BYU Cougars men's basketball


The BYU Cougars men's basketball team represents Brigham Young University in NCAA Division I basketball play. It currently competes in the Big 12 Conference. Established in 1902, the team has won 27 conference championships, 3 conference tournament championships and 2 NIT Tournaments, and competed in 32 NCAA tournaments. The Cougars most recently appeared at the NCAA tournament in 2025. BYU appeared in the Elite 8 of the NCAA tournament in 1950, 1951, and 1981, its deepest runs at the tournament in program history. BYU's basketball program has won 1,939 games in its 108-year history, ranking 12th in [List of teams with the most victories in NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship|NCAA Division I men's college basketball|all-time victories] among all Division I programs.
From 1999 to 2011, the team competed in the Mountain West Conference, followed by 12 seasons in the West Coast Conference. On September 10, 2021, the Big 12 Conference unanimously accepted BYU's application for membership, and BYU officially joined the conference for the 2023–24 season. The team is coached by Kevin Young.

History

BYU fielded its first basketball team in 1903. In 1906, the Cougars played their first game against Utah State University. In 1909, the team first played against the University of Utah. These two rivalries continue to this day. The Cougars won the first of their 27 conference championships in 1922 as a member of the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference led by star point guard River Jeffcoat.
The Cougars made the first of their 29 NCAA tournament appearances in 1950 under head coach Stan Watts. That Cougars came within one point of reaching the national semifinals. BYU's 1951 team was even more successful, winning 28 games and once again qualifying for the NCAA tournament. In addition, the 1951 team won the first of two NIT championships for the school. The Cougars defeated AP No. 9 St. John's, AP #10 St. Louis and AP #13 Dayton to win the title. Notable players on that team include: Mel Hutchins, who was taken #2 in the 1951 NBA draft, was named the 1951–52 NBA co-rookie of the year and became a 5-time NBA All-Star with the Pistons and the Knicks; Roland Minson, who was drafted #16 overall in the 1951 NBA draft; and Loren C. Dunn, a future general authority in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The Cougars would go on to make five more appearances in the NCAA tournament under Watts, and win their second NIT championship in 1966, although by that time the overall prestige of the NIT had fallen considerably. BYU has the most NCAA appearances of any men's team not to make the Final Four, having made 32 NCAA tournaments. BYU, alongside Xavier, Saint Joseph's, Boston College, Arizona State, and Davidson are each tied for second most in Elite Eight appearances without a Final Four with three.
Under Watts, BYU also became the first U.S. college basketball program to include an international player on its roster, as Finland native Timo Lampen debuted in the 1958–59 season. Later, BYU's Krešimir Ćosić, born in Yugoslavia, became the first international player to be named an All-American. His jersey was retired in the Marriott Center in March 2006 in the last home game of the season against the New Mexico Lobos. Watts retired as the winningest coach in BYU history.
After Watts' retirement following the 1972 season, the program experienced five consecutive losing seasons from 1974 through 1978 before returning to the NCAA tournament in 1979 behind Danny Ainge and coach Frank Arnold. The Cougars reached the Elite Eight, one game short of the Final Four, in 1981, Ainge's senior season. That season, Ainge won the Wooden Award as the nation's most outstanding player.
Arnold left following the 1983 season and was replaced by LaDell Andersen, who had several successful seasons in the 1980s, including the 1987–88 season when the Cougars rose as high as #3 in the national rankings on their way to a 26–6 season. Andersen then resigned following a 14–15 season in 1989. He was replaced by Roger Reid, who guided the Cougars to 20-win seasons in each of his first six years and five NCAA tournament appearances.
