Huggins in 2008 | |
| Biographical details | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1953-09-21)September 21, 1953 (age 72) Morgantown, West Virginia, U.S. |
| Playing career | |
| 1972–1973 | Ohio |
| 1975–1977 | West Virginia |
| Position | Point guard |
| Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
| 1977–1978 | West Virginia (assistant) |
| 1978–1980 | Ohio State (assistant) |
| 1980–1983 | Walsh |
| 1983–1984 | UCF (assistant) |
| 1984–1989 | Akron |
| 1989–2005 | Cincinnati |
| 2006–2007 | Kansas State |
| 2007–2023 | West Virginia |
| Head coaching record | |
| Overall | 935–414 (.693) |
| Tournaments | 34–26 (NCAA Division I) 0–1 (NAIA) 3–4 (NIT) 1–1 (CBI) |
| Accomplishments and honors | |
| Championships | |
| |
| Awards | |
| |
| Basketball Hall of Fame Inducted in 2022 (profile) | |
Robert Edward Huggins (born September 21, 1953),[1][2] nicknamed "Huggy Bear", is an Americancollege basketball coach. He was the head coach atWalsh,Akron,Cincinnati,Kansas State, andWest Virginia. He was inducted into theNaismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2022.
Huggins is the sixth men's college basketball coach with 900 or more career victories.[3] He has been to 24 totalNCAA tournaments, including 23 in the last 26 seasons. He has led his teams to nine Sweet Sixteen appearances, four Elite Eight appearances (3 at Cincinnati and 1 at West Virginia University), and twoFinal Four appearances (1992 with Cincinnati and 2010 with West Virginia). Huggins has also lost in the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament a total of 16 times. As of March 2021, Huggins has averaged 23 wins per season over the course of his career. He is also the second coach to win 300 games at two schools.[4]
Huggins released a statement announcing his resignation and retirement from West Virginia in 2023, following hisdrunk driving arrest.[5] He later denied having officially resigned in a letter his lawyer sent to the university demanding his reinstatement.
Huggins, who had moved from Morgantown, West Virginia toPort Washington, Ohio, with his family, played basketball for his father, Charles, atIndian Valley South High School. As a senior, he helped lead his team to a 26–0 season.[6] He was an all-state pick in three years, the Ohio Player of the Year in 1972, and he finished his high school career with 2,438 points, twelfth in Ohio history at the time.[7]
Huggins began college atOhio University. After his freshman season he transferred to his nativeWest Virginia. He playedpoint guard for theMountaineers from 1975 until 1977 under head coachJoedy Gardner.[8] His career-high was 28 points againstVirginia Tech. He averaged 13.2 points as a senior and totaled 800 career points in his three collegiate seasons.
He graduated from WVU magna cum laude with a double major in education and physical education and subsequently received amaster's degree in health administration from WVU.[7]
Huggins began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at West Virginia under Gardner in 1977. He then spent two years as an assistant toEldon Miller at Ohio State University. Huggins was 27 when he became a collegiate head coach for the first time, atWalsh University in 1980.[9] In three seasons at Walsh, he compiled a 71–26 record, twice earningNAIA District 22 Coach of the Year honors. Huggins directed the Walsh 1982–83 team to a perfect 30–0 regular season mark and an eventual 34–1 mark. After serving as an assistant atUniversity of Central Florida for the 1983–84 season, Huggins was named head coach of theUniversity of Akron. Huggins compiled a 97–46 record and reached post-season play in three of his five seasons at Akron, including an NCAA bid in 1985–86 season.
Huggins was the head coach of the Cincinnati Bearcats from 1989 to 2005. When Huggins was hired, the Bearcats had not earned a bid to the NCAA tournament since 1977. The Bearcats were invited to the NIT in his first two years, and then advanced to the Final Four of the1992 NCAA tournament, Huggins' third season as coach. This was the first of 13 consecutive seasons in which the Bearcats appeared in the NCAA tournament.[9]
Twenty-seven percent of Huggins's players graduated with a degree, a rate described by one commentator as "abysmal".[10] During four of his years as Cincinnati's head coach, his graduation rate was 0%; that is, none of his players earned a degree.[11] In 2021, Huggins told aPittsburgh Post-Gazette reporter that criticism of his graduation rates was a "terrible rap", noting that hisjunior college transfers were not treated as graduates even if they later earned a degree.[12] According to the NCAA, the Bearcats men's basketball team's graduation rate increased as soon as Huggins left the head coaching job, although as late as 2017, it continued to be much lower than for other athletic programs at Cincinnati.[13]
Overall, Huggins compiled a 399–127 record (.759) in his 16 years at Cincinnati, making him the winningest basketball coach in the school's history. OnlyEd Jucker has a better win percentage among Bearcats coaches.[14] Huggins directed Cincinnati to ten conference regular-season titles and eight league tournament titles. The Bearcats appeared in post-season play in each of Huggins' 16 seasons. In addition to their Final Four appearance in 1992, they advanced to the Elite Eight of the NCAA tournament two other times, in1993 and1996.
