Born in
Charleston, West Virginia, Harrick graduated in 1960 from Morris Harvey College, now known as the
University of Charleston.
College coaching career Harrick's coaching career began at
Morningside High School in
Inglewood, California where he served as an assistant coach from 1964 to 1969 and as head coach from 1970 to 1973. He was then hired as an assistant coach at
Utah State University from 1974 to 1977. Harrick then spent two seasons as an assistant coach at UCLA from 1978 to 1979. His first collegiate head coaching job was at
Pepperdine University in 1979, where he led the school to four
NCAA tournament appearances and was a conference coach of the year four times.
UCLA In 1988, he returned to
UCLA to assume head coaching duties after the firing of
Walt Hazzard. During the recruiting period before his first season, he recruited
Don MacLean, the most significant recruit to commit to Westwood in several years. McLean's arrival helped start a revival of the basketball program. By 1992, the
Bruins were back in the Elite Eight, officially the first time they had advanced that far in 13 years. The 1979-80 team went all the way to the national championship game, but had that appearance vacated due to ineligible players. This was officially the second time they had advanced that far since
John Wooden left the school. During the
1994–95 season, he led UCLA to a 31–2 record (a loss to California was subsequently forfeited to the Bruins) and the school's
eleventh national championship, its first since the
1974–75 season. The 31 wins would stand as a school record until the 2005–06 season. A year later, Harrick's Bruins were upset in the first round by
Princeton. As it turned out, this would be the last game Harrick would coach in Westwood. Shortly before the start of the
1996–97 season, he was accused of falsifying receipts at a student-athlete recruiting dinner when two current players,
Cameron Dollar and
Charles O'Bannon, joined the table. Since Harrick paid for the entire meal, it amounted to an improper extra benefit for Dollar and O'Bannon. To cover up their presence, Harrick included the names of his wife and the wife of newly hired assistant
Michael Holton on the expense report. When the school investigated, Harrick told Holton to tell athletic director Peter Dalis that Holton's wife was at the meal. However, a day later, Holton confessed that was not true. On November 6, 1996, Dalis and school chancellor
Chuck Young gave Harrick an ultimatum: resign by the next morning or be fired. Harrick opted to take the firing. Although picking up the tab for Dollar and O'Bannon was a secondary violation at best, Young and Dalis felt Harrick's attempted cover-up was unforgivable. However, Harrick claims that the NCAA has cleared him of wrongdoing. He left UCLA as the school's second-winningest coach, behind only Wooden. However, he is now third behind Wooden and
Ben Howland.
Rhode Island After a one-year hiatus, Harrick returned to coaching by accepting the head coach position at
Rhode Island. He coached the
Rams for two seasons (from 1997 to 1999), where in both years they qualified for the NCAA Tournament. During the
1998 tournament, the Rams upset
Kansas in the second round and reached the Midwest Regional finals but were defeated by
Stanford 79–77. In his second season, he managed to recruit
Lamar Odom and led the Rams to their first
Atlantic 10 Conference tournament title.
Georgia After the season, he left URI to become the head coach at the
University of Georgia. He served there for four seasons (1999–2000 through 2002–03), leading the
Bulldogs to the NCAA tournament twice following a losing record. His tenure at Georgia ended in controversy in the spring of 2003. His son, Jim Harrick Jr., a Georgia assistant, got into trouble for paying $300 in expenses for one of his players, Tony Cole. He also gave an "A" to Cole,
Rashad Wright and Chris Daniels for a basketball strategy class even though they never attended it. The class also had a test with the question, "How many points is a three-point basket worth?" After the story broke, Georgia pulled out of the 2003 SEC Tournament and withdrew from postseason consideration. The school suspended Harrick Jr. on February 28, 2003 and fired him five days later. Harrick Sr. was suspended on March 10 and resigned on March 27 after being told his contract would not be renewed. An NCAA investigation confirmed the violations, also finding that six players did not pay for over $1,500 of long-distance telephone calls in December 2001. The telephone charges in question were due to hotel error and ultimately never charged to the program. Since they were not valid charges, Georgia did not self-report the violations until an internal investigation into the program in July 2003. In 2004 the NCAA placed Georgia on four years' probation for the violations. It also forced the Bulldogs to vacate half of their wins from 2001–02 and all their wins from 2002–03—30 games in all. Harrick Jr. was given a seven-year
show-cause penalty order for his role in the academic fraud, as well as telling two of the players involved to lie to the NCAA. The 'show-cause' effectively blackballed him from the college ranks until 2011 at the earliest.
Later career After Georgia, Harrick worked as a scout for the NBA's
Denver Nuggets and helped develop basketball in China. On June 13, 2006, Harrick accepted the head coaching position for the
Bakersfield Jam, an
NBA Development League team. Harrick later became a college basketball analyst for
Prime Ticket, the Southern California affiliate of
Fox Sports Net. From 2018 until 2021, Harrick was an assistant men's basketball coach at
California State University, Northridge. ==Head coaching record==