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Billy Hahn

Billy Hahn (June 22, 1953 – April 7, 2023) was an American basketball coach who was an assistant coach for the West Virginia Mountaineers under head coach Bob Huggins. During his head coaching and assistant coaching career, Hahn has coached and recruited 19 future NBA players and set various school records at Maryland with numerous NCAA Tournament appearances over his career.

Billy Hahn
Biographical details
Born(1953-06-22)June 22, 1953
Mishawaka, Indiana, U.S.
DiedApril 7, 2023(2023-04-07) (aged 69)
Playing career
1971–1974Maryland
Position(s)Point guard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1974–1975Morris Harvey (assistant)
1975–1976Davidson (assistant)
1976–1979Rhode Island (assistant)
1979–1986Ohio (assistant)
1986–1989Ohio
1989–2001Maryland (assistant)
2001–2004La Salle
2007–2017West Virginia (assistant)
Head coaching record
Overall79–99

Early life edit

Born in Mishawaka, Indiana, Hahn graduated from Penn High then attended the University of Maryland. During his tenure at Maryland, Hahn was a three-year letterwinner on three of the greatest teams in Terrapins' history. As a freshman, he played on the Terps team that won the 1971 National Invitation Tournament. That season, he played as a key reserve off the bench. Hahn was team captain during his senior season and was part of the 1974–1975 squad that went 24–5. Hahn graduated from Maryland with a bachelor’s degree in distributive education and a minor in business administration in 1975.

Coaching career edit

Morris Harvey College and Davidson edit

Hahn began his coaching career at Morris Harvey College in 1975 as an assistant coach under Rick Meckfessel. In 1976, Hahn became an assistant coach at Davidson College.

Rhode Island edit

After his season at Davidson, Hahn became an assistant coach at Rhode Island, where he helped the team to the NCAA tournament in 1978, and the NIT in 1979.

Hahn recruited and coached future NBA player Sly Williams while at Rhode Island.

Ohio edit

In 1980, Hahn left Rhode Island for the assistant coaching position at Ohio University under Danny Nee. During his six-year tenure, the Bobcats won the Mid-American Conference Championship in 1983 and 1985 and went to the NCAA tournament in both of the seasons. In 1986, Hahn helped the Bobcats to the NIT.

After the 1986 season, Hahn was named head coach. He led the Bobcats to the MAC Championship Game in 1988. During his head coaching tenure, he recruited and coached the school's all-time leading scorer, Dave Jamerson, and the MAC Player of the Year in 1989, Paul Graham.

Maryland edit

After his head coaching stint at Ohio University ended following the 1989 season, Hahn returned to his alma mater, the University of Maryland, to become the assistant coach under Gary Williams. During his tenure from 1989 to 2001, Hahn's Terps went to the NCAA tournament a school-record eight straight years, including the 2001 Final Four. The Terps also finished fourth or higher in the ACC eight consecutive seasons and established school records for regular season victories, 28 in 1999, and ACC victories in a season, 13 in 1999.

Hahn was promoted to associate head coach in 1997 and became the leading recruiter and scout along with his on-court coaching duties. During the tenure, he coached Walt Williams, Joe Smith, and Steve Francis, who all became NBA Lottery draft selections. He was also named one of the top ten recruiters in the eastern United States by Eastern Basketball.

The year after he left, 2002, the Terps won the national championship with most of Hahn's recruits. He was given a championship ring by Williams and the Terrapins basketball squad, even though he was not associated with the school anymore.

Hahn coached future NBA players Tony Massenburg, Jerrod Mustaf, Keith Booth, Sarunas Jasikevicius, Laron Profit, Terence Morris, Obinna Ekezie, Steve Francis, Chris Wilcox, Lonny Baxter, Steve Blake, and Juan Dixon, at Maryland.

La Salle edit

Tenure edit

Hahn was hired as La Salle's men's basketball coach in 2001, succeeding longtime coach Speedy Morris.[1] In each of his three seasons at La Salle, Hahn's Explorers had losing records. While at La Salle, Hahn coached NBA players Steven Smith and Rasual Butler.

Scandal and resignation edit

Hahn was forced to resign in 2004 when a women's basketball player claimed he discouraged her from reporting a rape she said occurred in April 2003 that allegedly involved one of Hahn's players. Hahn claimed that the woman didn't want to report the incident at the time. However, La Salle school policy required Hahn to report the incident to a counselor. This was to ensure compliance with the Clery Act, a federal law which requires colleges to make timely reports of crime on campus. La Salle women's basketball head coach John Miller was also forced to resign on the same day as Hahn, also for not reporting the alleged rape.[2]

West Virginia edit

After spending three seasons out of coaching, Hahn was hired by new head coach, Bob Huggins, at West Virginia University in April 2007. Hahn and Huggins had been rivals, when Huggins coached Akron.

