Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball
The Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team represents Texas Tech University in basketball. Texas Tech competes in NCAA Division I and has been a charter member of the Big 12 Conference since its first season in 1996. The team previously competed in the Border Conference and Southwest Conference. The team was founded in 1925, having since won 13 regular season conference championship, and made 22 appearances in the NCAA tournament as of the 2025β2026 season. Since 1999, the Red Raiders have played their home games at the United Supermarkets Arena on the university's campus in Lubbock, Texas.
History
1925β1935
Texas Tech's basketball program was founded the same year the school opened its doors in 1925. The inaugural game was a 37β25 loss to Daniel Baker College. Tech would lose two more games before finally clinching their first ever victoryβ35β21 at Sul Ross University.Grady Higginbotham was the first coach, earning a 14β18 record over two seasons. Until Pat Knight, Higgenbotham was the only Tech basketball coach to garner an overall losing record during his stay. Following Higgenbotham's departure, Victor Payne led the Matadors from 1927 to 1930. His final tally stood at 32 wins and 20 losses. W. L. Golightly coached only one season, bringing in an 11β9 record. Dell Morgan held the head coaching job from 1931 to 1934, chalking up 42 wins to 29 losses. He was followed by Virgil Ballard. Though Ballard coached only a single season, it was during his time that the team won their milestone 100th game, a one-point victory over House of David. Ballard left with a 15β9 record.
1935β1971
Berl Huffman was twice the head basketball coach at Texas Techβfirst from 1935 to 1942 and then from 1946 to 1947. During his total of eight seasons, he garnered a record of 121β67. Polk Robison was the only other person to serve two different times as the head basketball coach at the school. When Huffman left in 1942, Robison took the job. And, when Huffman left a second time in 1947, it was Robison who again filled the position, this time remaining until 1961. At a total of 18 seasons, his stay is the second longest of any Red Raiders basketball coach, behind Gerald Myers. He departed after leading his teams to 254 wins, 195 losses, and the first two NCAA tournaments in school history.Gene Gibson followed Robison into the position. In his eight seasons, he chalked up the second best conference record in Texas Tech history and led the Raiders to a Southwest Conference Championship in 1962. Bob Bass led the program to a 22β15 record over a season-and-a-half before returning to professional basketball coaching duties.
1971β2001
Gerald Myers became coach of the Red Raiders mid-year during the 1970/71 season and stayed until 1991. His stay was the longest of any head basketball coach at Tech, and several milestones were passed during his tenure, including wins #600, #700, #800, and #900. With a Texas Tech career record of 326β261, Myers has more wins with the Red Raiders than any other men's basketball coach in school history. Myers led Tech to 16 winning seasons, two Southwest Conference championships, three SWC tournament titles, and four NCAA tournament berths. Myers served as the school's athletic director from 1996 to 2011.James Dickey replaced Myers as head coach prior to the 1991/92 season and would remain at Texas Tech until his dismissal at the end of the 2000/01 season. During his 10 seasons at Texas Tech, Dickey amassed a 166β124 winβloss record. The program also won its 1,000th game under Dickeyβa 71β62 victory at UALR.
Dickey took over a Texas Tech program that had finished with a 13β45 combined record over Myers' final two years and led his first team to a winning season and fifth-place finish in Southwest Conference play, after having been picked to finish last in the conference. In his second year as head coach, the Red Raiders won the Southwest Conference tournament championship, the school's fourth, to secure the league's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Texas Tech finished the 1994/95 season with a 20β10 record, sharing the SWC regular season championship with Texas and earning a berth in the 1995 National Invitation Tournament. In the SWC's final season, Dickey's 1995β96 Red Raiders produced one of the most successful seasons in school history and one of the more memorable seasons in the history of the conference, finishing 30β2 overall and undefeated in conference play, winning both the SWC regular season championship and the conference tournament title, advancing to the "Sweet Sixteen" in the NCAA Tournament, and finishing #8 in the AP poll and #10 in the Coaches' Poll.