Reid was fired in the middle of the 1996–97 season after a 1–6 start. Part of his firing had to do with a private comment Reid made to Chris Burgess, then considered the top high school player in the nation and a Latter-day Saint whose father had attended BYU; Reid suggested that Burgess had let down the entire church by choosing to attend Duke rather than BYU. Assistant coach Tony Ingle coached the team on an interim basis for the rest of the season and did not win a game; the Cougars' 1–25 record was the first time the school failed to reach 5 wins in a season.
Following the season, Steve Cleveland was hired as the new head coach and returned the Cougars to prominence. In 2001, the Cougars won the MWC regular season and tournament championships, making their first NCAA tournament appearance since 1995. BYU had success under Cleveland, winning multiple conference championships and the conference tournament, reaching the NCAA tournament three times. They also had two draft picks: Travis Hansen, drafted by the Atlanta Hawks, and Rafael Araujo, drafted by the Toronto Raptors. After the 2004–05 season, Cleveland resigned to become the head coach at Fresno State; he was replaced by Dave Rose.
Dave Rose, co-captain of the University of Houston's 1983 "Phi Slama Jama" college basketball team, began the first of six straight 20-win seasons in 2005–06. Rose and assistant Dave Rice continued BYU's successful recruiting with the addition of All-American Jimmer Fredette in 2007 and DeMarcus Harrison in 2011. In June 2009, he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and returned to coaching later that year. In 2010, Rose coached BYU to their first NCAA tournament victory in 17 years in a double-overtime win against the University of Florida. The following year, BYU made further inroads as a #3 seed when they advanced to the Sweet 16. On March 13, 2012, BYU set a record for the largest comeback in an NCAA tournament game, as they were down by 25 points at one point in their first game of the 2012 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament and came back to beat the Iona Gaels 78–72.
Following Tyler Haws' departure for an overseas professional career, Kyle Collinsworth became the Cougars' recognized leader, setting the NCAA record for career triple doubles and earning WCC Player of the Year honors as a senior. Since Collinsworth's departure, the Cougars have struggled, especially in the postseason. The program was dealt an additional blow when the NCAA announced penalties against the Cougars due to an alleged benefits scandal surrounding shooting guard Nick Emery. As part of those sanctions, BYU was ordered to vacate all victories where Nick Emery played over two seasons. The BYU athletics department has appealed the decision. An official BYU athletics department statement read in part, “The vacation-of-records penalty is extremely harsh and unprecedented given the details of the case. For more than two decades, the NCAA has not required an institution to vacate games in similar cases where the COI found there was no institutional knowledge of or involvement in the violation by either the coaching staff or other university personnel. In fact, this sanction includes the most severe vacation-of-record penalty ever imposed in the history of NCAA Division I basketball for infractions that included no institutional knowledge or involvement. In addition, in the case most similar to this situation, appropriate penalties were imposed, but no wins were vacated. BYU believes the vacating of its game record penalty is unfair and not consistent with recent NCAA precedent.”
On March 26, 2019, after thirteen seasons as head coach at BYU, Dave Rose announced his retirement. On April 10, 2019, BYU athletics director Tom Holmoe announced that Mark Pope, a former assistant at BYU under Rose and head coach of the Utah Valley University men's basketball team, had been hired as Rose's replacement.
On July 23, 2019, Nick Emery announced that he was retiring from college basketball. He cited unspecified challenges in his career that led to the decision.
