¹ÏÉñapp

Bringing The World Home To You

© 2025 ¹ÏÉñapp
120 Friday Center Dr
Chapel Hill, NC 27517
919.445.9150 | 800.962.9862
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

NC State fires coach Kevin Keatts a year after improbable ACC title and Final Four run

N.C. State men's basketball 2024 ACC Tournament
Mitchell Northam
/
¹ÏÉñapp
N.C. State coach Kevin Keatts celebrates beating North Carolina in the ACC Tournament title game on March 16, 2024, in Washington, D.C.

N.C. State fired men's basketball coach Kevin Keatts on Sunday, an abrupt end to an eight-year tenure coming less than a year after the Wolfpack's improbable run to the Atlantic Coast Conference championship and the Final Four.

The school announced the move a day after the Wolfpack closed a 12-19 season.

"I want to thank Coach Keatts for his contributions to N.C. State and for always representing the university with class," athletic director Boo Corrigan said in a statement. "He will always have a treasured place in Wolfpack history for the accomplishments of his 2023-24 squad and I appreciate the passion he brought to this role. We wish him and his family the best in the future."

Keatts posted his own statement on social media, calling the past eight years "a dream come true."

"As we enter this new era of college sports, I wholeheartedly believe that I am leaving the program in better position to succeed than when I started — and that the basketball program will continue to thrive when supported to the level necessary to compete," Keatts said.

He signed off with a nod to players being able to transfer freely in a rapidly evolving college sports landscape.

"I am officially entering the portal," Keatts said.

Keatts went 151-113 at N.C. State, including 69-84 in ACC play. His teams earned three NCAA Tournament bids, the last coming when the Wolfpack followed a five-games-in-five-days ride to their first ACC Tournament title since 1987 with a just-as-unexpected run to the program's first Final Four since the late Jim Valvano led the "Cardiac Pack" to the 1983 NCAA title.

It was difficult to predict that Keatts would be out of a job a year later.

But he couldn't sustain that momentum as this season turned into a crashout, with the Wolfpack's retooling through the transfer portal — which had worked well enough to get N.C. State to back-to-back NCAA bids — proving to be a major miss. N.C. State went just 5-15 in league play, suffering the ignominy as the reigning champion to miss the 15-team ACC Tournament in an expanded 18-team league.

That included going 0-11 on the road, an ugly mark considering Keatts had made it a tradition for the team to get ice cream after road wins. The finale came with the Wolfpack giving up the last 10 points in Saturday's loss to a Miami team that had won just six games all year.

The firing comes after Keatts faced multiple challenges in his tenure, starting with stabilizing a wobbly program on the court and then working for years amid the shadow of a federal corruption investigation into the sport that was tied to predecessor Mark Gottfried's tenure. That case hovered for years before the program was placed on a year of probation in December 2021.

Ultimately, Keatts had five 20-win seasons but never delivered a consistent winner that Wolfpack fans have desperately craved, with the wild swing from the past 12 months illustrating that problem.

He arrived in 2017 from UNC Wilmington promising that "Kevin Keatts is a winner" in his introductory news conference. In many ways, he matched that, particularly after the program had bottomed out in Gottfried's final two seasons after four straight NCAA bids. Keatts started with a 21-win season that included taking down highly ranked Duke, UNC and Arizona teams before reaching the NCAAs.

That was the first of the 20-win seasons, though one ended with the Wolfpack falling on the wrong side of the bubble on Selection Sunday (2019) and had another likely bid vanish when the COVID-19 pandemic canceled the 2020 tournament. Then came two years of struggles, notably with a program-record 21 losses in 2022 before the final two-year upturn that culminated with last year's remarkable run.

The Associated Press is one of the largest and most trusted sources of independent newsgathering, supplying a steady stream of news to its members, international subscribers and commercial customers. AP is neither privately owned nor government-funded; instead, it's a not-for-profit news cooperative owned by its American newspaper and broadcast members.
Stories From This Author