Two decades later, Juwan Howard and Leonard Hamilton come full circle

NCAA Basketball: NCAA Tournament-Texas Southern at Michigan
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
  

Juwan Howard was a star forward for the Washington Wizards during the 2000-01 NBA season, averaging 18.2 points and seven rebounds before he was traded to the Dallas Mavericks as part of an eight-player deal.

It was one of the most productive seasons of Howard’s NBA playing days, and it came under the tutelage of Wizards’ coach Leonard Hamilton.

Now, two decades later, Howard has his alma mater in the Sweet 16 as a No. 1 seed for the first time since his own college career. And the only thing standing between the Michigan basketball team and an Elite Eight berth is Hamilton’s Florida State Seminoles. Now 72 years old, Hamilton has built a perennial contender at Florida State.

“Our relationship runs deep,” Howard said during a Zoom call with reporters Thursday. “It goes back to the time when I played for coach Hamilton when I was playing for the Washington Wizards. The respect that I have for a coach as a man as a father and also as a coach, obviously, during his time coaching University of Miami as well as Florida State. He’s had amazing success, great knowledge for the game of basketball, people and his resume speaks for himself.”

After Howard was initially hired last May, Hamilton was one of the first people he visited. Howard used the opportunity to pick his mentor’s brain.

At the time, Howard had never coached a college basketball game. Hamilton, on the other hand, was a veteran NCAA coach, having established successful programs at Oklahoma State, Miami and Florida State.

“Our conversations were very good,” Howard said. “I learned a lot. I will continue to use coach Hamilton as a mentor, a father figure, an example of what great successful coaches look like on this collegiate level.”

Beyond Hamilton, there’s another element of familiarity with the Seminoles for Howard. Florida State star freshman Scottie Barnes grew up in the Sunshine State, where he crossed paths with Howard’s two youngest sons, Jace and Jett, on the AAU circuit. Eventually, the three of them became high school teammates and won a Florida state title together.

“Scottie and I have known each other for a very long time, growing up in the Florida area,” Howard said. “… Scottie has a great relationship with me and my wife. We love Scottie, we of course admire his success thus far at FSU. I’m so proud of him.”

Sunday’s Sweet 16 matchup is set for 5 p.m. at Bankers Life Fieldhouse. While this season is Howard’s NCAA Tournament debut as a coach, Hamilton is no stranger to this stage of the college basketball season.

Whether or not Howard, who was named National Coach of the Year last week, can outduel one of his role models remains to be seen. Either way, Sunday’s matchup is only an added layer to their budding mentorship.

“As far as what I learned from coach Hamilton, I learned a lot,” Howard said. “I’m going to continue to keep learning because I have that growth mindset. He’s a great example. John Thompson, coach Leonard Hamilton, coach John Chaney and many others, those coaches are paving the way for a guy like myself and young other coaches that are coming in. … Coach Hamilton will always be that friend, father figure that I will always lean on.”

Florida State and Michigan are two of the most dependable names in men’s college basketball these days. Though both are traditional football powerhouses, each has seen far more recent success on the hardwood. Florida State is coming off of consecutive top-two conference finishes and has reached the second weekend of the Big Dance in three of the past four tournaments, while Michigan has made two national title games in the past decade and 10 of the past 13 tournaments overall. The two teams even met in the NCAA Tournament’s regional final in 2018, with the Wolverines prevailing, 58-54, en route to the second of those title games. 


  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn

The two programs also are led by Black coaches, which is more the exception than the rule: Leonard Hamilton of Florida State, in his 19th year in Tallahassee, and Michigan’s Juwan Howard, in his second year in Ann Arbor three decades after his playing career there. According to The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, 22.7 percent of the coaches in men’s Division I basketball in the 2019-20 season were Black, while 53.2 percent of the players were. Out of the 77 coaches to have led a team this season at the Power Six level,1 just 13 are Black.

In a 2018 interview with William C. Rhoden of The Undefeated, Hamilton expressed disappointment and bewilderment in the continued underrepresentation of Black coaches in college basketball. “It has been extremely confusing at times, discouraging at times, to come up with the right answer,” Hamilton said. “It’s a mystery to me why progress has been so slow. It’s a mystery why the doors have not been opened wider.”