Pope led a turnaround for the program in his first two seasons, with his inaugural season led by a trio of seniors in Yoeli Childs, T.J. Haws, and Jake Toolson. The team finished that season 24–8 and was projected to be a lock for the NCAA tournament as a single-digit seed before all postseason play was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2020–21 season was projected to be a rebuilding year due to the loss of Childs, Haws, and Toolson to graduation, but Pope revamped the team in the offseason. Returning senior guard Alex Barcello was joined by graduate transfers Brandon Averette and Matt Haarms. The 2020–21 team finished the regular season 20–6 and made the NCAA tournament as a No. 6 seed, the program's first appearance in the tournament since the 2014–15 season.
After lackluster 2021-22 and 2022-23 seasons, BYU was picked to finish 13th of 14 teams in the Big 12 prior to the 2023-24 season, their first competing in the conference. However, the Cougars posted a 10-8 conference record and went 22-9 during the regular season to finish fifth in the final conference standings. They defeated UCF in the second round of the Big 12 Conference tournament before losing to Texas Tech in the quarterfinals. They were awarded a 6-seed in the NCAA Tournament, where they lost to [2023–24 2023–24 Duquesne Dukes men's basketball team|Duquesne Dukes men's basketball team|Duquesne] in the first round.
On April 12, 2024, it was announced that Mark Pope had been hired as head coach at Kentucky. On April 16, BYU announced the hiring of Kevin Young, associate head coach of the Phoenix Suns, to serve as the team's new head coach. Young proceeded to sign what were then four of the nine highest-rated recruits in BYU history —Egor Demin, Kanon Catchings, Brody Kozlowski, and Elijah Crawford. Demin, who played for Real Madrid's U18 squad and was eligible to play US college basketball under new NCAA rules, was given a five-star rating by 247Sports, becoming the highest-rated recruit and only five-star recruit in program history. These signings led many to consider BYU's 2024 recruiting class the best in program history to that point.
BYU finished the 2024–25 regular season with a 23–8 record, 14–6 in Big 12 play. After starting conference play 2-4, the Cougars won 12 of their final 14 regular season games, including road wins over ranked [2024–25 2024–25 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team|Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team|Arizona] and [2024–25 2024–25 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team|Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team|Iowa State] teams and a 91–57 home win over #23 [2024–25 2024–25 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team|Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team|Kansas]. BYU finished tied for third in the final Big 12 standings, earning a double bye in the conference tournament. The Cougars defeated Iowa State in the quarterfinals before losing to Houston in the semifinals. Selected as a 6-seed for the NCAA Tournament, the Cougars defeated 11-seed [2024–25 2024–25 VCU Rams men's basketball team|VCU Rams men's basketball team|VCU] and 3-seed [2024–25 2024–25 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team|Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team|Wisconsin] to advance to just the sixth Sweet Sixteen appearance in program history and first since 2011, before losing to 2-seed [2024–25 2024–25 Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team|Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team|Alabama].
On December 10, 2024, AJ Dybantsa, ESPN's #1 overall recruit in the 2025 class and widely anticipated to be the first overall pick of the 2026 NBA Draft, announced his commitment to BYU on ESPN's First Take with Stephen A. Smith. Dybantsa immediately became the highest-rated recruit in BYU history, as well as the first ESPN 5-star recruit ever to sign with the program. Dybantsa, who played his senior year of prep basketball at Utah Prep in Hurricane, Utah, chose BYU over finalists North Carolina, Alabama, and Kansas.