The Raiders moved to the Big 12 for the 1996/97 season, and appeared to pick up right where they left off with a solid 19β9 season. For all intents and purposes, however, Dickey's tenure ended on the first day of the inaugural Big 12 basketball tournament. During the Raiders' first-round game, it was discovered that two players had played the entire season while academically ineligible. Hours after that game, Texas Tech announced that it was withdrawing from postseason consideration and forfeiting its entire conference schedule. The Raiders had lost that game, and would have had to forfeit it if they had won. A subsequent investigation revealed massive violations dating back to 1990 in men's basketball and nine other sports. As a result, the NCAA stripped Tech of its two NCAA tournament wins in 1996 and docked it nine scholarships over four years. Dickey was unable to recover from the lost scholarships, and his Red Raiders finished with four consecutive losing seasons, during which they only won a total of 18 games in Big 12 play. He was fired after his 2000/01 team produced a 9β19 overall record.
Bob Knight era: 2001β2008
Bob Knight served as the Texas Tech men's basketball head coach from 2001β2008.Hired in March 2001 to replace James Dickey as head coach, Bob Knight quickly improved the program, which had not received a bid to the NCAA tournament nor achieved a winning record since 1996. Knight led the Red Raiders to three NCAA Tournament appearances and one NIT appearance in his first four years at Texas Tech, including an appearance in the Sweet Sixteen in 2005. Texas Tech finished the 2005/06 season with a 15β17 overall record, marking the only time that Knight finished a complete season at Tech with a losing record and fewer than 21 wins. During the 2005β06 season, the ESPN reality TV show centering on Knight and the Red Raiders, Knight School, was filmed. The Red Raiders recovered in 2006/07, finishing 21β13 and again earning a bid to the NCAA Tournament, where they would lose to Boston College in the first round. In both 2006 and 2007, Knight's Texas Tech teams defeated two top 10-ranked teams in consecutive weeks. During Knight's first six years at Texas Tech, the Red Raiders won 126 games, an average of 21 wins per season.
On New Year's Day 2007, Texas Tech recorded a 70β68 defeat of New Mexico to give Knight his 880th career victory, making him the highest winning coach in men's college basketball history.
On January 16, 2008, Knight registered his 900th career victory when the Red Raiders upset the ninth-ranked Texas A&M Aggies, 68β53. Knight won two more games as head coachβagainst Missouri and Oklahoma Stateβprior to announcing his retirement on February 4, 2008, after having led his 2007β08 team to a 12β8 mid-season record. His son Pat Knight, the head coach designate since 2005, was immediately named as his successor. The younger Knight stated that, after many years of coaching, his father was exhausted and ready to retire.
Bob Knight finished with an overall winβloss record of 138β82 at Texas Tech.
Pat Knight era: 2008β2011
After assuming the head coaching role midseason, Pat Knight's initial two games were defeats on the road. The first was an 80β74 loss to Baylor on February 6, 2008. The second came three days later at Nebraska. Knight's first head coaching win came at home when the Red Raiders upset #18 Kansas State, 84β75, at United Spirit Arena. Going into the game, KSU was in sole possession of first place in the Big 12. On March 1, 2008, the Red Raiders again defeated the top team in the conference by beating #5 Texas, 83β80, ending a month-long, eight-game winning streak for the Longhorns.The Red Raiders finished the regular season with back-to-back losses, first at Kansas and then to Baylor. At the 2008 Big 12 men's basketball tournament, they added another lossβto Oklahoma Stateβin the first round. The team did not receive an invitation to play at either the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship or at the National Invitation Tournament. Texas Tech did get an invitation to the inaugural College Basketball Invitational, but declined the offer.
In the third game of the 2008β09 season, Tech defeated Division II opponent East Central 167β115, setting a new school record for most points scored in a game. The previous record of 128 was set in the double overtime victory over Texas on February 20, 1994. The combined total of 282 points also became a new record.
On March 7, 2011, Texas Tech terminated Knight's position as head coach. He left with an overall record of 50β61, becoming the second coach in the school's history to depart with more losses than wins.
