Sunday May 25th, 2025 3:23AM

Bearcats' Huggins suffers heart attack

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BEAVER, PENNSYLVANIA - Cincinnati basketball coach Bob Huggins had a heart attack Saturday at Pittsburgh International Airport during a recruiting trip, a hospital spokesman said. <br> <br> The 49-year-old Huggins was in serious but stable condition at Medical Center, Beaver, about 24 miles northwest of Pittsburgh, hospital spokesman Scott Monit said at a media briefing Saturday. <br> <br> Huggins had chest pains at the airport, about 11 miles west of Pittsburgh, and was taken to a nearby hospital before he was transferred to the Medical Center, where he had surgery to implant a stent Saturday morning, Monit said. The tiny, metal mesh device is designed to keep Huggins once-clogged artery open. <br> <br> Huggins will remain in the hospital at least two days but Monit offered no further prognosis and said future questions on Huggins&#39; health should be directed to University of Cincinnati spokesman Tom Hathaway. <br> <br> Huggins was at the airport for a flight to Milwaukee for a coaching clinic scheduled to include Maryland&#39;s Gary Williams and Oklahoma State&#39;s Eddie Sutton. <br> <br> Monit didn&#39;t know what player Huggins was recruiting in the Pittsburgh area. <br> <br> Huggins is known almost as much for his sideline temper as for turning Cincinnati into a perennial winner. He rages at his players&#39; mistakes and at referees&#39; calls that go against him. <br> <br> He also has worried about having a heart attack. His father, a high school coach in northern Ohio, had one before the age of 40. Before Cincinnati&#39;s annual postseason banquet in 1998, Huggins had tests on his heart as a precaution. <br> <br> Cincinnati football coach Rick Minter, in Philadelphia for a game against Temple, was stunned when he received the news. <br> <br> ``He&#39;s what put the University of Cincinnati back on the map in the early &#39;90s,&#39;&#39; Minter said. ``We have the same work habits, same lifestyle. This could easily be me.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> The hard-driving Huggins was the third-youngest coach to get 500 wins in Division I. His career record is 500-172, including a 332-100 record in 13 seasons at Cincinnati. <br> <br> The Bearcats have been ranked No. 1 several times during his tenure, but have made the Final Four just once. Cincinnati went 31-4 last season, losing to UCLA 105-101 in double overtime in the second round of the NCAA tournament. <br> <br> In March, Huggins turned down a chance to coach West Virginia, his alma mater. <br> <br> He came to Cincinnati before the 1989-90 season from Akron and immediately turned around a lagging program. He also became known for his antics during games - throwing off his jacket, jumping while screaming at officials, berating players on the bench. <br> <br> He became nationally prominent after leading the Bearcats to the 1992 Final Four by using a tenacious full-court press. He has turned down offers from two NBA teams - the Miami Heat and Los Angeles Clippers - and overtures from other universities to stay in Cincinnati. <br> <br> The basketball program also has been characterized by a poor graduation rate and criminal charges against players during Huggins&#39; tenure. The NCAA imposed wide-ranging penalties on the program in 1998 for lack of institutional control.
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