West Virginia’s Huggins arrested on DUI charge
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Jeff Borzello Close Jeff Borzello ESPN Personnel Writer Basketball recruiting expert. Joined ESPN in 2014. Graduate of University of Delaware.Pete Thamel Jun 17, 2023, 10:38
- AM ET West Virginia guys’s
- basketball coach Bob Huggins was apprehended Friday night in
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Pittsburgh on a charge of driving under the impact, possibly putting his future with the program in jeopardy with a second debate in the past 6 weeks.According to a cops report, a breath test figured out that Huggins’blood alcohol content was 0.21%, more than twice the legal limitation of 0.08%in Pennsylvania.
A blood sample also was drawn from Huggins at a health center prior to his release.West Virginia authorities found out early Saturday early morning about Huggins’arrest and are anticipated to decide on his fate as coach in the future.” We are collecting more information and will take suitable action once the evaluation is complete,”the school stated in a statement.Huggins was arrested after Pittsburgh Police observed a black SUV obstructing traffic right before 8:30 p.m. Friday. The automobile had a”flat and shredded tire”and the motorist’s side door was open.After directing the motorist– determined as Robert
Huggins, 69, of Morgantown, West Virginia– to move the automobile off the road, officers observed Huggins having problem steering the SUV and pulled him over. The officers questioned Huggins and, believing he was intoxicated, asked him to perform field sobriety tests, which he failed.Huggins informed officers he had actually been to a basketball camp with his sibling in Sherrodsville, Ohio– about 90 minutes from Pittsburgh. An officer stated Huggins was asked several times what city he was in however never got a clear response, with the coach pointing out the city of Columbus a few times.The officer likewise noted garbage bags with empty beer containers both inside the lorry and in the trunk, according to the criminal complaint.Editor’s Picks
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already were signs that the 2023-24 season loomed as the last one for Huggins. In addition to getting a$1 million income decrease and a three-game suspension in the after-effects of his use of an anti-gay slur on a Cincinnati radio station, Huggins was essentially offered an agreement that is guaranteed for just a year, a rarity in college sports.The legal amendment was essentially a signal that West Virginia officials controlled Huggins’future and could alleviate into a shift to the next staff without worrying about owing him a significant quantity of money.Huggins’ arrest will put pressure on West Virginia authorities, who said they were outraged by his remarks and needed to
battle internally to keep him on for next season amid public pressure.In a joint declaration after Huggins’radio comments, president Gordon Gee and athletic director Wren Baker called the slurs “inexcusable”and
said the remarks”tainted West Virginia University.” Huggins, a Morgantown native who bet the Mountaineers in college, has actually coached at his university considering that 2007 and was inducted into the
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Popularity in September. He has actually directed the Mountaineers to 11 NCAA competition appearances, including a Final Four in 2010. Huggins invested one season at Kansas State after leading Cincinnati to 14 straight NCAA tournament looks from 1992 to 2005. Huggins was founded guilty of drunken driving in 2004 while at Cincinnati after pleading no contest. He was suspended for roughly 2 months by the school and bought to
undergo rehab. But the conviction led to a standoff with then-university president Nancy Zimpher that ultimately led to Huggins resigning as Bearcats coach the following year.The Associated Press contributed to this report.