Huggins earned theRay Meyer Award as theConference USA Coach of the Year a record three times (1997–98, 1998–99, and 1999–2000), and was a unanimous choice for C-USA Coach of the Decade. He was selected national coach of the year byESPN.com in 2001–02. He was named co-national coach of the year byThe Sporting News and was Basketball Times' national coach of the year in 1997–98.[15] His teams won five consecutive conference tournament titles—all fourGreat Midwest Conference titles from 1992 to 1995 and the firstConference USA men's basketball tournament in 1996.[citation needed] During his tenure, Huggins coached three consensus All-Americans:Danny Fortson,Kenyon Martin, andSteve Logan.[16]
Huggins was arrested fordriving under the influence inFairfax, Ohio on June 8, 2004. He ultimately pleadedno contest to DUI.[17] A judge ordered Huggins to pay a $350 fine plus court costs, and to attend a three-day state-certified intervention program.[18]
On August 23, 2005, UC PresidentNancy L. Zimpher said that the Bearcat program under Huggins didn't fit with her plan to upgrade UC's academic reputation.[19] Zimpher had been embarrassed by Huggins's DUI arrest, news of which broke on the morning of her first commencement as UC's president, at whichCoretta Scott King spoke. In addition, an assistant coach, two players and a recruit had been arrested in the spring of 2005.[20] Later that day, Zimpher and athletic directorBob Goin gave Huggins 24 hours to resign and take a $3 million buyout or accept reassignment outside the athletic department for the balance of his contract. Had Huggins not responded, he would have been fired.[21][22] Multiple letters between UC and Huggins' attorney showed that Huggins had known weeks in advance that his ouster was imminent.[21][23] He accepted the $3 million buyout.[24]
After spending a year out of the coaching profession, on March 23, 2006, Huggins accepted the head coaching job atKansas State University,[25] replacing the firedJim Wooldridge. Some of Huggins' recruiting targets includedO. J. Mayo andBill Walker, who had been seriously considering playing for him in Cincinnati.[26] In his sole season at Kansas State, Huggins coached the Wildcats to a 23–12 overall record, and a 10–6 Big 12 record. The Wildcats were invited to the NIT, where they won one game.[27]
Huggins was the head coach of the Mountaineers from 2007 to 2023. He has 345 coaching wins at WVU;[15] onlyGale Catlett has more.[28]
On April 5, 2007, Huggins announced that he had signed a five-year contract to be the head coach at his alma mater,West Virginia University. Huggins succeededJohn Beilein, who left WVU to coach theMichigan Wolverines.[29]On December 22, 2007, Huggins won his 600th game, on the road againstCanisius.[30] The Mountaineers were the 7th seed in the West region of theNCAA tournament where they defeated 2nd-seededDuke 73–67 to move into the Sweet Sixteen, ending a streak of consecutive Sweet 16 appearances for Duke that had begun in 1997.[31] WVU lost its next game against #3-seed Xavier, 79–75, in overtime.[32] West Virginia finished the season ranked 17th in the AP poll. At the end of his first season at West Virginia, Huggins signed an 11-year contract extension that would keep him coaching at West Virginia until the age of 65.[33]
On May 18, 2008, Huggins completed his recruiting class with the signing of small forward,Devin Ebanks. The #13-ranked prospect had signed withIndiana before decommitting and looking atMemphis,Texas,Rutgers and WVU. Ebanks was the last addition to the freshman class that included #11-power forwardKevin Jones, #34-power forward Roscoe Davis and #26-point guardDarryl Bryant.[34][35] West Virginia began the2008–09 season 4–0, led by seniorAlex Ruoff and juniorDa'Sean Butler. Having finished the regular season at 21–10 (10–8), West Virginia earned a first round bye in the2009 Big East tournament, where they lost in the semifinals to Syracuse in overtime, 74–69. WVU earned a #6 seed in the NCAA tournament and lost their first-round game against the #11 seedDayton Flyers, 68–60.[36]
