Florida hires Rhode Island’s Tammi Reiss as its next women’s basketball coach

Charged with turning around a struggling Florida program, the three-time A-10 Coach of the Year leaves URI after a historic run that delivered a school-record 28 wins and the Rams’ first NCAA tournament berth in three decades

Rhode Island head coach Tammi Reiss shouts instructions to her team during the first half against Alabama in the first round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 21, 2026 in Louisville, Ky.
Rhode Island head coach Tammi Reiss shouts instructions to her team during the first half against Alabama in the first round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 21, 2026 in Louisville, Ky.
Timothy D. Easley/AP
Share
Rhode Island head coach Tammi Reiss shouts instructions to her team during the first half against Alabama in the first round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 21, 2026 in Louisville, Ky.
Rhode Island head coach Tammi Reiss shouts instructions to her team during the first half against Alabama in the first round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 21, 2026 in Louisville, Ky.
Timothy D. Easley/AP
Florida hires Rhode Island’s Tammi Reiss as its next women’s basketball coach
Copy

Florida hired Rhode Island’s Tammi Reiss as the program’s next women’s basketball coach Monday, tasking her with rebuilding the least-accomplished program on campus.

Reiss, a three-time Atlantic 10 coach of the year, spent seven seasons with the Rams and led them to the NCAA Women’s Tournament for the first time in 30 years earlier this month. Rhode Island lost to Alabama in the opening round.

Nonetheless, the Rams won a school-record 28 games to go along with a share of the A-10 regular-season championship and the league tournament.

Reiss, 55, played alongside Dawn Staley at Virginia and appeared in three consecutive Final Fours (1990, 1991 and 1992), including the 1991 national title game. She was part of eight NCAA Women’s Tournament appearances as an assistant coach, including four at Syracuse, before arriving at Rhode Island.

She replaces Kelly Rae Finley, who was fired two weeks ago while the Gators were poised to miss the NCAA Tournament for the fourth consecutive year.

The 40-year-old Finley went 93-75 in five seasons in Gainesville, including 30-50 in Southeastern Conference play. She put together one of the program’s best collections of talent in recent years, with Liv McGill, Me’Arah O’Neal and Laila Reynolds giving the team three McDonald’s All-Americans in its starting lineup.

But the trio was unable to deliver enough wins in one of the country’s deepest leagues.

Reiss will try to revive women’s basketball at Florida, which is the only program on campus that has never won a conference title. The Gators have seemed reluctant to funnel as much money as SEC heavyweights LSU and South Carolina into a program that has provided little, if any, return on investment for decades.

Reiss, though, has a track record of building.

The Rams tripled their average attendance during her tenure and raised the program’s first three conference banners. Her overall record is 138-73, including 96 wins over the last four seasons. She twice set the program record for victories.

This story was originally published by the Associated Press.

Charged with turning around a struggling Florida program, the three-time A-10 Coach of the Year leaves URI after a historic run that delivered a school-record 28 wins and the Rams’ first NCAA tournament berth in three decades
It takes around 40 gallons of sap to make just one gallon of syrup
Only charitable organizations can legally host bingo games in Rhode Island. Lawmakers consider a bill that would allow the game at casinos
An experiment in participatory budgeting — a process where voters directly decide how to spend public money — got off to a promising start in Providence, until the entire staff working on the project was suddenly laid off
Why a prosperous nation struggles to feed hungry people
Massachusetts acquisitions drag down bottom line as federal funding cuts loom