Billy Gillispie era: 2011β2012
Billy Gillispie became the head coach of the team on March 20, 2011. He only stayed for one season before resigning on September 21, 2012, in the wake of a school investigation into his treatment of his players.Tubby Smith era: 2013β2016
Tubby Smith was hired to replace interim head coach Chris Walker on April 1, 2013, after 6 seasons as head coach of Minnesota. Smith's first season showed some signs of progress, with Texas Tech picking up its first victory over a top-25 team since 2009. Texas Tech's victory over the then #12 Baylor Bears was the first win over a ranked opponent since December 2009, when the team defeated #10 Washington. Smith would later earn another top 25 upset with a victory over #19 Oklahoma State on February 8, 2014. Following outreach by Smith and the athletic department, Texas Tech students broke both school and Big 12 Conference records for student attendance at the United Spirit Arena during a February 25, 2014, loss to Kansas State. The record of 6,086 students fell less than 2,000 short of the national record.The Red Raiders ended Smith's first season with a home victory over the Texas Longhorns, but the Raiders fell to Oklahoma State in the first round of the Big 12 tournament in March. They ended the season with a 14β18 overall record, Smith's first losing season as a head coach.
Under Smith, the 2015β2016 Red Raiders finished 9β9 in Big 12 play and advanced to their first NCAA Tournament in nine years, earning an 8-seed in the East Regional. Their season ended in the Round of 64 with a loss to the 9-seed Butler Bulldogs.
Following the season, the Smith era came to an end as Smith resigned on April 14 to coach the Memphis Tigers.
Chris Beard era: 2016β2021
Texas Tech hired former Arkansas-Little Rock coach Chris Beard on April 15, 2016, a week after he was appointed to the same position at UNLV. In his second season at the helm, Texas Tech reached the Elite Eight for the first time in school history, with a 78β65 win over the Purdue Boilermakers, where they lost to the eventual national champions, the Villanova Wildcats, 71β59.With a share of the Big 12 regular season title, the Red Raiders returned to the NCAA Tournament in 2019 as a #3 seed. Their second trip to the Elite Eight in as many years saw them defeat the #1 seed Gonzaga Bulldogs 75β69, clinching their first ever Final Four appearance. They proceeded to defeat the Michigan State Spartans 61β51, reaching their first-ever national title game, where they ultimately lost to another #1 seed, the Virginia Cavaliers, 85β77 in overtime, ending the most successful season in school history.
Beard departed the program after the 2020β21 season, to take the head coaching job at his alma mater, the University of Texas. Given the rivalry between the two schools, Texas Tech athletic director Kirby Hocutt later remarked, "Had he gone to any other university, he'd be celebrated. But there's just certain things you cannot do, and one of them is you can't leave Texas Tech for Texas."
Mark Adams era: 2021β2023
Mark Adams, a Texas Tech alumnus and longtime coach around West Texas who had served as Beard's assistant for the last six seasons, was elevated to head coach on April 5, 2021. The Dustin R. Womble Basketball Center, a new 58,000-square foot, $32.2 million practice facility for the men and women's basketball teams, was inaugurated a month later. Coach Adams swept former coach Chris Beard and the University of Texas in his first season at the helm.On March 5, 2023, Texas Tech University announced that they suspended Coach Adams for using "racially insensitive" terms and possibly spitting on a player; Corey Williams led the team in the Big 12 tournament. On March 8, Adams resigned his position.
Grant McCasland era: 2023βPresent
On March 31, 2023, Grant McCasland was hired as the 19th head coach of the Red Raiders. He had previously been the head coach of North Texas. Previously, he worked as the Director of Basketball Operations at Texas Tech from 1999-2001. He also earned his master's degree from Texas Tech in 2001. In Coach McCasland's first season, he notched a 23-11 record including a berth to the NCAA Tournament. The Red Raiders were upset in the first round by [2023β24 2023β24 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team|NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team|NC State].In 2024β25, McCasland guided the Red Raiders to a top-10 AP ranking and a No. 3 seed in the NCAA tournament. The Red Raiders advanced to their third Elite Eight as a program and their first under a coach not named Chris Beard.