None of the blue bloods of college basketball — Kansas, Kentucky, North Carolina or Duke — is led by a Black coach, and just one (Kentucky under Tubby Smith) has ever employed a Black coach. Out of the 25 winningest programs in Division I history, just two (St. John’s and Temple) are currently led by Black coaches. The entire Pac-12 has zero Black head basketball coaches.

Black head coaches in Power Six men’s basketball during the 2020-21 season by career wins, and their first year as a head coach

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn

Coach School Conference 1st year Record
Leonard Hamilton Florida State ACC 1986 600-437
Mike Anderson St. John’s (N.Y.) Big East 2002 402-226
Ed Cooley Providence Big East 2006 286-204
Shaka Smart* Texas Big 12 2009 272-142
Cuonzo Martin Missouri SEC 2008 252-177
Jeff Capel Pitt ACC 2002 215-158
Dave Leitao** DePaul Big East 1994 212-241
Kevin Keatts NC State ACC 2014 151-74
LaVall Jordan Butler Big East 2016 80-79
Mike Boynton Jr. Oklahoma State Big 12 2017 72-58
Patrick Ewing Georgetown Big East 2017 62-59
Juwan Howard Michigan Big Ten 2019 41-16
Jerry Stackhouse Vanderbilt SEC 2019 20-37

*Shaka Smart is leaving Texas to coach Marquette after the 2020-21 season.

**Dave Leitao was fired from DePaul on March 15.

Power Six conferences are the ACC, Big 12, Big East, Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC.

Prominent figures within the sport have long decried the relative paucity of Black coaches representing, mentoring and leading Division I basketball players, the majority of whom are Black. Some, like Kentucky’s John Calipari, have blamed a truncated coaching pipeline, arguing the NCAA’s elimination of graduate assistant coaching spots in the early 1990s made it more difficult for Black coaches to ascend the ranks. Others, like Georgetown’s Patrick Ewing and Michigan State’s Tom Izzo, point to a lack of representation among athletic directors; according to The Undefeated, just 12 athletic directors at Power Five conferences at the start of 2018 were Black. 

“People hire people that look like them,” Ewing said in 2020. “It’s not necessarily racist. Most of the time you hire a person you can relate to.”

When those obstacles are overcome, the presence and success of Black coaches at high-major programs likely paves the way for more Black coaches in Division I basketball. As we discussed in our piece on his legacy, the late John Thompson Jr.’s success at Georgetown opened the doors for more Black coaches in the ranks of college basketball. Near the start of Thompson’s tenure, there were just seven Black head coaches at the Division I level who coached outside of historically Black colleges or universities. By the early 1990s, after the Thompson-led Hoyas had reached three Final Fours, winning one championship, that number had grown nearly fivefold, to 34. Among the 10 winningest Black coaches in Division I history, eight started their careers a decade after Thompson started at Georgetown.

One of those new coaches was Hamilton, whose path to Florida State and 600 wins — recently surpassing “Big John” — was anything but guaranteed. He almost left basketball in 1974 after the president of Austin Peay, where Hamilton was an assistant coach, told Hamilton that he would not be considered for the head coaching position because he was Black. Hamilton quit his job and worked briefly as a salesman before the former coach at Austin Peay arranged an interview for him at Kentucky, which had integrated only five years earlier. Hamilton spent 12 seasons as an assistant for the Wildcats before starting his head coaching career in 1986 at Oklahoma State. He then coached 10 seasons at the University of Miami and one season for the NBA’s Washington Wizards before landing at Florida State in 2002. 

Howard’s journey back to Michigan, in contrast, was far less circuitous. After completing a 19-year NBA career in which he played for eight teams (including Hamilton’s Wizards), the former All-Star stayed on as a member of the Miami Heat, transitioning from player to assistant coach. When his alma mater came knocking after John Beilein left to coach the NBA’s Cleveland Cavaliers, the former Fab 5 star couldn’t say no. Still, Howard’s hiring generated criticism from a number of observers, some of whom pointed to his lack of experience as a head coach as a liability for the program.

