Jay Wright Officially Retires As Villanova Coach

An all-time great college basketball coach called it a career at the end of the 2022 season.

Villanova's Jay Wright announced on Wednesday that he is officially retiring as the Wildcats' coach — capping a historic, and successful, 21-season run.

He first joined the Wildcats in 2001. By the end of his tenure, Wright coached the team to five Big East titles, four Final Four appearances, six 30-win seasons and two national championships (2016, 2018).

Reaching the Final Four in this year's tourney can now be remembered as the proper send-off for the ageless great.

The Wildcats lost to the championship-bound Kansas Jayhawks, 81-65 — just two wins short of a nearly perfect ending.

Still, the coach stated that he felt the perfect time to step away from basketball was now — extinguishing rumors that Wright was pivoting to the NBA.

For now, Wright thinks he's got nothing left to prove.

Wright leaves the program with a 642-282 record. He hands the team off to Fordham head coach and former Villanova assistant Kyle Neptune.

The 37-year-old will leave his position as the Rams' coach after just one season.

Neptune first joined the Wildcats in 2008 as a video coordinator for Wright. He returned to Villanova from 2013-to 2019 as Wright's assistant.

According to Fox News Digital, Wright will stay at Villanova but under a different role.

Follow along on Twitter: @AlejandroAveela

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Alejandro Avila lives in Southern California and previously covered news for the LA Football Network. Jeopardy expert and grumpy sports fan. Known for having watched every movie and constant craving for dessert. @alejandroaveela (on X)