Sunday, February 7, 2021
  Community, Athletics, Around Campus

By News and Internal Communications

By Jonah Goldberg

RIO GRANDE VALLEY, TEXAS – The UTRGV Department of Intercollegiate Athletics has announced that men’s basketball Head Coach Lew Hill died Sunday at the age of 55.

“Words cannot describe how any of us feel right now. Everyone in our department is devastated by this news,” said UTRGV Vice President and Director of Athletics Chasse Conque.

“Coach Hill was an incredible human being. He was my close friend and a trusted colleague. He cared deeply about those around him, from his family, to his players, to his staff and, really, everyone in the department and at UTRGV. We offer our deepest condolences to his wife Renee and Coach Hill’s entire family during this unimaginable time,” Conque said.

UTRGV President Guy Bailey said Coach Hill will be greatly missed.

“This is a tragic loss, not only for the UTRGV community but for the entire Rio Grande Valley community,” Bailey said. “Coach Hill was very involved in the community and always had a knack for making everyone he met feel special. On behalf of the entire university, we convey our heartfelt condolences to Coach Hill’s family and friends. Please keep them in your thoughts in the following days.”

The cause of death is not known at this time.

Hill coached the Vaqueros on Saturday night in a 77-75 loss to Texas Southern in Houston.

Coach Lew Hill
UTRGV men’s basketball head coach Lew Hill passed away on Sunday at the age of 55. Hill was the head coach at UTRGV for five seasons, taking over the program in 2016. Hill is pictured talking to his players during the UTRGV vs. New Mexico game on January 25, 2020. (UTRGV Photo by David Pike)

 

A LOOK BACK

Hill was head coach at UTRGV for five seasons, taking over the program in 2016 and making five-win improvements in each of his first three years, culminating with a 20-win, 2018-19 season that saw the Vaqueros win an NCAA Division I postseason games for the first time while hosting two rounds of the CIT.

For his efforts, Hill was a finalist for the 2019 Ben Jobe Award, presented annually to the top minority coach in Division I men's basketball. In total, the Vaqueros made two postseason appearances under Hill, including an appearance in the 2018 CBI.

Hill’s teams displayed the tenacity he inspired in them, rallying back from seven double-digit deficits in 2018-19 and then, after starting the 2019-20 season 6-14, winning eight of their final 10 to earn the No. 2 seed in the Western Athletic Conference Tournament, the highest seed in program history.

The Vaqueros picked up right where they left off this season, going 8-4 under Hill. In total, the Vaqueros won 16 of Hill’s final 22 games.

For his head coaching career, Hill won 67 games, the fifth-best total in program history.

 

BEYOND BASKETBALL

Hill was passionate about bringing awareness to diabetes, personally leading the charge to host diabetes awareness nights at home basketball games.

He also believed greatly in giving back to the campus and the community, and was known for buying large amounts of breakfast tacos and walking to faculty and staff offices around campus to deliver them – his way of thanking fellow UTRGV employees for their hard work and dedication.

When UTRGV Athletics started a weekly story time series this past spring, Hill was the first employee to sign up, reading The Dinosaur Who Lived in My Back Yard with his daughter, Elle.

Originally from Mount Vernon, N.Y., Hill was an All-State performer at Mount Vernon High School. He then went on to be an All-American point guard for San Jacinto Junior College, helping to lead the team to the 1984 NJCAA National Championship. He played his final two seasons at Wichita State, earning All-Missouri Valley Conference honors as a senior for helping to lead the Shockers to 20 wins and a berth in the 1988 NCAA Tournament.

Hill graduated with a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and played one season professionally in Germany before starting his coaching career at Wichita East High School in 1989-90. He moved up to the collegiate ranks as an assistant coach at South Alabama from 1990-92.

From there, Hill worked as an assistant coach at Southeast Missouri State (1992-94), East Carolina (1994-98) and Texas A&M (1998-03) before getting promoted to associate head coach at Texas A&M for the 2003-04 season.

Hill joined former Pan American University Head Coach Lon Kruger’s coaching staff at UNLV as an assistant coach in 2004 and then went with Kruger to Oklahoma in 2011. In Hill’s final season at Oklahoma, 2015-16, the Sooners reached the Final Four.

Hill is survived by his wife, Renee, their two children, Lewis Jr. (LJ) and Elle, and three other daughters, Sierra, Erica and Asya.

UTRGV is expected to name an acting head coach in the near future.

A determination as to the status of upcoming games will be made in the near future.

Coach Lew Hill at HESTEC
UTRGV men’s basketball head coach Lew Hill is pictured inspiring a crowd of students during HESTEC Student Leadership Day in October 2016. (UTRGV Archival Photo by Paul Chouy)



ABOUT UTRGV

The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UTRGV) was created by the Texas Legislature in 2013 as the first major public university of the 21st century in Texas. This transformative initiative provided the opportunity to expand educational opportunities in the Rio Grande Valley, including a new School of Medicine, and made it possible for residents of the region to benefit from the Permanent University Fund – a public endowment contributing support to the University of Texas System and other institutions.

UTRGV has campuses and off-campus research and teaching sites throughout the Rio Grande Valley including in Boca Chica Beach, Brownsville (formerly The University of Texas at Brownsville campus), Edinburg (formerly The University of Texas-Pan American campus), Harlingen, McAllen, Port Isabel, Rio Grande City, and South Padre Island. UTRGV, a comprehensive academic institution, enrolled its first class in the fall of 2015, and the School of Medicine welcomed its first class in the summer of 2016.