On the plane back from Israel for the second time in his life, Auburn men’s basketball head coach Bruce Pearl had already made up his mind. He was going to return to the Holy Land this August, with a new group of people who he wanted to share his experiences with – his entire Auburn men’s basketball team.
Growing up, Pearl was the star athlete everyone wanted on their team.
“I was one of the best athletes in town, always the first kid picked in everything,” the 62-year-old Jewish-American coach told The Jerusalem Post.
He was the quarterback, the point guard and the first baseman. During his freshman year of high school, he had an unfortunate knee injury that took him out of many of his favorite sports. He lost much of the mobility in his leg, and thus was unable to play his two best sports, basketball and football.
When Pearl began attending Boston College in 1978, he tried to walk on, but was cut from the team. However, head coach Tom Davis saw something special in young Bruce, and decided to keep him around.
“Coach Davis saw a passion in me, and offered me an opportunity to work for the program in any and all capacities,” Pearl remembers excitedly.
Last day in Jerusalem, made it count #WarEagle pic.twitter.com/z0GFTlTc5q
— Auburn Basketball (@AuburnMBB) August 3, 2022
Last day in Jerusalem, made it count #WarEagle pic.twitter.com/z0GFTlTc5q
Beginning as a student manager, Pearl ended up as an assistant coach by the end of the season, a huge accomplishment that usually takes many years to complete. “I got involved in everything,” reflected Pearl. “I didn’t think I was going to coach, but I just loved it.”
Going into his senior year of college, he had “real job” opportunities available with Procter and Gamble and IBM and had been seriously considering pursuing a marketing career. At that same time, Coach Davis had just been hired by Stanford to be its new men’s basketball coach, and asked Pearl to come with him. Although still a senior in college, Pearl decided to pivot career paths, and accepted the job. Pearl is currently one of very few college basketball coaches to have never played a single minute of college basketball himself.
He remained with Coach Davis at Stanford – and later Iowa – until 1992, when he got his first head coaching job with the University of Southern Indiana (USI).
Pearl coached the NCAA Division II USI Screaming Eagles for nine successful seasons, finishing his tenure with a record of 231-46. He left USI in 2001 to return to Division I basketball, where he coached the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee for four years, posting an all-time league leading winning percentage of 79.9% before departing in 2005 for Tennessee.
Pearl stayed at Tennessee until 2011, and later became the head coach of Auburn in 2014, where he coaches currently.
Pearl’s first time in Israel wasn’t until 2009, when he spent the summer as a coach for the Maccabiah Games, leading a talented Team USA to victory. He was honored to spend time in the Holy Land, combining his passions for basketball and Judaism at the same time.
“I’m almost embarrassed to say that 2009 was my first trip to Israel,” Pearl says. “I had every intention in 1982 to go to Israel and live there long enough to join the army and do service, but I didn’t do it because I had other job offers and basketball offers that got in the way.”
Pearl’s family history in Israel dates back to World War II as his grandparents had all fled from the Ukraine and Russia regions to Israel to escape the Holocaust.
“I immediately understood what that was all about when I was coaching there, to take these young Jewish men and help them understand their history, responsibility, and hopefully to get them to fall in love with Israel as I had as a younger boy”
Bruce Pearl
This morning we visited the Yad Vashem World Holocaust Museum. We listened. We learned. We grew.#WarEagle pic.twitter.com/p9ncoNbmS8
— Auburn Basketball (@AuburnMBB) August 3, 2022
“I immediately understood what that was all about when I was coaching there, to take these young Jewish men and help them understand their history, responsibility, and hopefully to get them to fall in love with Israel as I had as a younger boy”
This morning we visited the Yad Vashem World Holocaust Museum. We listened. We learned. We grew.#WarEagle pic.twitter.com/p9ncoNbmS8
“I immediately understood what that was all about when I was coaching there, to take these young Jewish men and help them understand their history, responsibility, and hopefully to get them to fall in love with Israel as I had as a younger boy,” Pearl said about the Maccabiah Team USA experience. “And we did it. We had the trip of a lifetime. We beat Israel in overtime, and Israel doesn’t lose at home very often. It was exciting to be there.”
Currently coaching at Auburn, Pearl leads with the lessons he learned from his first Israel trip, including those of perseverance and connection. He puts his players first and has been most proud of this year’s team for sticking together through tough times.
“The fact that we had four new starters and we managed to get to No. 1 in the country and stay there for three weeks” was Pearl’s favorite part of the team’s 2022 NCAA season“For a period, nobody in college basketball was playing as good as we were,” Pearl declared.
March Madness is special for many reasons. We follow the Cinderella stories, the dominant runs, and the players who step up in big moments. For Auburn men’s basketball, it was another opportunity for the program to prove that it belongs in the conversation as a consistent basketball powerhouse.
