coaches at Division I institutions. All are members of the National Association of Basketball Coaches. The board for the 2024-25 season: Tobin Anderson, Iona; Adrian Autry, Syracuse; John Becker, Vermont; Randy Bennett, Saint Mary’s; Jeff Boals, Ohio; Alvin Brooks, Lamar; Scott Drew, Baylor; Matt Driscoll, North Florida; Dan Earl, Chattanooga; Jonas Hayes, Georgia State; Alan Huss, High Point; Donte’ Jackson, Grambling; Ben Jacobson, Northern Iowa; James Jones, Yale; Greg Kampe, Oakland; Brad Korn, Southeast Missouri State; Greg McDermott, Creighton; Nick McDevitt, Middle Tennessee; Mike McGarvey, Lafayette; Niko Medved, Colorado State; Dan Monson, Eastern Washington; Chris Mooney, Richmond; Nate Oats, Alabama; Eric Olen, UC San Diego; Matt Painter, Purdue; Michael Schwartz, East Carolina; Patrick Sellers, Central Connecticut State; Zach Spiker, Drexel; Brett Tanner, Abilene Christian; Stan Waterman, Delaware State; Jeff Wulbrun, Denver.
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Kansas takes top spot while SEC claims most teams in preseason top 25.
The start of the 2024-25 college basketball season is almost upon us, which means it is time to unveil the preseason USA TODAY Sports men’s basketball coaches poll. There should be no surprise where Bill Self and the Kansas Jayhawks find themselves. Given how the football team has fared this season, the locals in Lawrence have been patiently waiting for tip-off to the season.
As a whole, the Big 12 has a strong showing in the rankings with five teams in the top 10 but only one other team in the top 25. They are a conference that is looking to be top-heavy but this will be a conference to keep an eye on moving forward.
The two-time defending national champion UConn Huskies check in at No. 3 behind Kansas and No. 2 ranked Alabama Crimson Tide. Dan Hurley is ready for a run at third straight title. An event that hasn’t occurred since seven straight titles in the late 60s and early 70s by John Wooden and the UCLA Bruins. This year’s Bruins team is one of four Big Ten teams to make the preseason poll.
There are going to be plenty of eyes in the SEC with John Calipari leaving Kentucky to take over the Arkansas Razorbacks program. The Hogs are among nine teams hailing from the conference, including newcomer the Texas Longhorns. Here is how the full rankings look:
2024-25 Preseason Men’s Basketball Coaches Poll
Rank
School
Last Year’s Record
Points
1
Kansas
23-11
743 (15)
2
Alabama
25-12
718 (6)
3
Connecticut
37-3
717 (6)
4
Houston
32-5
698 (4)
5
Duke
27-9
625
6
Iowa State
29-8
591
7
Gonzaga
27-8
575
8
Baylor
24-11
545
9
Arizona
27-9
510
10
North Carolina
29-8
498
11
Auburn
27-8
465
12
Tennessee
27-9
437
13
Purdue
34-5
390
14
Creighton
25-10
342
15
Texas A&M
21-15
332
16
Arkansas
16-17
272
17
Marquette
27-10
268
18
Indiana
19-14
208
19
Texas
21-13
166
20
Cincinnati
22-15
163
21
Florida
24-12
130
22
UCLA
16-17
123
23
Kentucky
23-10
95
24
Illinois
29-9
87
25
Mississippi
20-12
66
Dropped Out:
No. 13 North Carolina State (26-15); No. 15 Clemson (24-12); No. 18 San Diego State (26-11); No. 20 Utah State (28-7); No. 22 Saint Mary’s (26-8); No. 23 South Carolina (26-8); No. 24 Washington State (25-10); No. 25 Texas Tech (23-11)
Others Receiving Votes:
Texas Tech (23-11) 60; Rutgers (15-17) 57; St. John’s (20-13) 42; Xavier (16-18) 26; Michigan State (20-15) 25; Brigham Young (23-11) 16; Oregon (24-12) 16; Kansas State (19-15) 11; Boise State (22-11) 9; Saint Mary’s (26-8) 9; Clemson (24-12) 8; Dayton (25-8) 7; Ohio State (22-14) 7; Maryland (16-17) 4; Grand Canyon (30-5) 3; Mississippi State (21-14) 2; Princeton (24-5) 2; San Diego State (26-11) 2; Virginia (23-11) 2; Wake Forest (21-14); Wisconsin (22-14)
