Billy Hahn, a coaching veteran of 36 years, enters his seventh season on the Mountaineer basketball staff. Hahn enters his third season as assistant to the head coach after serving as an assistant coach from 2008-11. Since coming to West Virginia in 2007, the Mountaineers have won the 2010 Big East Championship and have earned five NCAA tournament appearances, including the 2010 Final Four. Hahn spent the majority of his coaching career at Maryland, where he was an assistant to Gary Williams for 12 seasons from 1989-2001. While at Maryland, the Terps went to the NCAA tournament a school-record eight straight years, including the 2001 Final Four. In 2002, the season after Hahn left for a head coaching job at La Salle, the Terps won the national championship with many of Hahn’s recruits. For his work, Williams and the Maryland basketball program presented Hahn with a championship ring. While at Maryland, the Terps finished fourth or higher in the Atlantic Coast Conference regular season standings in eight consecutive seasons, and established then-school records for overall victories (28 in 1999) and ACC victories in a season (13 in 1999). Hahn was promoted to associate head coach in 1997 and served as one of Maryland’s primary recruiters and was the lead scout in addition to his on-the-floor coaching and administrative duties. He recruited and coached three NBA Lottery picks (Walt Williams, Joe Smith and Steve Francis) and was named one of the top 10 recruiters in the eastern United States by Eastern Basketball. Hahn began his coaching career in 1975 in West Virginia as an assistant coach to Rich Meckfessel at Morris Harvey College. He then served as an assistant coach to Dave Pritchett at Davidson for one year before moving on to serve as an assistant coach at Rhode Island for Jack Kraft from 1977-80. During his time at URI, the Rams went to the NCAA tournament in 1978 and NIT in 1979. In 1980, Hahn began a six-year stint as an assistant coach at Ohio University under Danny Nee. At Ohio, the Bobcats won the Mid-American Conference championship in 1983 and 1985, advancing to the NCAA tournament in both of those years. The Bobcats also went to the NIT in 1986. Hahn was named head coach at Ohio University in 1986 and coached the Bobcats for
JOSH EILERT COORDINATOR OF BASKETBALL OPERATIONS
Josh Eilert enters his seventh season with the West Virginia men’s basketball program. Eilert spent the first six seasons as the video coordinator before being named coordinator of basketball operations in October 2013. He came to WVU from Kansas State, where he served as a graduate assistant at Kansas State under Bob Huggins in 2006-07.
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three years until 1989, leading them to the MAC championship game in 1988. During his career there, he recruited and coached the school’s all-time leading scorer in Dave Jamerson. Hahn recruited and coached Paul Graham, the MAC player of the year in 1989. After serving as an assistant at Maryland for 12 years, Hahn served as head men’s basketball coach at La Salle for three years from 2001-04. In recent years, Hahn has been a director of the Hoop Group, a New Jersey-based recruiting and camp service, and also has served as a college basketball television analyst. Hahn has coached 22 NBA players during his career: Sly Williams, Paul Graham, Dave Jamerson, Tony Massenburg, Jerrod Mustaf, Walt Williams, Keith Booth, Joe Smith, Sarunas Jasikevicius, Laron Profit, Terence Morris, Obinna Ekezie, Steve Francis, Chris Wilcox, Lonny Baxter, Steve Blake, Juan Dixon, Steven Smith, Rasual Butler, Joe Alexander, Da’Sean Butler and Devin Ebanks. Hahn earned his bachelor’s degree in distributive education with a minor in business administration
from Maryland in 1975. While there, he was a three-year varsity letterwinner under Lefty Driesell on three of the best basketball teams Maryland has fielded. He was a freshman in 1971-72 when the Terps won the National Invitation Tournament; he was a key reserve on the team that lost what is considered to be the greatest game in ACC history (Maryland’s 103-100 overtime setback against NC State in 1974). He captained the team his senior year. Hahn is one of only two players in Maryland basketball history to play and coach in the NCAA tournament. He was also a part of two of the winningest teams in school history. He played on Maryland’s 1974-75 team that finished with a 24-5 record (.828 winning percentage) and coached the 1998-99 team that won a then-school record 28 games and went 28-6 (.824 winning percentage). A native of Mishawaka, Ind., who attended Penn High, Hahn and his wife, Kathi, have been married since 1976. They have two children, a son, Matthew, and a daughter, Ashley.
Since coming to West Virginia in 2007, the Mountaineers have won the 2010 Big East Championship and have earned five NCAA tournament appearances, including the 2010 Final Four. While at Kansas State, Eilert assisted the coaching staff with the day-to-day internal operations of the basketball program, including self-scout and opponent scouting, coordination of on-campus recruiting, film exchange, travel arrangements and special projects. Eilert also served as the assistant camp director of the Bob Huggins basketball camps. Prior to Kansas State, Eilert was a loan officer at Community National Bank in Seneca, Kan. Eilert played two seasons of basketball at Kansas State from 2002-04 after transferring from
Cloud County Community College, where he was a two-year letterman and one-year starter. He was a first team all-Big 12 academic selection as a senior and four times was named to the Big 12 Commissioner’s Honor Roll. Eilert was honored with the Keith Amerson Academic Award in 2004. While at Cloud County, he earned KJCAA Academic All-America honors as a sophomore. A native of Osborne, Kan., Eilert earned his bachelor’s degree in marketing from Kansas State in 2004. He earned his master’s degree in College Student Personnel/Intercollegiate Athletics from Kansas State in 2007. Eilert and his wife, Brandi, reside in Morgantown. They have a son, Brendan, and a daughter, Emri.