Except for he already came out and said he would never leave the city of Syracuse and never leave Syracuse University. And that's a good thing. He's done, and he certainly doesn't have the energy, nor apparently the desire, to start over somewhere else at this point in his life. It was time for him to exit the stage, and he knew it.
Q "Why do you like Duke, you didn't even go there." A "Because my art school didn't have a basketball team."
Lowe made 0 tournaments.
Gott made 4 and had a 6-4 record, although always as a low seed - made 2 Sweet 16s despite never being better than an 8.
Keatts was in his second tournament this year and has yet to record a tourney win.
State hasn’t been higher than an 8 seed since the days of Julius Hodge (3-seed in 2004) - that’s actually the only time in the past 35 years State was a top 4 seed.
Just be you. You is enough. - K, 4/5/10, 0:13.8 to play, 60-59 Duke.
You're all jealous hypocrites. - Titus on Laettner
You see those guys? Animals. They're animals. - SIU Coach Chris Lowery, on Duke
https://www.espn.com/mens-college-ba...replace-pitino
Anderson to Iona.
He had to make that move. Iona has been one of the better smaller-conference programs for a while - it's probably a better job than some of the lower-resourced mid-majors. And the NEC is the worst non-HBCU conference in Division I. You absolutely have to leverage that upset into a better gig.
Good for Iona to move quickly here, and to capitalize on their past relationship with Tobin Anderson. He'll be coaching in the MAAC against Greg Paulus and Baker Dunleavy.
But I wonder if Anderson could have landed an even higher profile job, like Providence.
I was thinking that but I think that would be a stretch for him. He did a great job and seems like a really good guy. But he has never set foot in a high major locker room as a player, assistant coach, or coach. Becoming a Big East head coach, particularly in this era of NIL and quick transfers, would be a huge leap for him.
I am very happy for him and think it is a good move for Iona. I know it is how the world works and do not blame him at all for his decision, but it is sad that these schools like FDU and St. Peter's achieve a little success and it is over so quickly as everyone moves on. I always admire the coaches who choose to stay at the smaller places and have a lifetime of success.
USF isn't Brey's next destination.
https://www.on3.com/news/head-coach-...ighting-irish/According to ESPN’s Pete Thamel, Brey interviewed for the USF job was an offer was never extended. Some time off will be taken from the coaching world as Brey now looks to find a role in television moving forward.
“Notre Dame coach Mike Brey tells ESPN he interviewed for USF, but was not offered the job, Thamel said. “He said he’s going to take some time off and pursue television.”
Q "Why do you like Duke, you didn't even go there." A "Because my art school didn't have a basketball team."
Bobby Hurley signed at extension at ASU.
I had to take a closer look at Mike Anderson because I didn't consider him to be the failing upward type.
UAB: 4 seasons, 89-41 (.685), 3 NCAAT, one Sweet 16. You may remember it.
I wish there were a clearer version of that.
Missouri: 5 seasons, 111-57 (.661), 3 NCAAT, one Elite Eight.
Arkansas: 8 seasons, 169-102 (.624), 3 NCAAT, two Round of 32 appearances.
St. John's: 4 seasons, 68-56 (.548), no NCAAT or NIT appearances.
Yeah, his winning percentage dipped a little with every subsequent job, but he never had a losing season. He's 63 now; if he wants to keep going, I could see a mid-major program seeking him out.
I think UVA is preparing for Bennett's top assistant, Jason Williford, to get his own program this year. He's in the mix at Mason (his wife is a partner at a DC law firm) and has been mentioned for the Temple vacancy. His son, Austin, is a D-1 prospect in the 2025 class.