
Darian DeVries faces a tall task in helping put Indiana back on the national basketball map for good
Associated Press
New Indiana Hoosiers coach Darian DeVries hit all the right notes Wednesday.
He wants a roster that reflects today's changing game yet still plays a selfless, hard-nosed style. He intends to go heavily into the transfer portal this year but recruit multiyear players in coming years. And, of course, he plans to win now — and for years to come.
It's exactly the kind of promises Hoosiers fans have been hearing for nearly a quarter-century but that have gone mostly unfulfilled. At his introductory news conference, DeVries promised this time would be different, even at a school where lofty expectations have been the norm for decades.
'I hope everybody, every fan base wants to win. I want to win. We all want to win,' he said. 'The passion is awesome. You want passion in a fan base. You want that. You thrive off that. Our players thrive off that. Nobody is going to want to win as bad as I do or our players do or our staff does or our fans do. So from my standpoint, let's do that together. Let's go make this thing happen and let's take this thing to as high a level as we can."
No, the 49-year-old DeVries wasn't quite as blunt as Hoosiers football coach Curt Cignetti, who started his tenure in December 2023 by challenging anyone who doubted he could win at Indiana to Google him.
Make no mistake, though, DeVries' message was the same.
He spent six seasons as Drake's head coach, leading the Bulldogs to more 20-win seasons in DeVries' tenure than the program had in its entire history, two regular-season Missouri Valley Conference titles and back-to-back league tournament championships before taking the West Virginia job.
It took him one season to make the Mountaineers relevant again, going from 9-23 with a last-place Big 12 finish in 2023-24 to a 19-13 mark and the cusp of an NCAA Tournament bid this season — a bid many thought was deserved.
Then, exactly a year after landing at West Virginia, DeVries returned to his Midwestern roots, explaining he couldn't turn down the chance to join one of the nation's traditional blueblood programs and put it back on the national map — for good.
'This is one of the premier schools, basketball schools in the entire country,' DeVries said. 'I enjoyed my time when I was a grad assistant at Creighton all the way up through assistants and head coaching, and now I'm looking forward to this next step. I believe we can do some special things here, so I'm really excited.'
So are Hoosiers fans, who have become more accustomed to mediocre records and hopeful of NCAA tourney bids over the past two decades.
Indiana missed the 68-team field in each of Mike Woodson's final two seasons and landed in the First Four in the first of his four seasons. As a result, Woodson and the athletic department decided in February this would be his final season coaching his alma mater.
But the problems predate Woodson's arrival in 2021-22: Indiana missed the tourney five straight times from 2017-21. The Hoosiers haven't been to the Sweet 16 since 2016 and haven't gone any deeper since playing for the 2002 national championship.
They believe that DeVries, the seventh coach since the late Bob Knight was fired, will be the one to restore Indiana's glory.
'He's a proven evaluator and developer of players,' athletic director Scott Dolson said. 'We wanted to make certain that we had a modern playing style. We have to have a head coach that understands where things are going. It was really important to us. We wanted someone that really wanted to be here. We felt we were in recruiting mode, but at the same time we wanted someone that really was recruiting us.'
All DeVries must do now is deliver on the promises with the results Indiana has been seeking, pretty much since the moment of Knight's firing.
'The chance to lead one of the biggest brands in college basketball was something I could not pass up,' DeVries said. 'We have an administration here that is 100% in alignment with navigating through this whole new era of college athletics, from the top down. There's no doubt that there's an extreme commitment to making sure we are on the upper edge of all of that. There are resources available here that are among the best in the entire country."
