Mike Rice Jr.

For other people named Michael Rice, see Michael Rice (disambiguation).
Mike Rice, Jr.
Sport(s) Basketball
Biographical details
Born (1969-02-13) February 13, 1969
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Playing career
1987–1991 Fordham
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1991–1994 Fordham (asst.)
1994–1997 Marquette (asst.)
1997–1998 Niagara (asst.)
1998–2001 Chicago State (asst.)
2004–2006 Saint Joseph's (asst.)
2006–2007 Pittsburgh (asst.)
2007–2010 Robert Morris
2010–2013 Rutgers
2015-present (Interim) The Patrick School
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
2x NEC Tournament champion (2009, 2010)
2x NEC regular season champion (2009, 2010)
Awards
2x NEC Coach of the Year (2008, 2009)

Mike Rice, Jr. (born February 13, 1969) is an American college basketball coach, formerly the head men's basketball coach at Robert Morris University and later Rutgers University. He is the son of former college basketball coach and current Portland Trail Blazers announcer Mike Rice. In 2009, he helped lead Robert Morris to its first NCAA Tournament since 1992.[1] Rice gained national attention in 2013, when ESPN aired Rutgers practice videos showing the coach verbally and physically abusing players. Rice was fired the next day. He resides in Little Silver, New Jersey.[2]

Overview

Rice was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to Kathy and Mike Rice. He attended Boardman High School in Boardman, Ohio where he was a three year starter as a basketball guard. He was a three-year starter for the Fordham University basketball team from 1988 to 1991 and was captain of the team his senior year when Fordham went to the National Invitation Tournament. He received a bachelor's degree in communication. After graduation he was an assistant coach at several programs including Fordham 1991–1994; Marquette University 1994–1997; Niagara University 1997–1998; Chicago State University 1998–2001; St. Joseph's University 2004–2006; and University of Pittsburgh 2006–2007. In addition he was associated with the Hoop Group in Neptune, New Jersey from 2001 to 2004 where he was director of the Eastern Invitational Basketball Camp.[3][4]

In 2007 he became head coach at Robert Morris University, and in 2010 he became head coach of Rutgers University.

Rutgers University suspension and firing

On December 13, 2012, Rice was suspended three games without pay and fined $50,000 for abusive behavior toward his players. The suspension came after athletic director Tim Pernetti obtained video footage from a practice during either Rice's first or second season at Rutgers, at which Rice was seen throwing basketballs at players' heads and cursing at them. Assistant coach David Cox led the team during Rice's suspension.[5] As part of the suspension, Rice was not only banned from any contact with his players or going on recruiting visits, but was banned from coming onto campus altogether.[6] Pernetti characterized the suspension as "a complete removal from the program," but stated that Rice would return to Rutgers for the 2013-14 season pending a review of his behavior.[7]

The situation changed dramatically on April 2, 2013, when ESPN's Outside the Lines aired several hours of video from Rice's practices. According to ESPN, the video, provided to Pernetti by then-assistant coach Eric Murdock, showed Rice berating, pushing, kicking, cursing, using homophobic slurs, and throwing basketballs at players during practices.[8] Murdock said that he first told Pernetti about the abuse in the summer of 2012, but Pernetti took no action until he and other Rutgers officials saw the video in December. Murdock claims he was fired in July for reporting the abuse, and is suing Rutgers for wrongful termination.[9] The video touched off a nationwide outcry, with New Jersey Governor Chris Christie condemning Rice's behavior, and State Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver among many demanding that Rice be fired.[10]

The next day, Rutgers fired Rice as head coach.[11] According to The (Newark) Star-Ledger, the move came after school president Robert Barchi saw the video for the first time, although he had signed off on Pernetti's decision to suspend Rice in December. When Barchi saw the video, he called in Pernetti and told him that Rice had to leave immediately.[12] Barchi held Pernetti responsible for the debacle, and forced Pernetti's resignation three days later.[13]

Head coaching record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Robert Morris (Northeast Conference) (2007–2010)
2007–08 Robert Morris 26–8 16–2 1st NIT First Round
2008–09 Robert Morris 24–11 15–3 1st NCAA First Round
2009–10 Robert Morris 23–12 15–3 1st NCAA First Round
Robert Morris: 73–31 46–8
Rutgers (Big East Conference) (2010–2013)
2010–11 Rutgers 15–17 5–13 13th
2011–12 Rutgers 14–18 6–12 T–11th
2012–13 Rutgers 15–16* 5–13 12th
Rutgers: 44–51* 16–38
Total: 117–82

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

* Rice was suspended by Rutgers for three games in December 2012. Assistant coach David Cox served as interim coach during Rice's suspension, but Rutgers credits the entire 2012-13 season to Rice.

References

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