Lee Cummard passes former mentor as BYU's winningest first-year head coach


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Lee Cummard became BYU's winningest first-year women's basketball coach with 25 wins.
  • Cummard surpassed Jeff Judkins' record, achieving a 25-11 season, including WBIT success.
  • Cummard praised his team and mentor, emphasizing collective effort and mutual support at BYU.

PROVO — Lee Cummard came to BYU as a freshman from Mesa, Arizona, and — apart from a few seasons playing professionally overseas — never left.

Now the BYU women's basketball coach will add his name to the record book.

Cummard became the winningest first-year head coach in BYU women's basketball history with Thursday night's 76-61 win over Stanford in the WBIT quarterfinals, when Delaney Gibb and Brinley Cannon combined for 42 points.

His 25-11 inaugural campaign has been up and down, with a nonconference win over Virginia Tech and a 9-9 Big 12 record that included regular-season sweeps of regional rivals Utah and Arizona State along with losses to Arizona and Cincinnati that landed the Cougars squarely on the NCAA Tournament bubble — and ultimately, among the first four teams left out of the field of 68.

But that led BYU to the No. 1 overall seed in the WBIT, which helped Cummard break the previous program record of 24 wins wins by a first-year head coach held by former coach Jeff Judkins — the program legend who added Cummard to his roster of assistant coaches in 2019 after a year as a men's basketball assistant at his alma mater.

"He is women's basketball at BYU; Jeff Judkins is synonymous with BYU women's basketball," Cummard said when he tied his former mentor after Monday's win over Missouri. "But we've got a great group. They've been all-in from the beginning, and their hard work is paying off and being rewarded. I'm in a really lucky position. Everybody collectively is all-in for the group, and playing for nothing but trying to win the next game.

"To be in any conversation with coach Judkins is a tremendous honor," he reiterated, "because he is women's basketball at BYU."

In his lone season as a men's assistant, Cummard helped a team that included all-West Coast Conference honorees Yoeli Childs and TJ Haws to a 20-13 record including a 10-5 mark in WCC play. He also coached Childs, Haws, Eric Mika and Elijah Bryant for three years as a graduate assistant under former coach Dave Rose.

But Judkins convinced Cummard to make the move to the women's team in 2019, and he eagerly watched from the end of the bench as Judkins led the program to back-to-back NCAA Tournament bids in 2020-21 and 2021-22. Cummard served as acting head coach for three games when Judkins while Judkins recovered from COVID-19, when he led the program to wins over Utah State, No. 17 Florida State and No. 22 West Virginia.

When Amber Whiting was hired to replace Judkins in 2022, she immediately retained Cummard and elevated him to associate head coach. In three seasons working mostly with the post players, Cummard coached the program's all-time leading rebounder and two-time All-America honorable mention Lauren Gustin while BYU made consecutive WNIT appearances.

After BYU fired Whiting following the 2024-25 season, Cummard was named the program's eighth head coach March 31, 2025 — on his 40th birthday — at the place he and his wife Sarah have raised the couple's three children.

It all led up to Thursday night, when more than 3,500 people that included the BYU men's basketball and women's soccer teams showed up for his team's WBIT run and a coaching honor for the one-time Mountain West player of the year.

"That's what BYU is," Cummard said. "Everybody is in it for everybody."

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Sean Walker, KSLSean Walker
KSL BYU and college sports reporter

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