Skip to Content Facebook Feature Image

Ryan Odom takes over at Virginia, seeking to be remembered for more than that UMBC shocker

Sport

Ryan Odom takes over at Virginia, seeking to be remembered for more than that UMBC shocker
Sport

Sport

Ryan Odom takes over at Virginia, seeking to be remembered for more than that UMBC shocker

2025-03-25 07:49 Last Updated At:07:50

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) — Ryan Odom was raised on Virginia basketball. Now, he’s being tasked with raising the Cavaliers back among the national elite.

“This is the place that I fell in love with basketball,” the Cavaliers' new coach said Monday during his introductory news conference. “This is the place where I was shaped in so many ways.”

Odom spent a good portion of his childhood in Charlottesville while his father, Dave, worked as an assistant for Virginia’s Terry Holland from 1982-89. Odom’s picture graced the cover of Holland’s camp one summer and Odom even served as a ballboy for the team.

On Monday, in a homecoming party replete with fans, the pep band and cheerleaders, Virginia introduced Odom as the permanent replacement for Tony Bennett, who led the program to its only national championship, in 2019.

That title came a year after one of the most stunning upsets in college basketball history. Odom’s Maryland-Baltimore County team beat Virginia in the first round of the 2018 NCAA Tournament, becoming the first 16-seed to defeat a 1-seed.

“I feel very prepared to take on what everyone knows is a daunting task, following coach Bennett, following a legend,” Odom said. “I’ll be honest. I’m at peace with that. I’m not afraid of it. I wouldn’t be standing here if I was afraid of it.”

Ron Sanchez, Virginia’s interim coach this year after Bennett’s surprise retirement three weeks before the season, went 15-17 and was not retained.

While Odom’s connection to Charlottesville certainly helped him as a candidate, Virginia athletic director Carla Williams made it clear Odom wasn’t simply the choice because of that, or the fact that, for the past two seasons, he’s been coaching an hour's drive away at VCU in Richmond.

Williams said Odom’s proven track record as a head coach — he’s 221-127 over 11 years — combined with his character and adaptability, made him the right fit for the Cavaliers.

“We trust him with this program,” Williams said. “Which is saying a lot because so many have put so much into this program. We trust Ryan with it.”

Odom led VCU to a 28-7 mark this season, winning the Atlantic 10 championship and taking his third school to the NCAA Tournament. He had previously guided UMBC and Utah State into the March Madness field.

The Rams’ season ended Thursday with a first-round loss to BYU.

With the NCAA transfer portal opening Monday, Virginia wasted no time in reaching an agreement with the 50-year-old Durham, North Carolina, native, announcing his hiring Saturday.

Williams said Odom’s contract is still being finalized and she declined to divulge details.

Odom said much of his staff at VCU would join him at Virginia, a group that includes assistants Matt Henry and Bryce Crawford. Odom indicated that longtime Virginia strength and conditioning coach Mike Curtis would remain with the program.

Longwood coach Griff Aldrich, a longtime friend of Odom’s, stepped down from his position with the Lancers on Sunday and will be Virginia’s associate head coach.

Walking out onto the John Paul Jones Arena court, through a tunnel of blue and orange balloons to the AC/DC anthem “Thunderstruck,” Odom smiled as the crowd cheered, this new beginning overtaking some of the painful Virginia loss many fans associate Odom with.

Odom's loose, confident UMBC team overwhelmed Bennett's methodical Virginia squad in a 74-54 March Madness shocker.

It’s a topic Williams and Wally Walker — a member of the search committee that selected Odom — said didn’t come up much during Odom’s job interviews.

“It hasn’t left any of our memories,” Walker said. “That was a hell of a coaching job.”

Odom, wisely, did not mention it in his introductory remarks.

Instead, he talked at length about his deep connection to the Virginia program.

“I may have babysat him when I was at Virginia,” Indiana Pacers coach Rick Carlisle, who played at Virginia, said Monday, adding: “It’s a great hire. You look at what he’s done everywhere he’s been, success has followed. And I don’t see this being any different.”

Jim Larrañaga, who retired this past season after 41 seasons as a college head coach, was an assistant on the Virginia staff under Holland. He shared an office with Dave Odom.

“He was always around the gym,” said Larrañaga, whose son Jay became childhood friends with Odom.

Larrañaga said his memories of the young Odom — who would ride his bicycle to University Hall when elementary school let out to attend practices — aren’t as vivid as his impressions of Odom as a coach in recent years.

In fact, a 77-70 loss to Odom’s VCU squad was one of the 12 games Larrañaga coached this season for Miami before retiring.

“One of my last losses was against VCU,” Larrañaga said. “They beat us. You could tell they had a good team and they’d be very competitive in the A-10.”

Odom, who also served as the interim coach at Charlotte for 19 games in 2015 and spent a year at Division II Lenoir-Rhyne in 2015-16, has won over 20 games in six of his nine full seasons as a Division I coach.