The USA TODAY Sports Board of Coaches is made up of 31 head coaches at Division I institutions. All are members of the National Association of Basketball Coaches. The board for the 2024-25 season: Tobin Anderson, Iona; Adrian Autry, Syracuse; John Becker, Vermont; Randy Bennett, Saint Mary’s; Jeff Boals, Ohio; Alvin Brooks, Lamar; Scott Drew, Baylor; Matt Driscoll, North Florida; Dan Earl, Chattanooga; Jonas Hayes, Georgia State; Alan Huss, High Point; Donte’ Jackson, Grambling; Ben Jacobson, Northern Iowa; James Jones, Yale; Greg Kampe, Oakland; Brad Korn, Southeast Missouri State; Greg McDermott, Creighton; Nick McDevitt, Middle Tennessee; Mike McGarvey, Lafayette; Niko Medved, Colorado State; Dan Monson, Eastern Washington; Chris Mooney, Richmond; Nate Oats, Alabama; Eric Olen, UC San Diego; Matt Painter, Purdue; Michael Schwartz, East Carolina; Patrick Sellers, Central Connecticut State; Zach Spiker, Drexel; Brett Tanner, Abilene Christian; Stan Waterman, Delaware State; Jeff Wulbrun, Denver.
Four-star forward Nik Khamenia committed to Jon Scheyer and Duke on Tuesday, despite all the projections pointing to him staying home and going to UCLA.
2025 four-star forward Nik Khamenia was considered a lock to commit to Mick Cronin and the UCLA Bruins on Tuesday.
Instead, the 6’8 California native shocked the college basketball recruiting world by announcing his commitment to Jon Scheyer and the Duke Blue Devils, another huge win for the ACC powerhouse on the recruiting trail.
Khamenia is the No. 19 ranked prospect in the 2025 class according to 247Sports. He was choosing between a top three of Duke, UCLA, and Gonzaga, and also had offers from North Carolina, Arizona, Kansas, Michigan, Ohio State, Creighton, Oregon, and many others.
Khamenia rose up the rankings in the 2025 class with a strong performance on the summer circuit, which included representing the United States in the FIBA U18 3×3 World Cup.
Khamenia now joins the Boozer twins, Cameron and Cayden, in Scheyer’s 2025 recruiting class, which is currently ranked No. 1 in the country.
Since taking over for coach Mike Krzyzewski in 2021, Scheyer has landed 10 five-star recruits and countless other four-stars, continuing the elite level of recruiting in Durham established by his predecessor.
The high level recruiting has yet to result in a Final Four appearance, but the talent coming through the program certainly hasn’t dipped in the post-Coach K era.
Let’s examine 25 candidates to earn All-American honors in the upcoming 2024-25 college basketball season.
The 2024-25 college basketball season starts in exactly two weeks, with Texas and Ohio State squaring off in Las Vegas and Gonzaga and Baylor in Spokane the two headlining matchups on opening day.
College hoops is headlined this season by a handful of superstar freshmen – notably Duke forward Cooper Flagg and the dynamic Rutgers duo of Dylan Harper and Ace Bailey – as well as multiple fifth year standouts, like Mark Sears at Alabama, RJ Davis at North Carolina, and Caleb Love at Arizona.
The dynamic between young one-and-done caliber talent and aging stars who are nearly old enough to rent a car should make for an exciting season on the hardwood.
It also makes the competition to earn All-American nods this year extra interesting. The college game is arguably as talent-rich as it has been in decades, with many NBA caliber players opting to return to school thanks to the rise of NIL and the transfer portal.
Below is a look at College Sports Wire’s preseason All-American projections for the first, second, and third teams, along with five players who just missed the cut and five additional dark horse candidates:
Broome was a beast for Bruce Pearl and the Tigers last year, and his developing outside shot and Auburn’s strong roster continuity should keep him in the national conversation all year long, enough to earn First Team honors.
Flagg is one of the most heralded freshmen to hit the college game in years, and his well-rounded game and versatile skill-set makes him a very likely All-American barring a surprising fall from grace.
