Providence Stuns Syracuse, Lands Bryan Hodgson in High-Stakes Coaching Battle

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USF coach Bryan Hodgson has accepted terms to become the next Providence basketball coach.

Providence just beat Syracuse for its next head coach. South Florida’s Bryan Hodgson is heading to the Big East, turning down an offer from the Orange to take over a Friars program that desperately needed a shot in the arm.

Per Rob Reinhart, an official announcement is expected within 24 hours.

From Foster Care to the Big East

Born in Olean, New York in 1987, Hodgson was placed in foster care as an infant and adopted by Larry and Rebecca Hodgson. 

Rather than bury that chapter of his life, he built a nonprofit around it. 

Coaching Love provides assistance to foster care children and at-risk youth, and it says everything about what kind of person is walking into the Dunkin’ Donuts Center.

The Résumé That Made Syracuse Nervous

Hodgson spent four years helping Nate Oats build Buffalo into a mid-major powerhouse before following him to Alabama, where he helped recruit Brandon Miller, the No. 2 overall pick in the 2023 NBA Draft, and contributed to three straight Tournament runs including two Sweet 16s. Twelve of his players have reached NBA rosters.

As a head coach, he’s been equally relentless. He inherited a 20-loss Arkansas State program and went 45-28 in two seasons. 

At South Florida, he took over a 13-19 roster, rebuilt entirely with 13 new players, won the AAC regular season title at 23-8, and ranked eighth nationally in scoring offense. His career record stands at 70-36. 

The man builds programs.

What Friar Nation Is Actually Getting

Sources indicate the NIL gap ultimately killed Syracuse’s chances of landing Hodgson

Providence was expected to bring upwards of $10 million for its 2026-27 roster; Syracuse was looking at roughly $8 million, according to Jeff Goodman of Field of 68. In today’s college basketball landscape, that $2 million difference was the ballgame — and Hodgson knew it.

What Providence gets is more than a résumé. Known as “The Shark,” Hodgson brings a personality that matches the Dunkin’ Donuts Center’s intensity — something Kim English never quite managed. As a Nate Oats disciple, his offense plays fast, lives at the rim and behind the arc, and scores in bunches.

This isn’t a safe hire. It’s a 38-year-old coach with a .650 winning percentage and a habit of making programs unrecognizable within two years.

If Hodgson does at Providence what he did at Arkansas State and South Florida, the Friars aren’t just relevant in the Big East again, they’re primed to be a dangerous team for years to come. 

The Shark is coming to Providence, and the conference should take notice.