The passing of Ian Progin last May second at the age of 47 did not come as a stunner in the immediate moment, as many of his close friends knew his cancer – first diagnosed in 2011 – had returned. He was living in hospice in his final days.
Nonetheless, it was indeed a stunner in the grand scheme of things. Here was a man who dedicated his life to his family, friends and his alma mater, who continued coaching not only high school basketball in Hillsborough, but also his son’s youth league, even while undergoing treatments.
Ian Progin seemed like he could beat anything. And for years, he did.
The longtime coach – who mentored the boys’ basketball team at Hillsborough for 12 years, and the girls for another four – was honored by the school Saturday afternoon, during a court naming ceremony in his honor between a girls’/boys’ doubleheader.
The ceremony was sandwiched in between a sweep Saturday for the Raiders, coming after the girls’ 72-33 win over Union. (Current head coach Courtney Tierney, now in her fifth season, was Progin’s successor.) And it preceded the boys’ 57-44 victory over Ewing, their fourth straight W.
PA announcer and head baseball coach Matt Mosko presided over the ceremony, after which a banner along the baseline padding was removed unveiling the words “IAN PROGIN COURT” in all caps, with Ian’s wife, Courtney, and son, Jeffery, sitting off to the left.
Progin was a 1996 graduate of Hillsborough High School, played college basketball at Widener, and later transferred to Rutgers as a walk-on. After his eligibility ran out, he joined the Sports department of campus radio station, WRSU 88.7 FM, where he was an analyst on basketball broadcasts. He graduated with a degree in Journalism and Mass Media.
He went back to Rutgers to become a teacher, and earned his Master’s from Rider, then came back to Hillsborough as a guidance counselor, also becoming the school’s head boys’ basketball coach. In his dozen seasons, the big highlights included an upset of top-seed Gill St. Bernard’s to win the 2014 Somerset County Tournament, then an amazing run to the Central Jersey Group 4 title in 2015.
Just one year later, he came back and coached the girls’ basketball team from 2016 to 2020, while also coaching gymnastics for three seasons.
Click below for video from Saturday’s ceremony, and scroll down further for additional links to coverage of Progin’s passing, including our original story and a tribute including fellow coaches and former players:
Former Hillsborough coach, Rutgers basketball walk-on Ian Progin passes away at age 47









