MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesota fired Richard Pitino on Monday after the men’s basketball coach compiled a 54-96 regular-season record over eight years in the Big Ten and had only three conference finishes higher than 10th place.
The Golden Gophers went 14-15 this season, dropping 11 of their last 14 games. They were 0-10 on the road, one of only three major conference teams in the country without a road win.
Athletic director Mark Coyle was scheduled to address reporters on Tuesday morning. He called Pitino “a tremendous person and coach” in a statement distributed by the university.
“Decisions like this are never easy, but after evaluating this season and the previous eight years of our program under Richard, it is clear to me that new leadership is needed,” Coyle said. “We have one of the best practice facilities in the nation, a historic competition venue and a state that produces top-caliber talent. This is an extremely attractive job.”
According to Pitino’s contract, the university will owe Pitino a $1.7 million buyout of his deal that had three years remaining. His base salary for 2020-21 was $2 million, below the median in the 14-team conference. According an Albuquerque Journal report, Pitino has been identified as a finalist for the head-coaching vacancy at New Mexico. If he were to be hired elsewhere, Minnesota could be able to reduce or eliminate the buyout.
Coyle ought to have plenty of strong candidates to consider. Two sons of former Gophers head coaches, Eric Musselman (Arkansas) and Brian Dutcher (San Diego State), are proven program-builders with teams currently in the NCAA tournament. Craig Smith (Utah State) and Niko Medved (Colorado State) are Minnesota natives currently having success running mid-major programs. Then there’s Gophers alum Ryan Saunders, who was fired last month as coach of the NBA’s Minnesota Timberwolves.
Hired at age 30 with one prior year of experience as a head coach at Florida International, Pitino guided the Gophers to an NIT championship in his first season. Only two NCAA tournament appearances followed, though, in 2017 and 2019.
The Gophers were primed to return to the Big Dance this season after beating Iowa, Ohio State, Michigan and Purdue — ranked No. 5, No. 9, No. 4 and No. 20, respectively, in the AP poll for March 8 — before injuries to starters Gabe Kalscheur and Liam Robbins accelerated another late-season slide.
The Gophers simply didn’t make enough shots to keep up and had to work too hard to get them. In the Division I rankings as of Friday, they were 13th in 3-point attempts and 334th in 3-point percentage.
Quick-witted and even-tempered, Pitino never pretended to ignore public criticism. After a win over then-No. 6 Maryland in 2016, Pitino quipped he could “start going inside at Starbucks instead of going through the drive-through.” He expressed the same peace after Minnesota lost Thursday in the Big Ten tournament, anticipating his postseason meeting with Coyle.
“We all have losses. That’s OK. I do have a great relationship with Mark. If he gives me some bad news, that doesn’t mean I’m going to flip a desk or anything,” Pitino said.
Minnesota’s best run under Pitino was in 2017, when a 7-0 record in February fueled a fourth-place finish in the Big Ten and a No. 5 seed in the NCAA tournament. The Gophers were one and done. Two years later, they beat Louisville in the NCAA tournament to reach the second round.
The son of longtime college and pro coach Rick Pitino, who was the first to win NCAA championships at two different schools with Kentucky and Louisville, Richard Pitino was picked by previous Minnesota athletic director Norwood Teague to replace Tubby Smith. The elder Pitino, now the coach at Iona, is back in the NCAA tournament this month as a No. 15 seed.
After striking out with Fred Hoiberg, Flip Saunders, Shaka Smart and Brad Stevens, Teague received a strong endorsement of Richard Pitino from Billy Donovan, the current NBA coach with the Chicago Bulls who had Pitino on his staff at Florida from 2009 to 2011.
Pitino and his wife and three children became fond of Minnesota despite East Coast roots, but he ultimately failed to forge a strong connection with the state’s high school circuit, with Minnesota annually producing high-major prospects.
Sure, two of the best players from the 2019 team, Amir Coffey and Daniel Oturu, are both Minnesota natives and now with the NBA’s LA Clippers. There were too many recruiting misses, though, that left the Gophers with little depth when injuries hit.
One of those whiffs came with the 2017 freshman class, when Pitino and his staff signed Isaiah Washington at point guard from New York and passed over Minnesota native McKinley Wright IV. Wright became the all-time assists leader at Colorado, where he was a three-time All-Pac-12 player. Washington transferred after two seasons with the Gophers.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.