Storrs, CT (Sports Network) - Jim Calhoun has decided to call it a career.
The longtime Connecticut men's basketball coach made the announcement Thursday
at a press conference, at which time the school also named assistant Kevin
Ollie as the Hall of Famer's successor.
Calhoun spent the past 26 years at Connecticut and transformed a middling
program into a perennial national power. He guided the Huskies to a record of
625-234 with seven Big East Tournament titles and three NCAA Tournament
championships.
The 70-year-old Massachusetts native joined UConn in the spring of 1986 after
14 seasons at Northeastern, where he took a Division II team and turned it
into a top Division I mid-major. In 40 years as a collegiate head coach,
Calhoun finished with a record of 873-380. He is one of just eight Division I
coaches to eclipse 800 career wins and currently has the sixth-most all-time
victories.
It took the Huskies just four years to win their first Big East title under
Calhoun, doing so in 1990. The ultimate success in the NCAA Tournament took a
few more years.
The Huskies finally won it all in 1999 with a stunning victory over Duke, then
added a second title in 2004 against Georgia Tech before the most-recent
championship just two seasons ago. The 2011 squad first won five games in five
days to capture an unlikely Big East tourney title, then carried that momentum
into the NCAA Tournament and beat Butler for the crown.
Kemba Walker was the star of the 2011 team and one of numerous Huskies to
develop into NBA-caliber players. Others to star in the NBA included Cliff
Robinson, Ray Allen, Richard Hamilton, Caron Butler, Ben Gordon and Rudy Gay.
Ollie also played for Calhoun and spent 13 seasons in the NBA. He first joined
Calhoun's staff as an assistant for the 2010-11 season.
A two-time team captain for the Huskies, Ollie will inherit a team that is
ineligible for postseason play in 2012-13 because of academic deficiencies.
Calhoun is a three-time cancer survivor and is stepping down after numerous
other health issues. He took a leave of absence last season due to a bout with
spinal stenosis, a lower back condition that causes severe pain and hampers
mobility, then suffered a fractured hip while bike riding in July.
His final team went 20-14 and lost its first NCAA Tournament game -- a 77-64
second-round setback to Iowa State. He is a four-time Big East Coach of the
Year and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2005.
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