Per a statement from Virginia Athletics, Coach Tony Bennett’s contract has officially been extended through the 2030 season — erasing any doubt about the National Championship winning coach’s future in Charlottesville. There is also a condition —- if Bennett continues to remain in his position past the 2026 season, then one more year is added to the deal.
Bennett has undoubtedly left a lasting legacy thus far with the Cavaliers. In addition to the 2019 National Championship, he has won six ACC regular-season championships and produced several NBA Draft picks as well as a multitude of professional players overseas. After the retirement of Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski, Bennett is the clear-cut best coach in his conference — as he is the only current ACC coach with a National Championship victory.
In an era of college basketball marked by turbulent change, Athletic Director Carla Williams has chosen to rely on the steady presence of one of the few remaining experienced title-winning coaches in college basketball.
“Tony Bennett is foundational to our efforts to compete for championships in this new model of college athletics,” Williams said. “He embodies everything important to the University of Virginia and Virginia Athletics. It is an honor to work with him, and we are thrilled about the future of men’s basketball under his leadership.”
That future holds a new age of ACC basketball featuring California Berkeley, Stanford, Berkeley and Southern Methodist joining the conference. Virginia itself is also entering a new chapter of college hoops, as Reece Beekman and Ryan Dunn have left for the professionals — leaving a great deal of questions to be addressed on the Cavaliers roster.
A rocky 2023-24 campaign led to unprecedented uncertainty surrounding Bennett’s job security, but he quickly began to rebuild — swiftly collecting talented transfer portal acquisitions. Now, he has been rewarded with the reassuring safety of a contract extension heading into next season.
The 2024-25 campaign is already looking difficult, with road contests against North Carolina, Pittsburgh, Syracuse, Virginia Tech and Wake Forest on tap. Home games against Duke, NC State and Clemson also present formidable challenges.
Outside the ACC, the Cavaliers will face Florida, Villanova and Baylor, plus the winner of Tennessee versus St. John’s — combining to form one of the hardest schedules in the country. With his spot at the helm safely secured, though, Bennett will now look to prepare his team for the absolute gauntlet of daunting foes awaiting them this winter.
Looking further ahead, Bennett will continue to be the architect of the Virginia men’s basketball program, as his extension allows him to recruit an entirely new generation of future Cavaliers — the youngest of which are currently as young as rising seventh graders. No one knows for certain what these next several years of Bennett’s tenure will look like, but with one of the greatest Virginia coaches of all time leading the way, the Cavaliers should continue to be an ACC contender.