He’ll be hard pressed to change the fact that most of the nation knows him as the coach who historically upset Virginia.

Of course, as Bennett showed, winning a national championship with the Cavaliers can go a long way toward changing how a coach is perceived.

AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball. Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here.

Virginia Commonwealth head coach Ryan Odom reacts during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in the championship of the Atlantic 10 tournament against George Mason, Sunday, March 16, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

Virginia Commonwealth head coach Ryan Odom reacts during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in the championship of the Atlantic 10 tournament against George Mason, Sunday, March 16, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

Next Article

The Latest: Trump says he’s not backing down on tariffs

2025-04-07 21:36 Last Updated At:21:41

President Donald Trump remained defiant Monday as global markets continued plunging after his tariff announcement last week.

Trump has insisted his tariffs are necessary to rebalance global trade and rebuild domestic manufacturing. He's singled out China as “the biggest abuser of them all” and criticized Beijing for increasing its own tariffs in retaliation.

Here's the latest:

The cases are likely headed to a Supreme Court showdown on the president’s power over independent agencies.

A divided U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued the ruling in the lawsuits separately brought by Merit Systems Protection Board member Cathy Harris and National Labor Relations Board member Gwynne Wilcox.

The ruling reverses, at least for now, a judgement from a three-judge panel from the same appellate court.

▶ Read more about Trump and the board members

The dispute over tariffs has caused some fracturing within Trump’s political coalition.

Hedge fund manager Bill Ackman said the president was “launching a global economic war against the whole world at once” and urged him to “call a time out.”

“We are heading for a self-induced, economic nuclear winter,” he wrote on X on Sunday.

Top White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett told Fox News on Monday morning that Ackman should “ease off the rhetoric a little bit.”

Hassett said critics were exaggerating the impact of trade disputes and talk of an “economic nuclear winter” was “completely irresponsible rhetoric.”

The president showed no interest in changing course despite turmoil in global markets.

He said other countries had been “taking advantage of the Good OL’ USA” on international trade.

“Our past ‘leaders’ are to blame for allowing this, and so much else, to happen to our Country,” he wrote on Truth Social. “MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”

Trump criticized China for increasing its own tariffs and “not acknowledging my warning for abusing countries not to retaliate.”

On a day when stock markets around the world dropped precipitously, Alabama Republican Party Chairman John Wahl led a celebration of the president whose global tariffs sparked the sell-off.

With no mention of the Wall Street roller coaster and global economic uncertainty, Wahl declared his state GOP’s “Trump Victory Dinner” — and the broader national moment — a triumph. And for anyone who rejects Trump, his agenda and the “America First” army that backs it all, Wahl had an offer: “The Alabama Republican Party will buy them a plane ticket to any country in the world they want to go to.”

Wahl’s audience — an assembly of lobbyists and donors, state lawmakers, local party officials and grassroots activists — laughed, applauded and sometimes roared throughout last week’s gala in downtown Birmingham.

Yet beyond the cheerleading, there were signs of a more cautious optimism and some worried whispers over Trump’s sweeping tariffs, the particulars of his deportation policy and the aggressive slashing by his Department of Government Efficiency.

▶ Read more about Trump’s support in Alabama

This morning, at 11 a.m., World Series Champions, the Los Angeles Dodgers, will visit the White House and meet the president. Later, at 1 p.m., Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will visit the White House and meet with Trump. At 2 p.m., Netanyahu and Trump will participate in a Bilateral Meeting in the Oval Office. At 2:30 p.m., they will hold a joint news conference.

Trump said Sunday that he won’t back down on his sweeping tariffs on imports from most of the world unless countries even out their trade with the U.S.

Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One, Trump said he didn’t want global markets to fall, but also that he wasn’t concerned about the massive sell-off either, adding, “sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something.”

His comments came as global financial markets appeared on track to continue sharp declines once trading resumes Monday, and after Trump’s aides sought to soothe market concerns by saying more than 50 nations had reached out about launching negotiations to lift the tariffs.

The higher rates are set to be collected beginning Wednesday. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said unfair trade practices are not “the kind of thing you can negotiate away in days or weeks.” The United States, he said, must see “what the countries offer and whether it’s believable.”

▶ Read more about the global impact of Trump’s tariffs

Pedestrian are reflected on a brokerage house's window as an electronic board displays shares trading index, in Beijing, Monday, April 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

Pedestrian are reflected on a brokerage house's window as an electronic board displays shares trading index, in Beijing, Monday, April 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

Shipping containers are stored at Bensenville intermodal terminal in Franklin Park, Ill., Sunday, April 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Shipping containers are stored at Bensenville intermodal terminal in Franklin Park, Ill., Sunday, April 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

President Donald Trump arrives at the White House on Marine One, Sunday, April 6, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

President Donald Trump arrives at the White House on Marine One, Sunday, April 6, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Recommended Articles
Hot · Posts