College basketball coach rankings: UConn's Dan Hurley bumps ... 2019 Only two of the five coaches who were on last season's hot-seat list survived -- Clemson's Brad Brownell, who saved his job ...
Virginia basketball coach Tony Bennett officially announced his retirement last Friday, citing the current environment in college sports as one of his primary reasons to step down. The 55-year-old ...
Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK This past spring featured a men’s college basketball ... look at some notable coaches who could find themselves on the hot seat this winter.
When we published this column a year ago, we weren't anticipating too much movement from coaches. The 2023 coaching ... The early read on the 2024 hot seat felt quieter. We were ...
VanDerveer's absence is the most significant change, considering she is the all-time winningest coach in Division I basketball (a record ... Premier League coaching hot seats » • NFL trade ...
The 2024-25 college basketball season is set to begin on Nov. 4. While no moves are imminent as every program enters the season with high hopes, several coaches will begin the year on the hot seat.
She’s also more versed in the basketball world than ... Bryce Drew, head coach, Grand Canyon: Expect Drew to be one of the hottest mid-major names this cycle, as he led Grand Canyon to a 30-5 ...
Just one year ago, Dennis Gates was one of college basketball’s hottest coaching commodities. He led Missouri to a 25-10 record in his first season in Boone County, and Truman punched his ticket ...
The early read on the 2024 hot seat felt quieter. We were ... wrong, to say the least. We're not going out on a limb in predicting the 2025 coaching carousel should be less dramatic -- especially ...
Could Gophers head coach Ben Johnson be on the hot seat? While not explicitly saying he's putting Johnson on the hot seat, ESPN's Jeff Borzello suggests it could be a possibility for the fourth ...
Michael Voepel is a senior writer who covers the WNBA, women's college basketball and other college sports. Voepel began covering women's basketball in 1984, and has been with ESPN since 1996.