___
AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness. Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here.
recommended

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


USA Today
24 minutes ago
- USA Today
Details for Florida basketball's 2025 matchup against UConn Huskies revealed
Details for Florida basketball's 2025 matchup against UConn Huskies revealed Florida basketball's matchup against the UConn Huskies at Madison Square Garden in New York City on Tuesday, Dec. 9, was officially announced by ESPN on Wednesday, setting up a rematch of the 2025 NCAA Tournament Second Round. The Gators narrowly won that game, 77-75, en route to their third-ever national championship. This fall, the two teams will once again battle on a neutral court in the second half of the Jimmy V Classic, which is named for NC State head coach Jimmy Valvano, who won a national title at age 37. Florida skipper Todd Golden is just two years older, and his recent success made him the youngest head coach to win a ring since Jimmy V. The game is scheduled as the second half of a double-header that opens with the BYU Cougars facing off with the Clemson Tigers, which tips off at 6:30 p.m. ET. Florida-UConn follows with a 9 p.m. ET start time. The Huskies hold the all-time edge over the Gators with a 5-2 record dating back to their first meeting in the Sweet 16 of the 1994 NCAA Tournament. Third-seeded Florida prevailed in overtime, 69-60, over second-seeded UConn to advance to the Elite Eight. Connecticut won the next five meetings spanning from 2013 to 2022, with a pair of victories coming inside the O'Connell Center and the other two on their home court; the third came in the 2014 NCAA Tournament Semifinals — a 63-53 triumph. Then, of course, Florida bookended the series win a win in the Big Dance this spring. Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.


Washington Post
37 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Finals things to know: Shai nearing a milestone, and don't expect close games
OKLAHOMA CITY — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has a chance to make a whole slew of history in these NBA Finals. The Oklahoma City star is the first reigning MVP who'll play in the finals — they start Thursday night when the Thunder play host to the Indiana Pacers — since Golden State's Stephen Curry in 2016. He could become the first player to win a scoring title and an NBA title in the same season since Shaquille O'Neal did it for the Los Angeles Lakers in 1999-2000. And sometime in Game 1 or Game 2, Gilgeous-Alexander will likely hit another milestone. He comes into this series with 2,960 points this season — officially, anyway, more on that in a second — between the 82-game regular-season slate and now the postseason. With 40 more points, he will record the 25th instance of a 3,000-point season when combining the regular season and the playoffs. The most recent to do it was Luka Doncic, who had 3,005 points for Dallas last season. If the NBA Cup championship game counted statistically, which it doesn't, Gilgeous-Alexander would only need 19 more points for 3,000. He had 21 in that OKC loss to Milwaukee at Las Vegas in December, but those points don't count toward his season total. Michael Jordan had 10 seasons with at least 3,000 points, Wilt Chamberlain had five and nine other players — Bob McAdoo, Elgin Baylor, James Harden, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Kevin Durant, Kobe Bryant, Rick Barry, Shaquille O'Neal and Doncic — have one. For the second consecutive year, there are four Canadians in the NBA Finals. Last year, it was Oshae Brissett for Boston and AJ Lawson, Olivier-Maxence Prosper and Dwight Powell for Dallas. This year, it's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Luguentz Dort for Oklahoma City, along with Bennedict Mathurin and Andrew Nembhard for Indiana. 'I played against Andrew when I was 9 years old,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'It's been an amazing journey. To see him having success, my own success, obviously Lu's success, Ben's success, it's special. It's hard to even wrap your head around. ... For us to make it to this stage, is a testament to our hard work, our character, people around us that helped us get here. It's been a blessing. It's been super fun.' Dort said he hopes Canadians enjoy seeing four of their own in the finals. 'Obviously we represent our teams here,' Dort said. 'But at the end of the day we represent our country as well.' And it's certain that Montreal will get a title: Dort and Mathurin are both from there. 'I think it's a great opportunity for me, Lu, the whole Montreal city,' Mathurin said. 'I think it's a great step in the right direction just to be able to go against each other. You know, Lu's a great friend of mine. I would call him brother right now, but we're enemies.' Indiana's James Johnson has been in the NBA for 16 seasons. He has played for 10 different franchises. He has played under 11 different coaches. He has finally made the NBA Finals. Johnson came close in 2019-20, starting the season with Miami — which wound up making the bubble finals that season. But Johnson was part of a three-team trade about a month before the pandemic hit and ended up in Minnesota. 