Karaban is the lone returning starter for the back-to-back national champion UConn Huskies, and he should take on an even bigger role for Dan Hurley’s team as they look to make it three titles in a row in Storrs.
Davis and Sears are fifth year guys who have dominated the college basketball game for many years, and there’s little reason to assume either won’t be on this team – in fact the National Player of the Year is very likely one of these two diminutive guards.
Second Team
Center Ryan Kalkbrenner – Creighton Blue Jays
Forward Hunter Dickinson – Kansas Jayhawks
Guard Kam Jones – Marquette Golden Eagles
Guard LJ Cryer – Houston Cougars
Guard Braden Smith – Purdue Boilermakers
Kalkbrenner is a three-time Big East Defensive Player of the Year, who has also led the conference in field goal percentage each of the past three seasons. Greg McDermott’s team is once again going to be a national championship contender, and it’s about time Kalkbrenner gets his due as an All-American.
Dickinson has been an All-American twice already, once at Michigan and last year with Kansas, but is hoping to make it three in his fifth and final season. The Jayhawks should be better than last year, and as long as he performs like he has for the last half decade he will be honored once again.
Jones averaged 15+ points per game each of the past two seasons at Marquette, and with Tyler Kolek and Oso Ighodaro out the door for Shaka Smart’s club it puts even more pressure on him to put the ball in the hoop. 20 per game in the loaded Big East, especially if Marquette finishes top 20, easily lands him on one of the All-American teams.
Cryer has also averaged 15+ each of the past two seasons, doing so at two different Big 12 programs. Houston lost Jamal Shead to the NBA and will rely heavily on Cryer to shoulder the load offensively in 2024-25.
For Purdue to avoid falling off a cliff in the post Zach Edey era, junior guard Braden Smith will need to take on a bigger role scoring the rock. There’s little reason to think he can’t do that, however, which has him in this conversation.
Third Team
Forward Norchad Omier – Baylor Bears
Forward Graham Ike – Gonzaga Bulldogs
Guard Hunter Sallis – Wake Forest Demon Deacons
Guard Johnell Davis – Arkansas Razorbacks
Guard Caleb Love – Arizona Wildcats
Omier averaged a double-double in each of his four previous college basketball seasons, including the last two with the Miami Hurricanes. He adds a tough frontcourt present to a Baylor team that desperately needed it.
Ike shook off some early season rust after missing the entire previous season with a foot injury to dominate down the stretch for Mark Few and Gonzaga, and a full season of health and familiarity with the Zags system should put the big man in the All-American conversation.
Next is a former Zag in Hunter Sallis, who exploded last season for Steve Forbes and the Demon Deacons. It was a surprise to see Sallis, who averaged over 18 per game on 40% shooting from three, return to school rather than stay in the NBA draft process, but another season like that will have him earning All-American honors.
Johnell Davis was one of three big time Florida Atlantic stars to transfer this offseason, ultimately ending up in Fayetteville to join John Calipari’s new team at Arkansas. Antonio Reeves thrived transferring to Kentucky to play for coach Cal, and Davis could be even better for the Hogs.
Love is back at Arizona, hoping to help Tommy Lloyd’s club avoid what has become a trend of early exits in the NCAA Tournament. Love is an elite isolation scorer, albeit an inefficient one, but in his final season he should be an All-American for the second straight year.
There is a plethora of older but extremely talented guards in college basketball this upcoming season, and any number of them could contend for an All-American nod.
Nembhard averaged seven assists per game last year, and if he does that again for a potential top five Gonzaga team he should be in this conversation.
Richmond is a triple-double waiting to happen and should get fully unlocked under Rick Pitino at St. John’s. Sandfort pulled out of the NBA draft to bring his elite three point shooting back to Iowa, and a pair of transfers in Tucker DeVries – who followed his dad Darian to West Virginia – and Tramon Mark at Texas have the scoring prowess to contend for AA honors.
Avila followed his coach, Josh Schertz, from Indiana State to St. Louis. ‘Cream Abdul-Jabbar’ was one of the most exciting players to watch last season, and should bring a jolt of energy to the A-10.
Osobor followed coach Danny Sprinkle from Montana State to Utah State, dominated in the Mountain West, and then followed coach Sprinkle again up to Seattle to play for Washington. The Huskies aren’t projected near the top of the standings in the Big Ten, but Osobor is too good to not be a dark horse in this conversation.
