Florida Atlantic's Dusty May has agreed to a deal to become the University of Michigan's next men's basketball coach, sources told ESPN.
May's agent, Andy Miller, of Klutch Sports, was working with university officials late Saturday night to finalize the details of a long-term contract, sources said.
Maye, 47, leaves Florida Atlantic University with an unlikely record of reaching the Final Four in 2023 and making it to the NCAA Tournament in 2024, winning 60 games over the past two seasons. UW and the University of Houston.
Although FAU lost in overtime to Northwestern in the NCAA Tournament opener on Friday, officials said Michigan officials moved quickly to secure Maye as the school's next coach. .
Several major programs pursued Maye as a coaching candidate, including the University of Louisville in the ACC and Vanderbilt University in the SEC, but Maye was ultimately swayed by his alumni network and fierce loyalty to the university and athletics. said the official. He believes this will help overcome some of the inherently transactional nature of his modern NIL/transfer portal era in player recruitment and retention.
Maye replaces Juwan Howard, who was fired after five seasons and finished last in the Big Ten for the first time since the 1966-67 season.
May's professional climbing has been a lesson in perseverance and perseverance. He joined a downtrodden FAU program six years ago for his first head coaching job, going 126-69 in an undefeated season.
Over the past two years, Florida Atlantic's winning percentage of .822 was fifth best in Division I, according to ESPN Stats.
The past two seasons marked the only time in school history that FAU has finished in the top 25. The Owls will reach the Final Four as a No. 9 seed in 2024, becoming the ninth team seeded No. 9 or lower to reach the Final Four since seeding began in 1979, according to ESPN Stats and Info.
May is an Indiana University graduate who has served as an assistant coach at his alma mater as well as at USC, Murray State, Eastern Michigan, UAB, Louisiana Tech and Florida State.