Jerome Tang’s time at Kansas State is over.
According to multiple reports, KSU fired Tang on Sunday following the Wildcats’ latest loss. KSU fell to 1-11 in the Big 12 with a 78-64 loss to Houston. It was the sixth straight defeat for Kansas State and came a game after Tang said he was “embarrassed for the university” when criticizing his team following a 91-62 home loss to Cincinnati.
Kansas State went 71-57 in Tang’s time with the school. His buyout for a firing without cause is $18 million, but the Field of 68 reported that Tang and the school were in negotiations.
His best season at Kansas State came in his first year with the school. The Wildcats went 26-10 in 2022-23 and made it to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament before losing to Florida Atlantic. It was the only time KSU would make the tournament in Tang’s tenure; the next year, KSU went 19-15 and fell to 16-17 in 2024-25.
This season, the Wildcats are just 10-15 despite signing PJ Haggerty from Memphis out of the transfer portal. Haggerty is averaging 23.3 points per game and shooting 48% from the field. But Kansas State’s defense has been abysmal.
K-State Is averaging 80.2 points per game but giving up 80.7 points per game. Just 28 teams are allowing more points per game than the Wildcats this season.
That Cincinnati game appeared to be the tipping point for many Kansas State fans as students wore paper bags over their heads during the game. In his postgame news conference, Tang said the game was “embarrassing” and that “these dudes did not deserve to wear this uniform. There will be very few in it next year.”
Tang will also not be wearing Kansas State colors next season. He then went on to say the team had practice at 6 a.m. the next day and he had “no answers and no words.”
Tang came to Kansas State from Baylor. He was the Bears’ associate head coach under Scott Drew from 2017 through 2022 and was on the staff when the Bears won the 2021 national title. Before he was the team’s associate head coach, Tang was an assistant with the team since 2003 after coaching high school basketball in Texas.