In 2012,Bleacher Report described Huggins's third season with the Mountaineers as having been his "best chance" to win a national title.[37] During the2009–10 season, West Virginia won a school-record 31 games. The team won theBig East tournament for the first time. As a #2 seed in theNCAA tournament, the Mountaineers went to their second Final Four in school history, and finished ranked #3 in the ESPN/USA Today poll.[38]
In the2010–11 season, the Mountaineers made it to the third round of theNCAA tournament, where they lost to Kentucky, 71–63. Huggins embraced Kentucky head coachJohn Calipari, a close friend, after the game, and wished him good luck.[39]
On December 22, 2011, Huggins reached his 700th career victory by defeating Missouri State in theLas Vegas Classic.[40]
The2012–13 season was the first for the Mountaineers in theBig 12 Conference. Huggins described the new conference's schedule as a "grind" early in the season, due to the increased travel requirements and high quality of opponents.[41] He also remarked about the difference in officiating, with a higher incidence of foul calls in the Big 12 than in the Big East.[42] After a rare sub-.500 season in 2012–13, Huggins told the press before thefollowing season, "It's not acceptable to lose … I think it got to the point it was acceptable. I've never had that before, I don't want that again".[43] During his first two seasons in the Big 12, the Mountaineers did not qualify for the NCAA tournament, Huggins's first two consecutive tournament misses as a head coach since his first two years at Cincinnati. In an interview with ESPN in 2016, Huggins said it was "100 percent my fault" that the teams were not able to qualify.[44]
Huggins is credited with the introduction of "Press Virginia", apressing defense that helped the team win 14 of its first 15 games in the2014–15 season.[45] The defense was said to have "met its match" in the2016 NCAA tournament, when 14th-seededStephen F. Austin defeated 3rd-seeded WVU in the first round. "I don't know why anybody would waste energy pressing us," Huggins said after the game. "We'll throw it to you regardless. That would be a waste of energy really. We're very charitable. We're one of the most charitable groups in college basketball. The second straight game we've turned it over 20 times."[46][47] Early in the2017–18 season, Huggins suggested that Press Virginia might not be used as often, due to his roster being depleted.[48]
On November 6, 2017, WVU and Huggins agreed to a four-year contract extension that included an option for him to step aside or continue coaching after the 2021–22 season, and starting with the 2022–23 season, an option to continue coaching or to work elsewhere in the athletic department through June 2027.[49]
Despite beginning the2018–19 season ranked No. 13, the Mountaineers finished the regular season at 12–19 (4–14), earning last place in Big 12 conference play for the first time. Despite finishing last in the conference, the Mountaineers upsetOklahoma and No. 7Texas Tech to advance to the conference tournament semifinals. This led Huggins to tweet a video of himself—when he was the head coach of the Cincinnati Bearcats—emerging from a coffin to say, "Why all the long faces? We're not dead yet!"[50] West Virginia lost to No. 17 Kansas in the semifinals the next day.[51] The Mountaineers were invited to theCollege Basketball Invitational, where they beatGrand Canyon in the first round before losing toCoastal Carolina in the quarterfinals.[52] The team's 21 losses were the most in a season in school history.
