2025 coaching carousel: Grading every high-major college basketball hire as ACC, Big Ten receive high marks

The 2025 college basketball coaching carousel hit full stride after the First Round of the NCAA Tournament, with more candidates open for business and the clock ticking down toward the transfer portal window. While many jobs are left open, big moves have been made already.
There are multiple trends starting to develop this cycle, starting with the hires made at Miami and Utah, continuing with a hire by Florida State. NC State and Texas went another direction by hiring coaches who fit a different mold.
The moves all send a clear message to other programs to move quickly, because the best candidates will come off the board fast. While some of the marquee coaches across college basketball might not be in play due to various factors, there are plenty of interesting names mentioned with each job.
The final grades for every college basketball hire do not come until their tenure ends – whether in a matter of years or decades. However, initial grades take into account the expected prestige of the job and the current pedigree of the coach. Take a look at the early grades for every high-major coach hired during the 2025 offseason so far.
Florida State
Out: Leonard Hamilton
In: Luke Loucks
Grade: B-
Florida State moved quick to find Leonard Hamilton’s replacement as the college basketball legend retires, keeping it in the family with a former player from the previous era. They locked in on 34-year old Sacramento Kings assistant Luke Loucks, following the recent trend of poaching promising NBA talent for the college sideline as the front office era grows.
Loucks is very young in the coaching profession, and has not run a team of his own at any level yet, building his staff with talented recruiters early as the Seminoles look to rebuild the program. As with any coaching jumping from the NBA to college, his success will be heavily tied to his ability to adjust to the differences in the game.
Indiana
Out: Mike Woodson
In: Darian DeVries
Grade: A-
Indiana was among the first teams to join the search for a new coach, and concluded their process early thanks to controversial NCAA Tournament bubble decisions which left West Virginia out of the field. Just one year after taking the West Virginia job, it is only fair to give a similar grade given his relatively successful season in a power conference.
After a long run of success at Drake, he successfully made the jump to the high-major level, and will see how much he can make out of increased resources at one of college basketball’s blue-blood programs. Bringing his son Tucker, who was shut down with injury this season, would kickstart the rebuilding process for a team featuring plenty talent.
Iowa
Out: Fran McCaffery
In: Ben McCollum
Grade: A-
Iowa make the bold choice to capitalize on a rare influx of Iowa-connected head coaches atop the college basketball landscape by moving on from long-time leader Fran McCaffery. They now turn to perineal winner across multiple levels Ben McCollum, who will bring a change of pace they hope can break through the difficult Big Ten standings.
After backing up four Division II national championships with an NCAA Tournament run at Drake, McCollum quickly moved toward the top of coaching hot boards across the country. The biggest questions faces his jump to Drake were squashed early. However, with another jump, questions on his ability to recruit at a high level and utilize resources to handle with yet another jump in competition remain.
Miami
Out: Jim Larrañaga
In: Jai Lucas
Grade: B+
Miami was in need of a hard reset, with Jim Larrañaga ready for retirement. The program has recent NCAA Tournament success to lean on but suffered a dramatic fall from glory to the bottom of a weak ACC. Enter a young, up-and-coming coach with experience in the conference, a long list of recruiting successes, and multiple stops working or playing for some of the best coaches in the sport.
With the NIL resources that Miami has boasted for the college basketball program and the obvious location bonus, Lucas promises to continue his strong recruiting in a new spot. The question here comes with a jump in responsibility from assistant to head coach at such a high level with such a gap to make up.
Minnesota
Out: Ben Johnson
In: Niko Medved
Grade: A-
Minnesota has fallen into the bottom group of Big Ten teams struggling to contend in one of college basketball’s most difficult conferences. By hiring Colorado State’s Niko Medved, there is a clear investment in improved results, but resources must follow to push the team into the category of contenders. Watch for the impact they can make through the offseason under the new staff.
Medved turned Colorado State into a consistent Mountain West contender with multiple NCAA Tournament appearances to back up his success, often finding the team’s best form entering March. Beyond that, he has now placed multiple players in the NBA after identifying talent and developing it beyond where projections believed possible.
NC State
Out: Kevin Keatts
In: Will Wade
Grade: A+
Will Wade receives the first A+ given out in the two-year history of these coaching grades, standing out as the all-in move of the offseason by NC State. Despite NCAA troubles which ended his LSU tenure prematurely, many of the problems are resolved in a new landscape of NIL, revenue-sharing and the transfer portal.
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Wade has led three programs to the NCAA Tournament, including an impressive stint at McNeese where he turned a Southland roster into an analytics darling which sat higher in the NET rankings than 13 ACC teams in 2024-25. With a power vacuum in the conference, the Wolfpack is ready to push toward the top of the standings quick.
Texas
Out: Rodney Terry
In: Sean Miller
Grade: B+
Texas stuck with Rodney Terry after an impressive run as the interim, but always felt likely to move on when things started to trend the wrong direction. They now circle back to a candidate from that initial coaching search, tabbing Xavier coach Sean Miller as the new program leader. He, like Will Wade at NC State, returns to the tier of job he had before the NCAA investigation which has minimal impact on the new era.
Miller had a good run of success at Arizona between Xavier stints. He now looks to regain that recruiting advantage by way of NIL investment and redevelop the pipeline of NBA players under his coaching. While there is plenty to like here, he has never cracked the Final Four code despite numerous trips to the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament.
Utah
Out: Craig Smith
In: Alex Jensen
Grade: B
After deciding to move on from Craig Smith early, Utah worked quickly on Dallas Mavericks assistant Alex Jensen in a deal that draws a striking resemblance to the 2024 cycle. Like their rival BYU did last year, the Utes turned to a coveted NBA assistant with ties to the area.
The next step for Utah is raising NIL funds to a level which can compete with not only their in-state rivals, but the rest of the Big 12 as well. Given the current state of the program, there is no extreme makeover neccisary to enter NCAA Tournament consideration early.
Virginia
Out: Tony Bennett
In: Ryan Odom
Grade: B
Virginia suffered the worst possible timing for a Hall of Fame retirement, going into the season with an interim head coach. After battling through, the now jump on the opportunity to hire a coach with ties to the program and a long track record of success, leading three teams to the NCAA Tournament so far in his career.
Adding further to the storybook path, he beat the Cavaliers in the first ever 16-over-1 upset in history during his UMBC tenure. Now on the other side, Odom looks to prove himself recruiting top-end players at the high-major level. He joins the influx of ACC coaches making their case for increased resources as the conference looks to make a resurgence on the national stage.
Open jobs
Multiple high-major jobs have already come open this cycle, making it look active already. Many more will make decisions on the future after a postseason exit.
Without a set number of jobs, those which are already open could get first look at the top candidates. That might give those schools a leg up on the competition.
Remaining jobs with vacancy to fill: Villanova, West Virginia, Xavier
Indiana, NC State and Virginia make moves to secure the future of their programs. Meanwhile, West Virginia must now look to replace the coach they put in place just one year ago.
Minnesota and Villanova are deep in the coaching search as well, with solid candidates on the radar. Stay tuned for more firings and hirings across the country.