Keyword
M COLLEGE BB
NCAA Tournament
Scores
Schedules
Rankings
Standings
Statistics
Transactions
Teams
Players
Recruiting
Message Board
CONFERENCES


SHOP@ESPN.COM
TeamStore
ESPN Auctions
SPORT SECTIONS
Saturday, September 28
Updated: September 29, 8:57 AM ET
 
Huggins has surgery following heart attack

ESPN.com news services

BEAVER, Pa. -- Cincinnati basketball coach Bob Huggins had a heart attack Saturday at Pittsburgh International Airport during a recruiting trip, a hospital spokesman said.

Bob Huggins
Bob Huggins had tests on his heart four years ago as a precaution, but there's a history of heart trouble in his family.
The 49-year-old Huggins was in serious but stable condition at the Medical Center in Beaver, about 24 miles northwest of Pittsburgh, on Saturday. A nurse in the critical care unit said Sunday morning that Huggins' condition remained serious but stable.

Huggins had chest pains at the airport, about 11 miles west of Pittsburgh, and was taken to a nearby hospital before he was transferred to the Medical Center, where he had surgery to implant a stent Saturday morning, hospital spokesman Scott Monit said. The tiny, metal mesh device is designed to keep Huggins' once-clogged artery open.

ESPN.com has learned that a family member at the hospital told Charlotte coach Bobby Lutz, who had called to check on his rival coach, that Huggins could be moved to Cincinnati once he becomes stable and more procedures on two other arteries could be done. But the other two arteries are not considered as critical at this juncture.

Huggins will remain in the hospital at least two days. Monit said future questions on Huggins' health were to be directed to University of Cincinnati spokesman Tom Hathaway.

Huggins was at the airport for a flight to Milwaukee for a coaching clinic scheduled to include Maryland's Gary Williams and Oklahoma State's Eddie Sutton.

Monit didn't know what player Huggins was recruiting in the Pittsburgh area.

Huggins is known almost as much for his sideline temper as for turning Cincinnati into a perennial winner. He rages at his players' mistakes and at referees' calls that go against him.

He also has worried about having a heart attack. His father, a high school coach in northern Ohio, had one before the age of 40. Before Cincinnati's annual postseason banquet in 1998, Huggins had tests on his heart as a precaution.

Cincinnati football coach Rick Minter, in Philadelphia for a game against Temple, was stunned when he received the news.

"He's what put the University of Cincinnati back on the map in the early '90s,'' Minter said. "We have the same work habits, same lifestyle. This could easily be me.''

The hard-driving Huggins was the third-youngest coach to get 500 wins in Division I. His career record is 500-172, including a 332-100 record in 13 seasons at Cincinnati.

The Bearcats have been ranked No. 1 several times during his tenure, but have made the Final Four just once. Cincinnati went 31-4 last season, losing to UCLA 105-101 in double overtime in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

In March, Huggins turned down a chance to coach West Virginia, his alma mater.

He came to Cincinnati before the 1989-90 season from Akron and immediately turned around a lagging program. He also became known for his antics during games -- throwing off his jacket, jumping while screaming at officials, berating players on the bench.

He became nationally prominent after leading the Bearcats to the 1992 Final Four by using a tenacious full-court press. He has turned down offers from two NBA teams -- the Miami Heat and Los Angeles Clippers -- and overtures from other universities to stay in Cincinnati.

The basketball program also has been characterized by a poor graduation rate and criminal charges against players during Huggins' tenure. The NCAA imposed wide-ranging penalties on the program in 1998 for lack of institutional control.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.





 ESPN Tools
Email story
 
Most sent
 
Print story
 
Daily email