Bucky McMillan will 'have to get to work immediately' as he takes over Texas A&M basketball

COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) — The Bucky McMillan era kicked off at Texas A&M with a lofty promise from the coach who raised Samford basketball to new heights.

“For me to leave that place, it would only be for some place that I know I could not just win championships, but was a great place with great people,” McMillan said at his introductory press conference in A&M’s Reed Arena on Monday. “That’s why I’m here — we’re going to win championships here.”

Texas A&M's men's basketball team has never advanced to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament, much less won a national championship. The A&M women won a national title in 2011 under coach Gary Blair.

The Aggies hired the high-revving McMillan, 41, to replace Buzz Williams, who exited A&M for Maryland on April 1. Williams finished with a 120-73 record at A&M over six seasons, and advanced to the NCAA Tournament in each of the past three seasons.

A&M hasn’t advanced to the Sweet 16, however, since 2018 under coach Billy Kennedy, which is why Williams’ tenure was considered overall disappointing to A&M fans.

McMillan, a native Alabaman who has never coached in Texas and had only visited College Station once prior, has hired two former assistants at A&M under Kennedy: Mitch Cole, who also assisted McMillan at Samford, and former Stephen F. Austin State head coach Kyle Keller, whom the Lumberjacks dismissed in January following a 1-7 start to Southland Conference play.

McMillan led Samford to the NCAA Tournament a year ago, and the Bulldogs narrowly lost 93-89 to Kansas in the opening round. McMillan, who was 99-52 over five seasons at Samford in Birmingham, Alabama, previously coached Mountain Brook High School near Birmingham to five state titles in Alabama’s highest high school classification.

“I’ve talked to a lot of folks about basketball,” said A&M athletic director Trev Alberts, who made his most high-profile hire since his arrival to College Station a little more than a year ago. “And the thing about Bucky McMillan that kept coming up was, ‘This is one of the elite, emerging young minds in college basketball.’ … He thinks differently — he coaches outside the box. And players enjoy his style of basketball.”

That style, first dubbed “Bucky Ball” during McMillan’s high school coaching days, is perpetually frenzied on offense and defense. McMillan has agreed to a five-year deal at A&M, via ESPN, but exact contract numbers were not available Monday.

“When we bring recruits to games, and this place is filled up … and we’re leading the nation in scoring and it’s going crazy, people are going to say, ‘I want to be a part of that,’” McMillan told about 500 fans gathered in Reed Arena for his introduction.

The Bulldogs ranked 13th nationally in scoring this season with 82.9 points per game, and finished in the top 10 in 3-pointers made and attempted (356 of 978 for 36.4%). The Samford defense’s 16.1 turnovers forced per game ranked fourth nationally.

“Any coach who wins 330-plus games as a high school coach with multiple state championships is worth paying attention to,” Texas A&M president Mark Welsh said. “Any coach who’s had the record he’s had over the last five years at Samford University, which plays in a tough basketball conference, is worth paying attention to.

“And anyone who raises attendance the way he has in every venue that he’s been a part of is worth paying attention to.”

Samford a year ago won a school record 29 ...

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