Coaches

W.A. Colton1902–190516–11
C.T. Teetzel1905–190822–6
Fred Bennion1908–191016–6
Henry Rose1910–19118–0
E.L. Roberts1911–1920, 1925–192787–49
Alvin Twitchell1920–192550–20
G. Ott Romney1927–1935139–71
Edwin R. Kimball1935–1936, 1938–194159–38
Fred "Buck" Dixon1936–193825–23
Floyd Millet1941–1949104–77
Stan Watts1949–1972371–254
Glenn Potter1972–197542–36
Frank Arnold1975–1983137–94
LaDell Andersen1983–1989114–71
Roger Reid1989–1996152–77
Tony Ingle 1996–19970–19
Steve Cleveland1997–2005138–108
Dave Rose2005–2019301–131
Mark Pope2019–2024110–52
Kevin Young2024–present26–10

Season-by-season results

'''Under Kevin Young:'''

Postseason

NCAA tournament

BYU has made the NCAA tournament 32 times, with the Cougars having a record of 16–35.
1950Elite Eight
West Regional Third Place
Baylor
UCLA
L 55–56
W 83–62
1951First Round
Elite Eight
West Regional Third Place
San Jose State
Kansas State
Washington
W 68–61
L 54–64
L 67–80
1957Sweet Sixteen
West Regional Third Place
California
Idaho State
L 59–86
W 65–54
1965Sweet Sixteen
West Regional Third Place
UCLA
Oklahoma City
L 76–100
L 102–112
1969QuarterfinalsNew Mexico StateL 62–74
1971Quarterfinals
Sweet Sixteen
West Regional Third Place
Utah State
UCLA
Pacific
W 91–82
L 73–91
L 81–84
1972QuarterfinalsLong Beach StateL 90–95 OT
1979#5Second Round#4 San FranciscoL 63–86
1980#3Second Round#6 ClemsonL 66–71
1981#6First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#11 Princeton
  1. 3 UCLA
  2. 2 Notre Dame
  3. 1 Virginia
W 60–51W 78–55
W 51–50
L 60–74
1984#8First Round
Second Round
#9 UAB
  1. 1 Kentucky
W 84–68L 68–93
1987#10First Round#7 New OrleansL 79–83
1988#4First Round
Second Round
#13 Charlotte
  1. 5 Louisville
W 98–92 OTL 76–97
1990#12First Round#5 ClemsonL 47–49
1991#10First Round
Second Round
#7 Virginia
  1. 2 Arizona
W 61–48L 61–76
1992#10First Round#7 LSUL 83–94
1993#7First Round
Second Round
#10 SMU
  1. 2 Kansas
W 80–71L 76–90
1995#8First Round#9 TulaneL 70–76
2001#12First Round#5 CincinnatiL 59–84
2003#12First Round#5 ConnecticutL 53–58
2004#12First Round#5 SyracuseL 75–80
2007#8First Round#9 XavierL 77–79
2008#8First Round#9 Texas A&ML 62–67
2009#9First Round#8 Texas A&ML 66–79
2010#7First Round
Second Round
#10 Florida
  1. 2 Kansas State
W 99–92 2OTL 72–84
2011#3First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#14 Wofford
  1. 11 Gonzaga
  2. 2 Florida
W 74–66W 89–67
L 74–83 OT
2012#14First Four
First Round
#14 Iona
  1. 3 Marquette
W 78–72L 68–88
2014#10Round of 64#7 OregonL 68–87
2015#11First Four#11 Ole MissL 90–94
2021#6First Round#11 UCLAL 62–73
2024#6First Round#11 DuquesneL 67–71
2025#6First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#11 VCU
  1. 3 Wisconsin
  2. 2 Alabama
W 80–71W 91–89
L 88–113

NIT

BYU has made the National Invitation Tournament fifteen times, going 19–13. The Cougars were champions in 1951 and 1966.
1951Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Saint Louis
Seton Hall
Dayton
W 75–68
W 69–59
W 62–43
1953First RoundNiagaraL 76–82
1954First RoundSaint FrancisL 68–81
1966Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Temple
Army
NYU
W 90–78
W 66–60
W 97–84
1982First RoundWashingtonL 63–66
1986First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
SMU
UC Irvine
Ohio State
W 67–63
W 93–80
L 68–79
1994First Round
Second Round
Arizona State
Fresno State
W 74–67
L 66–68
2000First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Bowling Green
Southern Illinois
Notre Dame
W 81–54
W 82–57
L 52–64
2002First Round
Second Round
UC Irvine
Memphis
W 78–55
L 69–80
2006First RoundHoustonL 67–77
2013First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Washington
Mercer
Southern Miss
Baylor
W 90–79
W 90–71
W 79–62
L 70–76
2016First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
UAB
Virginia Tech
Creighton
Valparaiso
W 97–79
W 80–77
W 88–82
L 70–72
2017First RoundUT ArlingtonL 89–105
2018First RoundStanfordL 83–86
2022First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Long Beach State
Northern Iowa
Washington State
W 93–72
W 90–71
L 58–77

NAIA Tournament

BYU made two appearances in the NAIA Tournament, going 2–2.
1948First Round
Second Round
Delta State
Indiana State
W 66–61 OT
L 68–82
1949First Round
Second Round
Northwestern Oklahoma State
Northwestern State
W 79–50
L 57–59

Individual honors

Retired numbers

The Cougars have retired the numbers of four players in their history, with the most recent being the jerseys of Hutchins and Minson on February 16, 2013.

National Players of the Year

All-Americans

Conference Players of the Year

Individual records

Notable players