In November 2020, three months afterThom Brennaman wassuspended for using an anti-gay slur on ahot mic while broadcasting aCincinnati Reds game, Huggins invited Brennaman to speak to the WVU men's basketball team. Huggins thanked Brennaman on Twitter, writing that Brennaman's message "isn't one of excuses but one of accountability."[53] After Huggins faced criticism in 2023 for using the same slur on a live radio show in Cincinnati, several journalists wrote that Huggins must have been aware of how offensive the term was because of his decision to invite and acknowledge Brennaman.[54][55][56]
In 2021, West Virginia defeated 14th seedMorehead State in theNCAA tournament before losing in a three-point upset toJim Boeheim'sSyracuse Orange in the second round. The Mountaineers' win over Morehead State was also Bob Huggins' 900th career victory.[57] On November 18, 2021, Huggins earned his 903rd career victory by defeatingElon in the quarterfinals of theCharleston Classic, passingBob Knight all-time among Division I coaches and tyingRoy Williams for fourth all-time.[58] Three days later, Huggins passed Williams when the Mountaineers beatClemson. Upon passing Williams in career wins, Huggins remarked, "I’m not going to quit until I beat Roy in something."[59] In the2022 Big 12 men's basketball tournament, WVU defeatedKansas State 73–67 in the preliminary round and lost 87–63 to Kansas in the next day's quarterfinal round. Huggins was given twotechnical fouls and ejected from the game against Kansas after fiercely disputing a technical foul called onTaz Sherman.[60]
On May 8, 2023, Bob Huggins used a homophobic slur and expressed anti-Catholic sentiment when talking aboutXavier fans onTheBill Cunningham Show, a radio show airing onWLW in Cincinnati.[61][62] Some members of the sports media said that Huggins should resign or be fired as a result.[63][64][65] Huggins issued an apology for the statement, calling it "completely insensitive and abhorrent" and promising to fully accept any consequences.[66] In response to Huggins's remarks, West Virginia University stated, "The situation is under review and will be addressed by the university and its athletics department."[67][61]
Some faculty at WVU expressed disappointment about Huggins's comments and outrage regarding increased use of homophobic slurs among the student body as a show of support for Huggins.[68] Morgantown Pride, anLGBTQ+ support organization in Morgantown, called for WVU to terminate Huggins's employment.[69] Some national sports commentators called for Huggins to be fired for his remarks, while others argued that firing Huggins would have been an overreaction, since the inappropriate slur that Huggins used has been used for decades in banter among fans of rival teams.[70][71] Many of WVU's top donors continued to support Huggins after his comments on the radio caused offense.[72] One long-time WVU donor, a gay man, told WV Sports Now that he planned to redirect his donations away from the athletic department in response to Huggins's comments.[73]
On June 16, 2023, Huggins was arrested inPittsburgh and charged with driving while under the influence of alcohol.[74] Police officers reported that they found him in an SUV that was blocking traffic, with the driver's door ajar and with a "flat and shredded tire". Bags of empty beer containers were found in the vehicle. A breath test determined hisblood alcohol content to be 0.21%, more than two times the legal limit of 0.08%. Officers asked Huggins what city he was in, and did not get a clear response, with Huggins making mention ofColumbus, Ohio, a few times.[75]
On June 17, 2023, Huggins released a statement announcing his resignation from West Virginia. In the statement, he also announced his retirement.[5]
On July 2, 2023, in a letter sent to West Virginia University, Huggins, through his attorney, David A. Campbell, claimed that "he never signed a resignation letter and never communicated a resignation to anyone by WVU." According to the Associated Press, Huggins threatened legal action if he was not given his job back. In response, WVU officials stated that they were "confused by the allegations within the letter".[76][77]
Several former assistant coaches and players of Huggins have gone on to their own careers in coaching.
Huggins was the host ofThe Bob Huggins Show, a talk show produced by Gold and Blue Nation, a partnership between WVU Athletics andWBOY TV.[78]
After leaving the head coaching position at WVU, Huggins joinedFull Court Press, a radio show about WVU basketball, presented byHD Media. Huggins also contributed commentary onMarch Madness television coverage in 2023.[79]
Huggins was born inMorgantown, West Virginia on September 21, 1953. He and his wife have two daughters.[15]
Huggins has a family history of heart problems: his father had aheart attack before the age of 40. In 2002, atPittsburgh International Airport during a recruiting trip, Huggins experienced a heart attack himself. He was treated at a medical center inBeaver, Pennsylvania, where he had surgery to implant astent.[80] Later in his life, due toatrial fibrillation, Huggins had adefibrillator implanted. His defibrillator turned on during a game in 2017 againstTexas, causing him to clutch his chest and fall down. He was examined at the scene by medical personnel, and resumed coaching afterwards.[81]
The annual Bob HugginsFish Fry has been held 11 times, most recently on January 27, 2023, to raise money for charity.[82] At the 2023 event, whereCharles Barkley was the headlining guest, a record 2,700 people attended. The event has raised more than $16 million for charities including the Norma Mae Huggins Cancer Research Endowment Fund, named after Huggins's mother, and the Remembering the Miners organization.[83][84]
For each WVU win against Kansas, Huggins's contract stipulated a $25,000 win bonus, which he donated to the Norma Mae Huggins Cancer Research Endowment Fund.[85] He has also hosted fundraising events for WVU,[86][87] and he and his wife have donated to the university on their own.[88] Following Huggins's use of a gay slur to describe Xavier University students, he made a "substantial donation" to support Xavier's Center for Faith and Justice and Center for Diversity and Inclusion.[89]