But the records of the two coaches speak for themselves. Hamilton has risen to the top of a conference with three Hall of Famers in Mike Krzyzewski, Roy Williams and Jim Boeheim, and himself is on the ballot for the Hall’s 2021 class. Howard is just starting a career in arguably the nation’s most competitive conference and is one of just four coaches to earn a No. 1 seed in his first NCAA Tournament appearance. 

At a time where the conversation around progressive hiring in sports has perhaps never been louder, the true test of schools’ commitments to hiring Black coaches will lie in soon-to-be vacancies at elite programs. Krzyzewski, Williams and Boeheim are all in their 70s, and it’s conceivable that each coach’s successor could come from his ranks of assistant coaches. Two of the three associate or assistant head coaches on each of the staffs at Duke, North Carolina and Syracuse are Black, suggesting that the next in line at each of these powerhouses could look different than each program’s historical coaching lineage. 

But if recent coaching searches at other historically elite programs are any indication, there may be reason to be skeptical of such change. Each of these elite schools will no doubt feel pressure to score a big name with a proven track record — someone who, just by the opportunities already afforded them, is more likely to be white than Black. It may be hard to envision that any one of them would skirt outside the safe, well-traveled path of hiring “qualified,” white basketball coaches. Two Black coaches leading their highly ranked squads in the Sweet 16 may do little to change that. 

“As a Black skin, some folks think that you’re not qualified enough,” Howard told the Michigan Daily in October. “I think that’s the ignorance that we have to ignore and continue to keep driving and doing whatever to be the best person of ourselves, no matter what people may say or think.”

Juwan Howard
Juwan Howard Michigan (cropped).jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn

Howard as head coach of Michigan in 2020
Michigan Wolverines
Position Head coach
League Big Ten Conference
Personal information
Born February 7, 1973 (age 48)
Chicago, Illinois
Nationality American
Listed height 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)
Listed weight 250 lb (113 kg)
Career information
High school Chicago Vocational
(Chicago, Illinois)
College Michigan (1991–1994)
NBA draft 1994 / Round: 1 / Pick: 5th overall
Selected by the Washington Bullets
Playing career 1994–2013
Position Power forward
Number 5, 7, 55, 6
Coaching career 2013–present
Career history
As player:
19942001 Washington Bullets / Wizards
20012002 Dallas Mavericks
20022003 Denver Nuggets
2003–2004 Orlando Magic
20042007 Houston Rockets
2007–2008 Dallas Mavericks
2008 Denver Nuggets
2008–2009 Charlotte Bobcats
2009–2010 Portland Trail Blazers
20102013 Miami Heat
As coach:
20132019 Miami Heat (assistant)
2019–present Michigan
Career highlights and awards
As player:

As coach:

Career statistics
Points 16,159 (13.4 ppg)
Rebounds 7,428 (6.1 rpg)
Assists 2,663 (2.2 apg)
Stats 
Edit this at Wikidata
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
at NBA.com
Stats 
Edit this at Wikidata
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
at Basketball-Reference.com

 

Leonard Hamilton
Leonard Hamilton 2013.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn

Hamilton in 2013
Current position
Title Head coach
Team Florida State
Conference ACC
Record 396–225 (.638)
Biographical details
Born August 4, 1948 (age 72)
Gastonia, North Carolina
Playing career
1966–1968 Gaston CC
1969–1971 UT Martin
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1971–1974 Austin Peay (assistant)
1974–1986 Kentucky (assistant)
1986–1990 Oklahoma State
1990–2000 Miami (FL)
2000–2001 Washington Wizards
2002–present Florida State
Head coaching record
Overall 596–435 (.578) (college)
19–63 (.232) (NBA)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Big East regular season (2000)
ACC Tournament (2012)
ACC regular season (2020)
Awards
UPI National Coach of the Year (1995)
Big East Coach of the Year (1995, 1999)
ACC Coach of the Year (2009, 2012, 2020)