In Hahn's first season with the team, the Mountaineers finished the regular season with a 22–9 record. The team also advanced to the semifinals of the Big East tournament and the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA tournament, which included a second round victory over the #2-seed Duke Blue Devils. Hahn retired from coaching after the 2017 season.

Personal life and death edit

Hahn's son Matt, was a reserve on the Maryland basketball team from 1996–2000. He served as an assistant coach at IUP, Robert Morris, and Vermont.[3][4]

Hahn suffered a heart attack and died on April 7, 2023, at the age of 69.[5][6]

Head coaching record edit

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Ohio Bobcats (Mid-American Conference) (1986–1989)
1986–87 Ohio 14–14 7–9 6th
1987–88 Ohio 16–14 9–7 3rd
1988–89 Ohio 12–17 5–11 7th
Ohio: 42–45 21–27
La Salle Explorers (Atlantic 10 Conference) (2001–2004)
2001–02 La Salle 15–17 6–10 4th
2002–03 La Salle 12–17 5–11 4th
2003–04 La Salle 10–20 5–11 6th
La Salle: 37–54 16–32
Total: 79–99

References edit

  1. ^ O'Neil, Dana (April 6, 2001). "La Salle recruits a recruiter". Philadelphia Daily News. p. 148. Retrieved November 21, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ "Crisis Management 101". CNN. July 29, 2004. Retrieved April 26, 2010.
  3. ^ Fantino, John (May 20, 2010). "Assistant coach leaves UVM men's basketball team". Burlington Free Press. Retrieved 2010-05-26.[dead link]
  4. ^ . IUP Athletics. Archived from the original on 2022-09-28. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  5. ^ Forde, Mitchell (2023-04-07). "Longtime College Basketball Coach Has Died At 69". Athon Sports. Retrieved 2023-04-08.
  6. ^ Coach Billy Hahn Has Died