Degenhart averaged about 17 and 7 last year for the Broncos, and that was with his three point shooting taking a dip. If that returns to previous levels, and Boise State wins the Mountain West and hangs around the top 25, Degenhart could absolutely be in this picture, making him a name to keep an eye on.
Bailey and teammate Dylan Harper are projected to be just about everything for Rutgers this season. The dynamic freshmen duo are both top five NBA draft candidates, and one or both could ultimately end up in the All-American conversation.
Shelstad is among the strongest sophomore breakout candidates in college basketball. The Oregon guard should be among the best in the Big Ten and could lead Dana Altman’s team to a top three finish and a single digit seed in March.
Jay Wright, Rick Pitino and other coaches offered high praise for Tony Bennett.
Virginia men’s basketball coach Tony Bennett‘s decision to retire from coaching sent shock waves through the coaching ranks.
On Thursday, news broke that Bennett was walking away just weeks before the season began. It’s unclear what may have caused the long-time coach to leave, and supporters and fans potentially won’t get insight into those answers until a scheduled press conference. The stunning move leaves Virginia in a bind, and the school will have its hands full trying to find a replacement with such a short turnaround.
Nevertheless, as people tried to process what was happening, another coach who also had a shocking retirement, Jay Wright, praised Bennett, saying, “Tony is one of the most talented and toughest coaches we have ever competed against. We always respected him and his teams at the highest level.”
Tony is one of the most talented and toughest coaches we ever competed against . We always respected him and his teams at the highest level . A class guy – Inspirational – spiritual and an incredible competitor !! @UVAMensHoopshttps://t.co/aSgZxGFfAD
Wright wasn’t the only coach who had thoughts about Bennett. St. John’s head coach Rick Pitino and several others also reacted to the news.
Here’s what they said:
If the news is true, college basketball just lost a man with incredible class, humility, and dignity. Tony Bennett is an awesome teacher of our game. You will be deeply missed!
The school said in a social media post Thursday afternoon that Bennett, 55, will announce his retirement in a press conference on Friday morning at 11 a.m.
Bennett has led Virginia to a 364-136 record as head coach since taking the reins of the program in 2009. He led the Cavaliers to six regular-season ACC titles, 10 NCAA Tournament appearances and was named ACC Coach of the Year four times.
His 2019 team remains one of the more memorable redemption stories in men’s college basketball. After losing in the first round in 2018 to UMBC – becoming the first-ever No. 1 seed to lose to a 16-seed in men’s March Madness – Bennett’s ‘Hoos came back the next season to win the regular season ACC title and then storm their way through the NCAA Tournament. The run – powered by six NBA players – featured two overtime victories, clutch free throws from Kyle Guy, memorable passes from Kihei Clark and a buzzer-beater by Mamadi Diakite.
The timing of Bennett’s retirement is curious, considering he just appeared at the ACC’s media days last week, and Virginia’s 2024-25 season begins in less than three weeks. According to reporting from Nicole Auerbach and Jeff Goodman, Bennett’s retirement is not health related.
Bennett’s retirement is the latest high-profile one in ACC men’s basketball, which has seen Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski, North Carolina’s Roy Williams and Syracuse’s Jim Boeheim depart the sport in recent years. Bennett’s retirement also means that, for the first time since 1981, the ACC will not have a men’s basketball coach in it with a national championship.
Interesting to perhaps only me, but I was a Wisconsin student reporter covering hoops when Dick Bennett abruptly “retired” at age 57 in November of 2000 after a Final Four the previous spring, citing burnout. (He’d resurface a few years later.)
If the news is true, college basketball just lost a man with incredible class, humility, and dignity. Tony Bennett is an awesome teacher of our game. You will be deeply missed!
Tony is one of the most talented and toughest coaches we ever competed against . We always respected him and his teams at the highest level . A class guy –
Inspirational – spiritual and an incredible competitor !! @UVAMensHoopshttps://t.co/aSgZxGFfAD
RE: Tony Bennett. Anyone paying attention shouldn’t be shocked he’d retire early. Had a whole convo with @BrendanRMarks at the ACC Tournament in March about the very real possibility he’d step away. But a week after ACC Tipoff? That’s wild.