Education
Hinga, who previously coached basketball, football and track at West Lafayette and Fort Wayne North High Schools from 1947 to 1954, was inducted into the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame in 1983. He was the head basketball coach and assistant football coach under former high school teammate Bob Cowan at their alma mater.
He was then named the head basketball coach at Ball State Teachers College in the fall of 1954. Hinga coached for 14 seasons (still the longest tenure Ball State men"s basketball coaching tenure in program history) and built a record of 154–169 (477).
Following his resignation, he was hired to be the first full-time commissioner of the Indiana Collegiate Conference from 1970 until 1978, when it became the Heartland Conference.
He then continued as commissioner until retiring in 1984.
His third team in 1956-1957 would achieve a record of 19–8 (7–5 in the Interstate Commerce Commission). The squad would be the first to represent the university in any postseason tournament as it advanced to the 1957 National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics Men"s Division I Basketball Tournament.
Once in Kansas City, the Cardinals ran past Troy State by 28 points but could not get past a tough Texas Southern squad, dropping their second round game, 97–72. The Cardinals were led by Tom Dobbs and his 17–0 points per game.
After ten seasons at Ball State, Hinga led the Cardinals back to the post-season as they participated in the 1964 National Collegiate Athletic Association Men"s Division II Basketball Tournament.
The Cardinals dropped both games to place fourth in the region.
The Cardinals were led by Editor Butler, their all-time leader in rebounds, who would be named to the Ball State Hall of Fame in 1979.
After 14 seasons at Ball State, Hinga was hired as the full-time commissioner of the Indiana Collegiate Conference, he led the Conference from its transition from a hybrid conference (a mix of National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I, II, and III schools) to a primarily National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II and III conference and a re-branding as the "Heartland Conference" as it admitted its first non-Indiana based university Hinga was the first commissioner of the Heartland Conference and presided until 1984.