College Basketball Coach Turns Worst Coaching Job Into Slam Dunk at Salkehatchie

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load. The Great Read South Carolina Salkehatchie had no budget, players or running water in the locker room when Matt Lynch arrived. One season in, the first publicly gay head coach […]

College Basketball Coach Turns Worst Coaching Job Into Slam Dunk at Salkehatchie

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The Great Read

South Carolina Salkehatchie had no budget, players or running water in the locker room when Matt Lynch arrived. One season in, the first publicly gay head coach is figuring out how to win, on the court and off.

Basketball coach Matt Lynch in a gray suit and holding a clipboard crouches down to talk to his players at the bench during a break in play.
Matt Lynch, the University of South Carolina Salkehatchie men’s basketball head coach, at a game in November. Credit…Sean Rayford for The New York Times

Billy Witz

A little over a year ago, the University of South Carolina Salkehatchie posted a job opening for its men’s basketball coach. It might have been a single sentence: applications being accepted for the worst college coaching job in the country.

The school, a junior college at a rural outpost about an hour’s drive west of Charleston, had shut down its men’s basketball program before last season after going through four coaches in eight months. One quit before setting foot on campus.

There was not much to offer the candidates. The pay: $38,000 per year but no recruiting budget or staff. The facilities: a gym whose court is seven feet short of regulation, whose showers don’t have running water and whose men’s locker room doesn’t have a toilet.

And another thing: there were no players.

The job would test career ambitions, which made it perfect for Matt Lynch.

Lynch, 33, is like many hustling their way up the coaching ladder. He’s had the coaching bug since a church league dad handed him a clipboard and asked him to design his team’s final play. He embraces long hours. He schemes persistently. He charms relentlessly.

But what sets Lynch apart is that he is making the climb as an openly gay man.

Image

“If I was going to get a head coaching job, I knew it was going to be at a place that needed to be built,” Lynch said.Credit…Sean Rayford for The New York Times

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