Postseason
NCAA tournament results
The Red Raiders have appeared in the NCAA tournament 20 times. However, their 1996 appearance was vacated. Their combined record is 22β21.On April 6, 2019, Texas Tech earned their first trip to the NCAA tournament championship game with a Final Four win over [2018β19 2018β19 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team|Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team|Michigan State]. Two days later, the Red Raiders lost the NCAA tournament championship game in overtime 85β77 to [2018β19 2018β19 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team|Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team|Virginia].
| 1954 | First Round | Santa Clara | L 64β73 | |
| 1956 | First Round | SMU | L 67β68 | |
| 1961 | Sweet Sixteen Regional 3rd Place Game | Cincinnati Houston | L 55β78 W 69β67 | |
| 1962 | First Round Sweet Sixteen Regional 3rd Place Game | Air Force Colorado Creighton | W 68β66 L 60β67 L 61β63 | |
| 1973 | First Round | South Carolina | L 70β78 | |
| 1976 | First Round Sweet Sixteen | Syracuse Missouri | W 69β56 L 75β86 | |
| 1985 | #6 | First Round | #11 Boston College | L 53β55 |
| 1986 | #13 | First Round | #4 Georgetown | L 64β70 |
| 1993 | #12 | First Round | #5 St. John's | L 67β85 |
| 1996 | #3 | First Round Second Round Sweet Sixteen | #14 Northern Illinois
| W 74β73W 92β73 L 90β98 |
| 2002 | #6 | First Round | #11 Southern Illinois | L 68β76 |
| 2004 | #8 | First Round Second Round | #9 Charlotte
| W 76β73L 65β70 |
| 2005 | #6 | First Round Second Round Sweet Sixteen | #11 UCLA
| W 78β66W 71β69 L 60β65 |
| 2007 | #10 | First Round | #7 Boston College | L 75β84 |
| 2016 | #8 | First Round | #9 Butler | L 61β71 |
| 2018 | #3 | First Round Second Round Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight | #14 Stephen F. Austin
| W 70β60W 69β66 W 78β65 L 59β71 |
| 2019 | #3 | First Round Second Round Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight Final Four National Championship | #14 Northern Kentucky
| W 72β57 W 78β58 W 63β44 W 75β69 W 61β51 L 77β85OT |
| 2021 | #6 | First Round Second Round | #11 Utah State
| W 65β53L 66β68 |
| 2022 | #3 | First Round Second Round Sweet Sixteen | #14 Montana State
| W 97β62 W 59β53 L 73β78 |
| 2024 | #6 | First Round | #11 NC State | L 67β80 |
| 2025 | #3 | First Round Second Round Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight | #14 UNC Wilmington
| W 82β72W 77β64 W 85β83OT L 79β84 |
NIT results
The Red Raiders have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament four times. Their combined record is 6β4.| 1979 | First Round | Indiana | L 59β78 |
| 1995 | First Round | Washington State | L 82β94 |
| 2003 | First Round Second Round Quarterfinals Semifinals 3rd Place Game | Nevada San Diego State Georgia Tech St. John's Minnesota | W 66β54 W 57β48 W 80β72 L 63β64 W 71β61 |
| 2010 | First Round Second Round Quarterfinals | Seton Hall Jacksonville Ole Miss | W 87β69 W 69β64 L 87β902OT |
NAIA tournament results
The Red Raiders have appeared in the NAIA tournament two times. Their combined record is 3β2.| 1942 | First Round Second Round | Louisiana Tech Southeastern Oklahoma State | W 59β47 L 36β37 |
| 1949 | First Round Second Round Quarterfinals | Western Montana North Dakota Hamline | W 79β43 W 62β57 L 56β80 |
Home arenas
The Red Raiders play their home games at United Supermarkets Arena located on the university campus. The Red Raiders previously played at Lubbock Municipal Coliseum until United Supermarkets Arena opened in 1999. The university's first team, then known as the Matadors, did not have a home court but instead played at the Livestock Judging Pavilion until a wood and stucco barn was constructed the following season.Texas Tech students broke both school and Big 12 Conference records for student attendance at the United Supermarkets Arena during a February 25, 2014, loss to Kansas State. The record of 6,086 students fell less than 2,000 short of the national record.