Washington State’s Kyle Smith will be Stanford’s new men’s hoops coach

Washington State’s Kyle Smith will be Stanford’s new men’s hoops coach

Stanford’s new men’s basketball coach is no stranger to Maples Pavilion.

Kyle Smith, the coach who took Washington State to the NCAA Tournament this year for the first time in 16 seasons, will take over the Stanford program. National reporter Jeff Goodman was first to report the news, which the school announced Monday morning.

Smith’s Cougars eliminated Stanford from the men’s Pac-12 Tournament in the third round two weeks ago, ending Jerod Haase’s tenure in charge of the Cardinal. Washington State beat Drake in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, then fell over the weekend to Iowa State in the second round.

Stanford athletic director Bernard Muir stuck with Jerod Haase for eight seasons as the Cardinal recruited well but never reached the NCAA Tournament during his time in charge. Haase, a former Cal guard, went 126-127 at Stanford.

Related Articles

College Sports |


Stanford’s Iriafen dominates as Cardinal beat Iowa State in overtime

College Sports |


March Madness winners, losers: No. 1 seeds roll and Few’s in the S16

College Sports |


Stanford’s roadblock to NCAA regional is Iowa State post Audi Crooks

College Sports |


Pac-2 survival: WSU, OSU hit jackpot from CFP, NCAAs during wild week

College Sports |


First-round NCAA Tournament exit disappointing end to Saint Mary’s magical season

Smith has ties to the Bay Area, where he was an assistant under Saint Mary’s coach Randy Bennett and later led San Francisco for three seasons before Washington State hired him away in 2019. In between those Northern California stints, Smith took over Columbia for his first coaching job.

In five seasons leading the Cougars, Smith went 94-71, and this season’s result was his best yet despite losing several significant players from last year’s team in the transfer portal.

With the Cougars facing an uncertain future as they attempt to rebuild the Pac-12, Smith is opting for a new challenge as Stanford enters the ACC.