Longtime Miami basketball coach Jim Larrañaga will reportedly step down

CORAL GABLES, FL - DECEMBER 03: Miami head coach Jim Larrañaga (Larranaga) watches his players during the first half as the Miami Hurricanes faced the Arkansas Razorbacks on December 3, 2024 at the Watsco Center in Coral Gables, Florida. (Photo by Samuel Lewis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Jim Larrañaga is in his 14th season in Miami. (Photo by Samuel Lewis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Miami men’s basketball coach Jim Larrañaga’s time with the Hurricanes appears to be coming to an end.

According to the Miami Herald, Larrañaga, 75, is expected to step down and an announcement could come as early as Thursday afternoon. According to ESPN interim coach will be Bill Courtneya longtime assistant and former head coach at Cornell.

The Hurricanes are 4-8 so far this season after going 15-17 in the 2023-24 season.

The slump comes after Miami made a surprise run to the Final Four in 2023. The Hurricanes went 29-8 and won the Midwest Region as the No. 5 seed with wins over no. 1 seed Houston and no. 2 seed Texas. Miami fell to eventual national champion UConn in the Final Four. The 72-59 loss was the closest game UConn played in the entire NCAA Tournament that season.

Miami has looked far from a Final Four team in the early stages of the 2024-25 season. The Hurricanes started the season 3-0 before losing seven straight games. Those defeats included losses to Drake, VCU and Charleston Southern along with losses to power conference teams such as Arkansas, Clemson and No. 1 Tennessee. The Hurricanes snapped the streak with a 94-75 win over Presbyterian, but entered their Christmas break with a 78-74 overtime loss to Mount St. Mary’s on December 21st.

Miami blew a 10-point second-half lead to the Mountaineers before outscoring 12-8 in overtime.

The 2023 Final Four appearance was the first in school history for the Hurricanes and came one season after Miami reached the Elite Eight as a No. 10 seed after beating no. 2 Auburn in the second round of the tournament.

The longtime coach has been in Miami for 14 seasons. He came to the Hurricanes from George Mason. He spent 14 seasons at George Mason after 11 seasons at Bowling Green.

Larrañaga was at the helm at George Mason when the Patriots made one of the most improbable Final Four runs in modern college basketball history in 2006. George Mason knocked off three top-seven seeds before taking down the No. 1 Connecticut in the Elite Eight. The Patriots lost 73–58 to eventual national champion Florida in the national semifinals.

George Mason made the NCAA Tournament five times during Larrañaga’s time with the team. Miami has also made the NCAA Tournament five times during his tenure.

Overall, Larrañaga’s teams have a 716-483 record since his head coaching career began in the 1986-87 season. He has posted a winning record at all three schools, and both George Mason and Miami have won more than 60% of their games with him in charge.

When he officially steps down, Larrañaga will be the second ACC coach to leave his job before the calendar turns to 2025. Virginia’s Tony Bennett stepped down in October, saying he was “no longer the best coach to lead this program in this current environment.” Bennett’s Cavaliers won the 2019 national title a year after losing to the No. 1 seed in the first round of the tournament.