March 20th, 2026

South Florida coach Hodgson’s emotions run from tears to touch of anger after NCAA Tournament debut

By Canadian Press on March 19, 2026.

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — From tears, to praise, to a touch of anger.

South Florida’s Brian Hodgson ran the gamut of emotions in making his NCAA Tournament head coaching debut not far from where he grew up, and following an 83-79 first-round loss to Louisville on Thursday.

The Bulls’ first-year coach’s eyes began to well when senior forward Izaiyah Nelson referred to Hodgson as a father figure.

“Really right now I’m just honestly struggling to picture myself coaching this game without him,” Hodgson said of Nelson, who followed the coach to South Florida this year after spending two seasons together at Arkansas State. “Just to hear what he said about me, I feel the same way about him times a million.”

Hodgson also paid tribute to his parents, Rebecca and Larry Hodgson, who adopted and raised him in Jamestown, New York.

The game marked the first time Hodgson’s parents got to see him in person in three seasons as a head coach. His father has dementia, making it difficult for him to travel to Florida and Arkansas. Buffalo, meantime, is only a 60-mile drive from Jamestown.

“Someone sent me a picture of my mom and dad with a big smile on their face,” Hodgson said, before crediting his players for clinching the program’s fourth tournament berth, and first since 2012.

“I’ll never be able to repay these young men, because I didn’t know if or when that would happen for my dad to be able to be here and see me in person and how excited he was,” he added.

Hodgson was abused as a child and placed in foster care at the age of 2 before being adopted. He wasn’t the only one taken in by his parents, who also fostered more than 100 children.

“They never did that to get recognition, but they deserved it because they’re phenomenal human beings,” Hodgson said. “I’m very fortunate to have them as my parents.”

As for the anger, Hodgson’s ire was raised upon hearing Louisville coach Pat Kelsey question South Florida players for apparently disrespecting the Cardinals.

“Our guys heard what they said,” Kelsey said, following the win. “It was definitely something we heard. We internalized. We don’t have a bunch of guys that are like, but I could tell it was simmering in them and it bothered them. But I do have a lot of respect for (South Florida).”

Kelsey didn’t specify what was said or when, except refer to a Bulls player saying: “We’re going to pop them and something, something.”

Hodgson was in the interview waiting area and didn’t like what he overheard.

“I’ve heard all the nonsense about how our young men spoke heading into the game. What are we even talking about? Do you want these young men to not talk confidently about how they’re going to play against their opponent?” Hodgson said.

He then defended guard Wes Enis, who caused a stir among Louisville fans by saying he believed South Florida — the East Region’s No. 11 seed — was the better team after the matchup was announced on Sunday.

“I don’t really care,” Enis said, referring to the seedings. “I wouldn’t really call it an upset.”

Hodgson didn’t consider his player’s comment as a swipe.

“Did we want Wes Enis to sit in that press conference and say, ‘No, we can’t beat Louisville?’ No,” Hodgson said.

“We instill that in these young men to carry themselves with confidence every day,” he added. “We could have won this game. Louisville won the game today. I wouldn’t mind playing Louisville again.”

___

AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

John Wawrow, The Associated Press


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