'Getting here now means that I was fortunate enough to be on a team of guys that only want winning,' Johnson said. 'I was fortunate enough to join a team of guys that just want to win — and they want to win by any means necessary.' The last time Indiana's Rick Carlisle coached in the NBA Finals, every game was basically decided at the end. All six games of the Dallas-Miami series in 2011 were decided by 10 points or less. Since then, those games are rare. Out of the last 73 NBA Finals games, starting with the 2012 Heat-Thunder matchup through last season's Boston-Dallas series, the average margin of victory has been 12.4 points per game. There hasn't been an instance of more than three consecutive single-digit finals winning margins in that stretch, and 45 of the 73 games have been decided by at least 10 points. And there have been only six games in the last 12 finals decided by three points or less — while 10 have been decided by 20 points or more. There hasn't been an overtime game in the NBA Finals since Game 1 of the 2018 series between Golden State and Cleveland. The seven-year drought and counting without a finals overtime game is the longest in NBA history. There was a six-year stretch from 1984 through 1990 without an OT finals game, but never seven — until now. If Oklahoma City wins the NBA title, it will mark the 13th time in the last 14 seasons that a division champion has wound up winning the finals. The only exception in that span was Golden State in 2022. Before that, the last team to not win their division but win the NBA title was Dallas in 2011 — coached by current Indiana coach Carlisle. The Thunder and Pacers are playing for the NBA championship, the Larry O'Brien Trophy and about $5 million. Technically, $5,002,359. That's what one team will get added to its share of the league's annual playoff pool by winning the NBA Finals this season. The total pool this year, which will be divided by the 16 playoff teams, is $34,665,698. The Thunder have already secured no worse than $7,418,145 from the pool. The Pacers have secured at least $6,160,260. The bonus pool is typically split in some way among players and staff from the playoff teams. ___ AP NBA:


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Three LSU baseball players who need to step up in super regional against West Virginia
Three LSU baseball players who need to step up in super regional against West Virginia Thanks to strategic moves from head coach Jay Johnson, LSU baseball advanced to the 2025 NCAA Tournament super regionals. Johnson switched one of his best hitters out of the two-hole and plugged in Ethan Frey, the team's hottest bat as of late, for the Tigers' rubber match against Little Rock in the regional round. The result yielded four hits, four RBI, and two walks from Frey. In addition to consistent at-bats from leadoff hitter Derek Curiel and Steven Milam, LSU knocked off the Trojans and earned the right to host West Virginia in the Baton Rouge Super Regional. At the plate and on the mound, multiple Tigers continued hot streaks at the right time. But who needs to step up their game in order for LSU to clinch a berth in the College World Series? These are the three LSU players who must improve their performances in the super regional. Jared Jones Jones underperformed this far in the postseason. He went five for 20 in the Baton Rouge Regional, including an 0-5 showing with three strikeouts against Dallas Baptist. Johnson moved the slugger to sixth in the lineup after he occupied the two-hole much of the year. With a trip to Omaha on the line, Jones needs to find his way out of his first large slump of the season. West Virginia's pitching staff, also seemingly hitting a low, gave up a combined 14 runs over the last two games of the Clemson Regional. Jake Brown Often the middle man of the lineup, Brown went quietly through the regional. He batted .250 with just one extra base hit, which followed a hitless SEC Tournament. Brown's slump follows a six-game hit streak to end the regular season, and he experienced some streakiness throughout the conference slate. He must channel the confidence he felt during the South Carolina and Arkansas series in mid-May. Zac Cowan Cowan can go nowhere but up after his postseason showing so far. Over his last 6.2 innings, his ERA is 14.85. In a start Monday against Little Rock, he exited in the second inning after allowing four earned runs on three hits and two walks. For most of the regular season, Cowan was the SEC's best reliever. He may have been out of his element on Monday and experiencing command issues as of late in his first postseason with LSU. The talent is still there and must come through if the Tigers need to keep a game within reach during the super regional.