
Central Michigan dismisses coach Tony Barbee
April 4 - Central Michigan fired coach Tony Barbee on Thursday after four seasons.
The Chippewas went 14-17 this season and 49-75 in Barbee's four seasons at the helm.
Barbee, 53, had one winning season at Central Michigan, going 18-14 during the 2023-24 season.
"At this time, I have determined that we need to go in a different direction with the leadership of our men's basketball program," athletic director Amy Folan said in a news release. "I want to thank Tony for his dedication and service during his last four years in Mount Pleasant. We wish him the best in his future endeavors.
"I am confident that we will attract a high-caliber candidate pool during our head coaching search. This is a tremendous opportunity, and we know that our community will rally behind our next Chippewa men's basketball coach."
Barbee also went 49-75 in a four-season stint at Auburn from 2010-14. Prior to that, Barbee went 82-52 at UTEP from 2006-10, leading the Miners to a 26-7 record and a NCAA Tournament appearance during the 2009-10 campaign.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
5 days ago
- Reuters
Three Heisman winners headline 2026 Hall of Fame nominees list
June 2 - Heisman Trophy winners Robert Griffin III, Cam Newton and Mark Ingram headline the list of 79 players nominated by the National Football Foundation for the College Football Hall of Fame's Class of 2026. Ingram rushed for 3,261 yards and 42 touchdowns in three seasons at Alabama, which included winning the Heisman and a national title as a sophomore in 2009. Newton started for just one season in college, but he maximized his 2010 season at Auburn by throwing for 2,854 yards and 30 touchdowns, rushing for 1,473 yards and 20 scores and leading the Tigers to the national championship. Griffin claimed the 2011 Heisman Award after piling up 4,293 passing yards and 37 touchdowns at Baylor. All nominees for the College Football Hall of Fame must have earned at least one first-team All-American honor during their college career, but "post-football record as a citizen is also weighed." National Football Foundation members also are allowed to place emphasis on a player's academic record and whether he earned his diploma. There are two nominees on the ballot who were three-time first-team All-Americans: Ohio State linebacker James Laurinaitis and Southern California safety Taylor Mays. Seventeen nominees earned All-American status in two seasons, a group that includes Florida wide receiver/returner Percy Harvin, Florida State wide receiver Peter Warrick, Clemson cornerback Donnell Woolford and Florida State kicker Sebastian Janikowski. Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o made the list as the only player to win the Maxwell, Walter Camp, Bednarik, Butkus, Lombardi and Nagurski awards in the same season (2012). NFF members have until July 1 for vote for 12 players on the list, which runs the gamut from 1978 graduates (Tennessee receiver Larry Seivers and Arkansas lineman Leotis Harris) to 2014 graduates (Pittsburgh defensive lineman Aaron Donald and Northern Illinois quarterback Jordan Lynch). Members also will vote for two of the nine Football Bowl Subdivision Coach candidates: Jim Carlen (West Virginia, Texas Tech, South Carolina), Pete Cawthon Sr. (Austin (TX) College, Texas Tech), Larry Coker (Miami, UTSA), Dennis Franchione (TCU and many more), Ralph Friedgen (Maryland), Gary Patterson (TCU), Chris Petersen (Boise State, Washington), Darryl Rodgers (Arizona State and more) and Tommy Tuberville (Ole Miss, Auburn, Texas Tech, Cincinnati). The 2026 Hall of Fame class will be announced in January, one month after the Class of 2025 is officially enshrined at the NFF Awards Dinner in Las Vegas. Former Alabama coach Nick Saban and ex-Virginia Tech quarterback Michael Vick headlined the list of 18 former players and four coaches in the Class of 2025. --Field Level Media


Reuters
31-05-2025
- Reuters
Michael Earley to be retained as Aggies' head baseball coach
May 31 - Texas A&M Director of Athletics Trev Alberts announced today that first-year head baseball coach Michael Earley would return to College Station for the 2025-26 academic year. "Earlier today, I met with Coach Earley to discuss the state of our baseball program. I appreciate Mike's work in taking a holistic view of what changes need to be made so that we have a baseball program that meets our high standards," Alberts said. "Baseball success is critically important to Texas A&M. I am confident in Mike's ability to execute the needed change and fully support his vision going forward." Earley took over for Jim Schlossnagle, who guided the Aggies to a pair of College World Series appearances in his three seasons at the helm. In 2024, Texas A&M made it to the championship finals, but fell in three games (2-1) to national champion Tennessee. Schlossnagle took the University of Texas head coaching position one day after the decisive third game and Earley, the program's hitting coach, was elevated to the top spot in the dugout. Texas A&M was the consensus No. 1 pick in the preseason, but struggled to a 30-26 record, which included a 11-19 mark and 14th place finish in the SEC. The Aggies failed to earn an NCAA Tournament bid for just the second time since 2007. The nucleus of the team is expected to return, but Alberts did not address the statuses of hitting coach Caleb Longley and pitching coach Jason Kelly. --Field Level Media


Reuters
30-05-2025
- Reuters
NCAA president weighing tournament expansion to 76 teams
March Madness could soon become even bigger, if Charlie Baker has his way. Speaking Thursday during the Big 12 spring meetings, the NCAA president said he sees value in expanding the NCAA Tournament to potentially 76 teams with hopes of coming to a decision on the matter in the next few months. "We've had good conversations with CBS and WBD (Warner Bros. Discover)," Baker said. "Our goal here is to try to sort of get to either yes or no sometime in the next few months because there's a lot of logistical work that would be associated with doing this. "If we were to go down this road, you just think about the opening weekends, who has to travel the longest, it gets complicated." The tournament field expanded from 65 teams to 68 in 2011, creating the First Four round that pits the two lowest-seeded at-large teams against one another as well as the two lowest-seeded conference champions for a chance to reach the traditional 64-team bracket. Baker said he has discussed growing the field to 72 or even 76 teams. As the NCAA president put it, the current format contains flaws, noting that even with 68 teams in the field, there are still some who believe their teams were snubbed. "The point behind going from 68 to 72 or 76," Baker said, "is to basically give some of those schools that were probably among the 72, 76, 68, 64 best teams in the country a way into the tournament." Kansas coach Bill Self said Big 12 coaches favor expansion. His conference featured seven tournament entrants in 2025, compared with 14 boasted by the SEC. "There was a little bit that was brought forth and the consensus among the coaches, even though it was very little, would be in favor of that," Self said. "I don't know if you could make it where it was totally equitable all the way across the board for everybody. Certainly, there's going to be outliers on every situation." --Field Level Media