Virginia’s Tony Bennett stuns college basketball with retirement weeks before 2024-25 season

The timing of Bennett’s retirement is shocking and curious, to say the least.

Virginia men’s basketball coach Tony Bennett, who coached the Cavaliers to their lone national championship in 2019, is retiring just weeks before the start of the regular season.

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.

 

We’ll update this post as we learn more about Bennett’s retirement.