Creighton: History-Legacy-Tradition-Continuity

Head Coach-In-Waiting, Alan Huss is Back!

Well, well, well. Surprise, surprise. Then again, no. In the current shifting landscape of collegiate sports, stuff happens. Recruits change their minds, players transfer annually, coaching hires & fires, AD’s come and go. Continuity…program continuity, what’s that look like? In today’s sporting world, leadership must continually peer the horizons – what’s ahead, what’s coming down the pike? NIL, conference’s playing musical chairs, player unions, new revenue streams and sharing modalities, player’s ‘Bill of Rights’, the death of Grant of Rights agreements, coaching musical chairs, equitable profit sharing.. It’s a business these days and never a dull moment it seems.

Every year we see the scramble of coaching firings and hirings, The cobbling together of committees, the hiring of consultants, or both for buying a new coach. Some surprising, some not. Recently, a growing group of the old guard, longtime college basketball coaching stalwarts, are hitting the retirement trail, the beach, the golf courses, and a less tumultuous, stressful life. A changing of the guard. It is also a time of refreshment and opportunity for the younger generations of coaching talent to finally move up!

auf Wiedersehen – tschüss old guys, bienvenidos young coaches!

The hope is that an infusion of new blood, new coaching philosophy, new ideas – a fresh start – will jump start failing programs, energize average programs, and sustain current successes in top programs. In the modern era, Creighton’s athletic program (M/W basketball, futbol, baseball/softball, volleyball, and other sports) have sustained very good successes and have shown a consistent continuity of sport integrity and performance. Men’s basketball since 1985, has shown only one performance dip, during the Rick Johnson era. The Barone, Altman, and MeDermott tenures have all shown a consistent effort and successes.

Over the last several years, the designation of a “head coach in-waiting” has evolved at a handful of major schools. Notably Gonzaga, Houston, & Duke has used this sort of feature for continuity, and to a lesser degree, North Carolina and Villanova. The notion is to have a ‘chosen one’ successor to a legend to follow-on and maintain program continuity and trajectory.

In Creighton’s case former assistant coach Alan Huss is the heir apparent. Coach Huss will become the 17th coach in the Creighton men’s basketball lineage. He left CU two years ago for the HC job at High Point University, NC. Coach turned the HPU program around, winning 56 games (56-15 ) over his tenure and taking the Panthers to their 1st NCAA Tournament this season. Given the need for assurances and certainty, especially since Coach Huss has been a candidate for other high level positions, it is assumed that the timeline is relatively short (1 to 2 years) for Coach McDermott’s retirement.

https://www.foxsports.com/stories/college-basketball/creighton-names-high-points-alan-huss-greg-mcdermotts-successor

In the 106 years* of organized, coached, and documented men’s basketball history at Creighton University, there have been 16 head coaches. Beginning with the phenomenal, unmatched legend Thomas E. Mills, up to today with the winningest (total wins) coach in our history, Greg McDermott. Creighton is, and seemingly has always been, blessed with coaching giants: The list is long…Thomas Mills, Charles Kearney, Arthur ‘Schabie’ Schabinger, Eddie Hickey, Tommy Thomsen, Red McManus, Eddie Sutton, Tom Apke, Tony Barone, Dana Altman, and Greg McDermott. Alan Huss will continue the tradition and legacy. Through the span of these 106 years, Creighton Men’s Basketball has accumulated a record of 1,915 – 1,074, with a win percentage of .641 (64.1%), as of the 2023-2024 season.

James Harvey, a.k.a. gtmoBlue

*Organized basketball began in 1916 according to Creighton archival documents, with the hiring of Thomas Mills and official recordkeeping. There are accounts of unofficial Creighton team(s) prior to this time (1912), but are not considered as part of official Creighton basketball history.

(Note: In men’s basketball, since 1955 – the Tommy Thomsen era, there have only been two Creighton coaches with losing records – Willis Reed (1981-85) and Rick Johnson (1991-94).)

Creighton Basketball Class of 2025

Mac is reloading…again!

The hoops season has ended, but the hunt continues. Recruiting season is in full swing. The 2025 Transfer Portal opened a couple of weeks ago and the recruiting wars are underway in earnest.

New Recruits

Creighton has had one billet filled since November in Top 100 SF Hudson Greer, (247 Composite Rankings: #41/#10 SF). Greer is from Texas, but schooled at Monteverde Academy in Florida. He had over 24 major offers during his recruitment. The jays beat out Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, & Auburn, amongst others for his commitment.

Yesterday April 7, 2025 (NCAA Championship Day) they got the commitment of Serbian Ctr, Aleksa Dimitrijevic, an 18 y/o 7-footer. Dimitrijevic has played Serbia’s U18/U19 teams and briefly played pro in Europe. Virtually unknown outside of Europe, he visited 4 US universities; Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and the Jays. He is unranked by all the major recruiting services.

“I’m looking for a good connection with the coach. And, of course, we need to be on the same page,” Dimitrijević said. “The style of play is also important. I want to feel good so that I can play well.” Dimitrijević added: “All the schools I like don’t play the same style of play, but I can see myself in each system. I like how the guys play. I’m a five-man who can shoot threes, pick-and-pop. I can roll and defend the rim. I want to be myself wherever I go.”

Back in February, he told to 247Sports.

Transfers

Mac’s staff has been busy in the portal as well. Creighton has signed 3 Four-star transfers thus far this Spring.

PF/C Owen Freeman, 6-10/Iowa, followed by PG Nik Graves, 6-4/UNCC, and SG Josh Dix, 6-6/Iowa. Both guards are seniors-to-be, while Freeman is an incoming junior. See Gocreighton.com for more info on each new player and on the returning squad. https://gocreighton.com/sports/mens-basketball/archives

This combined class fills all the perceived team needs following the 4-man graduating class and outgoing support player transfers. Two current and one former Bluejays followed now Head Coach Mike Miller to Murray State University ( Mason Miller, Fred King, and former Jay Ben Shtolzberg). Star guard Pop Isaac (to U of Houston), SG Sterling Knox (Indy CC), and Frosh SG Larry Johnson (McNeese St) have also entered the portal.

See the White & Blue Review for additional, individual bios on the new players. https://whiteandbluereview.com/category/mens-basketball/

13 Apr 2025: Breaking News! / Late Entry

Well Done! Well deserved accolades

Creighton’s record setting center, Ryan Kalkbrenner, the 1st Team All Big East and 4x Big East DPOY, is racking up postseason awards. Ryan has earned:

USBWA – 2nd Team All American

NABC – 2nd Team All American

AP – 3rd Team All American

Wooden Award All American

NABC – Defensive Player of the Year

Naismith Award – Defensive Player of the Year

Naismith/Kareem Abdul Jabbar Award, Best Center in the Country

The Florissant, Missouri native has been the rock/pillar of Creighton Basketball these past 5 years and is well deserving of all of these accolades, and more. Well deserved Big Ryan. Well done, Sir!

James Harvey A.K.A. gtmoBlue

*All images courtesy of Creighton Athletics_2025.