Former Cincinnati Bearcats, West Virginia coach Bob Huggins wants Louisville job

With the West Virginia Mountaineers basketball vacancy filled by the recent hiring of Darian DeVries from Drake, former WVU coach Bob Huggins has thrown his hat in the ring for the Louisville Cardinals job. Huggins did so publicly Wednesday morning on a WDRB radio program in Louisville done by former Cardinal player and coach Jerry Eaves, a Louisville native.

Bob Huggins is interviewed on the UC Bearcat pregame show with former player Terry Nelson and Dan Hoard prior to the UC/West Virginia game Wednesday night.
Bob Huggins is interviewed on the UC Bearcat pregame show with former player Terry Nelson and Dan Hoard prior to the UC/West Virginia game Wednesday night.

To be fair, Eaves and Huggins know one another from his days on Denny Crum's staff. Though Eaves explained the issues at Louisville, he also openly politicked for Huggins.

Huggins states his case

After his second DUI in Pittsburgh in 2023 (the first was in Cincinnati in 2004) Huggins told Eaves he went to rehab immediately.

"I decided to change my life," Huggins said. "I've had no alcohol for over 300 days. I'm on the right path."

Huggins made no mention of the homophobic slur he made on 700WLW's Bill Cunningham show describing Xavier fans but has since apologized for those remarks.

Former West Virginia Mountaineers head coach Bob Huggins greets WVU forward Patrick Suemnick during Senior Day activities
Former West Virginia Mountaineers head coach Bob Huggins greets WVU forward Patrick Suemnick during Senior Day activities

He can raise funds

Huggins mentioned when coming to West Virginia, the players had difficulty using the gym. He then orchestrated the building of a state-of-the-art practice facility that he says opposing coaches like Rick Pitino and Baylor's Scott Drew marveled over during visits.

Louisville has issues

Eaves inspiration for the interview was talking with friend Dereck Whittenburg who played on Jim Valvano's NCAA championship North Carolina State team. Both agreed that Huggins should help.

"We let the mob lead the group," Eaves said to Huggins about Louisville's downfall.

2024 Louisville looks familiar to Huggins

Huggins mentioned he had the same institutional issues at Cincinnati when he took over for Tony Yates in 1989. After two NITs, the Bearcats were in the Final Four in 1992 and made the Elite Eight in 1993 before losing to eventual champion North Carolina.

Former UC Bearcat coach Bob Huggins attended the induction of Corie Blount into the UC Athletic Hall of Fame. From left are former Bearcats Anthony Buford, Tarrice Gibson, Curtis Bostic, Keith Gregor, Terry Nelson, Huggins, Alex Meacham, Nick Van Exel and A.D. Jackson.
Former UC Bearcat coach Bob Huggins attended the induction of Corie Blount into the UC Athletic Hall of Fame. From left are former Bearcats Anthony Buford, Tarrice Gibson, Curtis Bostic, Keith Gregor, Terry Nelson, Huggins, Alex Meacham, Nick Van Exel and A.D. Jackson.

"To revive that program, I've been blessed," Huggins said. "I've been around Oscar (Robertson). Oscar was in practice virtually every day. At West Virginia, I was around Jerry West, Rod Thorn and Rod Hundley. It was the same at Cincinnati, West Virginia and Kansas State. I've lived that. UC we fixed. There's absolutely no reason I can't come into Louisville and make it what it was before."

Return to Denny Crum days

The 70-year-old Huggins said Denny Crum was the coach who would come over and put his arm around him before a game and would converse with him often at conferences and tournaments.

Eaves mentioned the city of Louisville needs a return to those days.

“I'm really excited,” Huggins said. “I would be really excited to be there. I'd want to be and do what Coach Crum did. I think it fits me perfectly."

He would take on anyone

Much like Crum often played a treacherous non-conference schedule before hitting league play, Huggins told Eaves he would do the same as he did in Cincinnati.

"We didn't hide from everybody," Huggins said. "Line'em up and we'll go play. That's the mentality Louisville would like to see."

In his favor are 935 wins, a spot in the Naismith Hall of Fame and Final Fours at Cincinnati and West Virginia, teams he said were in "dire straits" when he arrived. Eaves mentioned the Cardinals needed "butts in seats" and before a commercial break, Huggins gave him a pleasing response.

"I put butts in seats for Louisville when I was in Cincinnati," he said.

First order of business?

Huggins said he would sit down with players as he did at UC, West Virginia and Kansas State and asked them what needed to be fixed. He said people don't realize it, but he's a player's coach.

"Guys come to my house almost daily to talk," Huggins said.

Louisville Cardinals head coach Rick Pitino talks with UC head coach Bob Huggins before the start of their game inside of the Shoemaker Center on Jan 19, 2002.
Louisville Cardinals head coach Rick Pitino talks with UC head coach Bob Huggins before the start of their game inside of the Shoemaker Center on Jan 19, 2002.

Who else would Louisville seek?

The Louisville search recently involved Florida Atlantic's Dusty May according to reports with May eventually going to Michigan. Veteran Louisville journalist Rick Bozich, now with WDRB, confirmed such in a Thursday article. Bozich even joined the radio program to question Huggins.

Recently, Indiana State's Josh Schertz has entered the picture. His Sycamores just defeated the Cincinnati Bearcats in the NIT quarterfinals. Schertz was also being courted by Saint Louis. The search is riddled with Cincinnati/Huggins ties as Elder and Xavier product Pat Kelsey of Charleston is in the mix as well as Richard Pitino of New Mexico, son of the coach who departed "The 'Ville" and went on to coach at Iona and St. John's. Many in the area, wonder why another departed coach, Chris Mack, was released from his duties.

Others that might be interested but have a monstrous buyout, would be former Huggins and Pitino assistant Mick Cronin who has taken UCLA to a Final Four. Other reports have contact with Seton Hall's Shaheen Holoway and USF's Amir Abdul-Rahim.

How long would Huggins coach?

Bozich asked Huggins, who will be 71 by the time the next season starts, about how many years he would stick around. He suggested 10 to 15 years.

"I'm in really good shape," Huggins said. "I want to go to work and be part of the family."

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Bob Huggins wants Louisville Cardinals NCAA basketball coaching job

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