yahoo - 2/10/2026 5:26:04 PM - GMT (+2 )
Indiana plans to build a permanent bronze statue of former men’s basketball coach and Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer Bob Knight inside Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall, the Hoosiers’ home arena.
The university announced the move on Monday, Febr. 9, the same day that Indiana’s 1976 national championship team was honored at halftime of the Hoosiers’ 92-74 win against Oregon.
"Coach Knight's influence on the game of basketball is immeasurable, but his impact on this university and Hoosier basketball fans is even deeper," said Indiana athletic director Scott Dolson said in a statement. "On a personal level, having started my career here as a student manager under Coach Knight, I saw firsthand the unparalleled standard of excellence he demanded. He taught me, and countless others, that success is the result of meticulous preparation and unwavering discipline. This statue will be a well-deserved tribute to a man who didn't just win games; he changed how the sport is played."
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Knight’s statue would be displayed in the south lobby of the arena, alongside the statue honoring the 1976 team that he led to an undefeated season. Fifty years later, it’s the last time a Division I men’s basketball champion has finished a season unbeaten.
Details about the project and its timeline, which is being funded by an anonymous longtime Indiana donor, will be released “in the coming months,” the school said.
Knight is widely considered one of the greatest and most influential coaches in the history of basketball at any level. He led the Hoosiers to three national championships — in 1976, 1981 and 1987 — and won 904 games over his 42-year head-coaching career at Indiana, Army and Texas Tech. He went 662–239 in 29 seasons with the Hoosiers. During that tenure, he popularized the motion offense and routinely had some of the country’s toughest, most tenacious defensive units.
Beyond his work at Indiana, which also included 11 Big Ten championships and five Final Four appearances, he was the head coach of gold-medal-winning USA Basketball teams at the 1979 Pan American Games and the 1984 Summer Olympics.
Knight’s legendary run at Indiana came to an abrupt end in September 2000, when the university fired him two months before the start of the upcoming season. His dismissal came after he violated a zero-tolerance behavioral policy that had been placed on him by school president Myles Brand earlier that year when a tape was released of Knight putting his hand around the neck of former Hoosiers guard Neil Reed during a 1997 practice.
In February 2020, nearly 20 full years after his firing, Knight returned to an Indiana game for the first time. He received a standing ovation while being honored at halftime of the Hoosiers’ game against Purdue.
Knight died at 83 years old in 2023.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Indiana plans to build statue of former basketball coach Bob Knight
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