Plymouth boys basketball coach Greg Miller resigns after two seasons
Greg Miller stepped away after two seasons and a 17-29 run, leaving Plymouth to replace a coach just as summer workouts and the 2025 roster take shape.

Plymouth boys basketball is back in the market for a head coach, and this resignation carries more weight than a simple personnel change. Greg Miller stepped down after two seasons, leaving behind a 17-29 record and a program that has not finished a season above .500 since 2018-19.
Plymouth athletic director Josh Troyer announced the move Tuesday morning, April 28, and said Miller is leaving for a career opportunity outside coaching and athletics. Miller said he enjoyed his time at Plymouth but could not pass up the new opportunity for his family. Troyer’s response was notably supportive, praising Miller for helping increase boys basketball knowledge and for leading by example every day, a sign the school is treating this as a professional transition rather than a fracture inside the program.
The timing matters because the spring turn in Indiana high school basketball is when programs shift from the final buzzer to offseason work. Whoever takes over at Plymouth will inherit the immediate job of organizing summer development, keeping returning players engaged, and shaping the 2025 roster before the season starts to come into focus. The school said the search is already underway, and interested candidates are being directed to Troyer and the school’s application system.
Plymouth is not a program that has to wonder whether the expectations are real. The school has two IHSAA boys basketball state championships, including the 2006-07 Class 3A title, and sectional championships in 2010 and 2013. That history gives the next coach a standard far beyond simply ending the current skid. The assignment is to reconnect a proud program with the level it has reached before.
The infrastructure is already in place, too. Plymouth athletics uses its official site as the central home for boys basketball schedules, rosters and updates, which means the next hire steps into an established program framework, not a blank slate. That can help a new staff move quickly, but it also sharpens the pressure to produce.
For Plymouth, this is more than a routine opening. Miller’s exit marks another reset for a program trying to climb back toward the standard its banners still represent, and the next coach will be judged not just on wins, but on whether the Pilgrims can turn a coaching change into forward momentum.
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