billy, hahn, this, biography, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, this, biography, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, js. This biography needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this biography Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Billy Hahn news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Billy Hahn June 22 1953 April 7 2023 was an American basketball coach who was an assistant coach for the West Virginia Mountaineers under head coach Bob Huggins During his head coaching and assistant coaching career Hahn has coached and recruited 19 future NBA players and set various school records at Maryland with numerous NCAA Tournament appearances over his career Billy HahnBiographical detailsBorn 1953 06 22 June 22 1953Mishawaka Indiana U S DiedApril 7 2023 2023 04 07 aged 69 Playing career1971 1974MarylandPosition s Point guardCoaching career HC unless noted 1974 1975Morris Harvey assistant 1975 1976Davidson assistant 1976 1979Rhode Island assistant 1979 1986Ohio assistant 1986 1989Ohio1989 2001Maryland assistant 2001 2004La Salle2007 2017West Virginia assistant Head coaching recordOverall79 99 Contents 1 Early life 2 Coaching career 2 1 Morris Harvey College and Davidson 2 2 Rhode Island 2 3 Ohio 2 4 Maryland 2 5 La Salle 2 5 1 Tenure 2 5 2 Scandal and resignation 2 6 West Virginia 3 Personal life and death 4 Head coaching record 5 ReferencesEarly life editBorn in Mishawaka Indiana Hahn graduated from Penn High then attended the University of Maryland During his tenure at Maryland Hahn was a three year letterwinner on three of the greatest teams in Terrapins history As a freshman he played on the Terps team that won the 1971 National Invitation Tournament That season he played as a key reserve off the bench Hahn was team captain during his senior season and was part of the 1974 1975 squad that went 24 5 Hahn graduated from Maryland with a bachelor s degree in distributive education and a minor in business administration in 1975 Coaching career editMorris Harvey College and Davidson edit Hahn began his coaching career at Morris Harvey College in 1975 as an assistant coach under Rick Meckfessel In 1976 Hahn became an assistant coach at Davidson College Rhode Island edit After his season at Davidson Hahn became an assistant coach at Rhode Island where he helped the team to the NCAA tournament in 1978 and the NIT in 1979 Hahn recruited and coached future NBA player Sly Williams while at Rhode Island Ohio edit In 1980 Hahn left Rhode Island for the assistant coaching position at Ohio University under Danny Nee During his six year tenure the Bobcats won the Mid American Conference Championship in 1983 and 1985 and went to the NCAA tournament in both of the seasons In 1986 Hahn helped the Bobcats to the NIT After the 1986 season Hahn was named head coach He led the Bobcats to the MAC Championship Game in 1988 During his head coaching tenure he recruited and coached the school s all time leading scorer Dave Jamerson and the MAC Player of the Year in 1989 Paul Graham Maryland edit After his head coaching stint at Ohio University ended following the 1989 season Hahn returned to his alma mater the University of Maryland to become the assistant coach under Gary Williams During his tenure from 1989 to 2001 Hahn s Terps went to the NCAA tournament a school record eight straight years including the 2001 Final Four The Terps also finished fourth or higher in the ACC eight consecutive seasons and established school records for regular season victories 28 in 1999 and ACC victories in a season 13 in 1999 Hahn was promoted to associate head coach in 1997 and became the leading recruiter and scout along with his on court coaching duties During the tenure he coached Walt Williams Joe Smith and Steve Francis who all became NBA Lottery draft selections He was also named one of the top ten recruiters in the eastern United States by Eastern Basketball The year after he left 2002 the Terps won the national championship with most of Hahn s recruits He was given a championship ring by Williams and the Terrapins basketball squad even though he was not associated with the school anymore Hahn coached future NBA players Tony Massenburg Jerrod Mustaf Keith Booth Sarunas Jasikevicius Laron Profit Terence Morris Obinna Ekezie Steve Francis Chris Wilcox Lonny Baxter Steve Blake and Juan Dixon at Maryland La Salle edit Tenure edit Hahn was hired as La Salle s men s basketball coach in 2001 succeeding longtime coach Speedy Morris 1 In each of his three seasons at La Salle Hahn s Explorers had losing records While at La Salle Hahn coached NBA players Steven Smith and Rasual Butler Scandal and resignation edit Main article La Salle University basketball scandal Hahn was forced to resign in 2004 when a women s basketball player claimed he discouraged her from reporting a rape she said occurred in April 2003 that allegedly involved one of Hahn s players Hahn claimed that the woman didn t want to report the incident at the time However La Salle school policy required Hahn to report the incident to a counselor This was to ensure compliance with the Clery Act a federal law which requires colleges to make timely reports of crime on campus La Salle women s basketball head coach John Miller was also forced to resign on the same day as Hahn also for not reporting the alleged rape 2 West Virginia edit After spending three seasons out of coaching Hahn was hired by new head coach Bob Huggins at West Virginia University in April 2007 Hahn and Huggins had been rivals when Huggins coached Akron In Hahn s first season with the team the Mountaineers finished the regular season with a 22 9 record The team also advanced to the semifinals of the Big East tournament and the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA tournament which included a second round victory over the 2 seed Duke Blue Devils Hahn retired from coaching after the 2017 season Personal life and death editHahn s son Matt was a reserve on the Maryland basketball team from 1996 2000 He served as an assistant coach at IUP Robert Morris and Vermont 3 4 Hahn suffered a heart attack and died on April 7 2023 at the age of 69 5 6 Head coaching record editStatistics overview Season Team Overall Conference Standing PostseasonOhio Bobcats Mid American Conference 1986 1989 1986 87 Ohio 14 14 7 9 6th1987 88 Ohio 16 14 9 7 3rd1988 89 Ohio 12 17 5 11 7thOhio 42 45 21 27La Salle Explorers Atlantic 10 Conference 2001 2004 2001 02 La Salle 15 17 6 10 4th2002 03 La Salle 12 17 5 11 4th2003 04 La Salle 10 20 5 11 6thLa Salle 37 54 16 32Total 79 99References edit O Neil Dana April 6 2001 La Salle recruits a recruiter Philadelphia Daily News p 148 Retrieved November 21 2020 via Newspapers com Crisis Management 101 CNN July 29 2004 Retrieved April 26 2010 Fantino John May 20 2010 Assistant coach leaves UVM men s basketball team Burlington Free Press Retrieved 2010 05 26 dead link Matt Hahn IUP Athletics Archived from the original on 2022 09 28 Retrieved 2022 09 28 Forde Mitchell 2023 04 07 Longtime College Basketball Coach Has Died At 69 Athon Sports Retrieved 2023 04 08 Coach Billy Hahn Has Died Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Billy Hahn amp oldid 1173909685, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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