
Spoelstra: No need to penalize Ball any further
Erik Spoelstra supports no further penalties for LaMelo Ball after flagrant foul.
Mick Byrne, the successful leader of Wisconsin's cross country and track and field programs, will retire after the 2026 outdoor season, concluding an 18-year tenure. He is the winningest coach in Big Ten men's cross country history, with 14 conference titles and an NCAA championship in 2011.
MADISON – Wisconsin's much-accomplished leader of its cross country and track and field programs is moving on.
Mick Byrne will retire following the 2026 outdoor track and field season, he announced via an April 14 press release, concluding an 18-year tenure with the Badgers.
Byrne is the winningest coach in Big Ten men's cross country history with 14 conference titles since arriving in 2008. The Badgers also won an NCAA national championship in 2011 under his tutelage.
First as the head men's cross country coach and assistant track and field coach and then as director of cross country and track and field since 2013 – with oversight over both men's and women's programs – his teams have won 14 NCAA individual titles, 18 Big Ten team titles and 95 Big Ten individual titles while earning 121 first-team All-Americans.
"Here at Wisconsin, I have been surrounded by an amazing staff who helped us win many championships," Byrne said in the release. "Their hard work and dedication made Wisconsin a special place to work. We had fun together. The student-athletes I had the privilege to coach here and at Iona made a huge impact on me throughout the years and I am a better person today because of them."
Mick Byrne (left) has been Wisconsin's director of cross country and track and field since 2013. He arrived at Wisconsin as the men's cross country and assistant track and field coach in 2008.
Interim athletic director Marcus Sedberry said that Byrne made a "profound" impact on Wisconsin.
"Mick has not only developed champions in sport on the course and track, but and also in life," Sedberry said. "His influence will be felt for generations through the student-athletes he mentored and the foundation he built."
Wisconsin's search for its next head coach "will begin in the near term," according to the release. It will be the first head coaching hire for the Badgers following Chris McIntosh's immediate resignation to take a job in the Big Ten office.
This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Wisconsin's Mick Byrne retires after accolade-filled 18-year tenure
Mick Byrne won 14 Big Ten conference titles, an NCAA national championship in 2011, and coached teams to 14 NCAA individual titles and 95 Big Ten individual titles.
Mick Byrne announced he will retire following the 2026 outdoor track and field season.
Mick Byrne has coached at Wisconsin for 18 years, starting in 2008.

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