This year’s March Madness tournament overlapped with the Jewish holiday of Purim, a rare occurrence. Purim is a celebration of the Jews being saved from persecution in ancient Persia. Pearl took the opportunity in one of his last press conferences of the tournament to express the importance of his Jewish heritage and how it intersects with basketball. He spoke powerfully and confidently on the current Ukraine-Russia conflict and the influential example that Queen Esther leads with in the Purim story.
This week, Pearl elaborated on his response by explaining why it was such a special time for him to be speaking about the holiday at this press conference.
“During Purim, I had been praying for an opportunity to say something,” Pearl recalled. “But the opportunity never really presented itself appropriately during the NCAA Tournament. However, the very last question of one of my last press conferences was a political question about Ukraine and my willingness to join with other women’s basketball coaches to contribute our own personal funds to help the crisis.”
This last question was the only one he had received over Zoom instead of in-person, and as it came over a loudspeaker, he described it as feeling like it had come from the heavens.
“That was God at work,” expressed Pearl. “I was able to then talk about Ukraine but also transition to who I am, what holiday I was celebrating, and the great dangers the Jewish people faced in Persia at the time as well as the dangers the Israelis are facing right now…”
Pearl sees his Judaism as part of everything he does, including basketball, and takes great pride in seizing opportunities to promote Jewish values.
“I’m very proud of my Jewish identity, and not afraid to put that pride on full display even though there are many times where – because of antisemitism – it wouldn’t benefit me personally or professionally. I’m active politically, speaking out publicly on antisemitism, racism and other issues of intolerance. I take the words ‘never again’ very seriously.”
Pearl’s Massachusetts upbringing definitely played a role in his social views.
“When I was growing up, I had the opportunity to see wonderful ethnicities, the Italian North End, Irish South Boston, the Jewish Ghettos of Roxbury and the inner-city Black community not always getting along, but each one of them being unique and full of grand tradition. I saw racial violence as a kid and tremendous antisemitism and felt it except when I was on the playground playing ‘shirts and skins.’ It didn’t matter how you prayed or what color you were. Through my Judaism I’ve tried to bring people together – we can do so much more together than apart. Jerusalem is a living example of what’s possible. If they follow the lead of the people in sports and follow the behavior of children we would all get along a lot better.”
Now back in Israel, Pearl was ready to get his “Birthright for College Basketball” off to a great start and believes it is important for everyone to at least once in their lifetime experience everything Israel has to offer.
“My players are going to see their Judeo-Christian roots, and for those who want to get baptized in the river Jordan, they will. They’ll walk in the garden where Jesus walked and they’ll pray at the Western Wall. And they’ll experience firsthand God’s presence in the Holy Land. Just come and see it, you’ll be changed forever,” encouraged Pearl.
To Pearl’s knowledge, no other major Division I basketball team has done a trip like this before, and he can’t stress enough how important he feels it is that teams get the opportunity to have influential experiences like trips to Israel.
“Our goal is to try and bring between two and four teams every August…Next year it could be Duke, Florida, Notre Dame, Georgia Tech”
Bruce Pearl
“Our goal is to try and bring between two and four teams every August…Next year it could be Duke, Florida, Notre Dame, Georgia Tech”
“Our goal is to try and bring between two and four teams every August,” Pearl elaborated. “Our media partners will come alongside us and Complete Sports Management, under the leadership of Lea Miller, who is the best at putting these kinds of trips and tournaments together. Next year it could be Duke, Florida, Notre Dame, Georgia Tech. Lots of different clubs are interested and when our kids come back and they have experienced this incredible culture and love that we are feeling here, I think this will be a place that a lot of college programs will want to come to.”
“We are definitely going to work on this and I want to give recognition to Daniel Posner and Athletes for Israel and Adam Milstein in California. There are definitely the beginnings of those noticing what we are doing in the lines of Birthright. I think that this is something that people will want to support. I can see donors from universities across the United States that will help teams go on this trip. It costs more than to go a little closer to home and we have fans that have traveled with us and I think there will be fans from other universities that will travel as well. I could see this as being similar to spring football and I hope this is going to take off.”
After he returns from his trip, Pearl will shift his focus to the upcoming season. His goals for the team are simple.
“Over the last five years, Auburn men’s basketball has won more games than anyone in the SEC, and I’d like to be able to say next summer that that’s the case over the last six years.”
Pearl believes that his players are the reason that Auburn’s basketball program is so successful and is proud of the athletes he’s been able to help them become. When asked about the biggest accomplishments of his coaching career, after the two divisional championships he won in 1995 and Auburn’s final four appearance in 2019, he said he’s most proud of “all of the student-athletes who’ve put up with me over the years and the impact we’ve had on them.”
But, big picture aside, right now Pearl’s focus is on one thing and one thing only.
“‘Birthright for College Basketball’ in Israel will become one of the most sought after and impactful foreign trips in the future.”